Roheeni Saxena, Ars Technica UK

Roheeni Saxena

Ars Technica UK

New York, NY, United States

Contact Roheeni

Discover and connect with journalists and influencers around the world, save time on email research, monitor the news, and more.

Start free trial

Recent:
  • Unknown
Past:
  • Ars Technica UK
  • Ars Technica

Past articles by Roheeni:

“Brains in a dish” move out of science fiction and into the lab

Growing brain-like tissues in cell culture lets scientists study neurodevelopment. → Read More

“Brains in a dish” move out of science fiction and into the lab

Growing brain-like tissues in cell culture lets scientists study neurodevelopment. → Read More

Undeveloped microbiomes make infants more prone to illness

Undeveloped immune systems are not the only culprit in infants’ susceptibility. → Read More

Toxic algae on the rise as our oceans warm

The rapidly warming Atlantic sees a big boost in toxic algae. → Read More

Undeveloped microbiomes make infants more prone to illness

Undeveloped immune systems are not the only culprit in infants’ susceptibility. → Read More

Harmful algal blooms occur more often now that oceans are warming

The rapidly warming Atlantic sees a big boost in toxic algae. → Read More

Liberal and conservative book buyers like different kinds of science

Does this mean anything? Only that we read science that reinforces our beliefs. → Read More

Dietary fats make worms live almost 50% longer—no human results yet

No studies in humans yet, but plant-based diets are definitely healthier anyway. → Read More

Dietary fats make worms live almost 50% longer—no human results yet

No studies in humans yet, but plant-based diets are definitely healthier anyway. → Read More

Liberal and conservative book buyers like different kids of science

Does this mean anything? Only that we read science that reinforces our beliefs. → Read More

STEM workforce is ageing, leaving few positions for new scientists

Scientists are getting their PhDs later, retiring at lower rates. → Read More

Government funding’s impact three times larger than we thought

Traditional metrics for patent impact of NIH grants misses their full contribution. → Read More

STEM Workforce is aging, leaving few positions for new scientists

Scientists are getting their PhDs later, retiring at lower rates. → Read More

Most common cells in the brain help us anticipate rewards

Anticipating and evaluating rewards requires specialized neurons. → Read More

Most common cells in the brain help us anticipate rewards

Anticipating and evaluating rewards requires specialized neurons. → Read More

Low levels of simple chemical associated with aging, DNA damage

Treatment with a simple chemical restores DNA repair to aging mice. → Read More

Low levels of simple chemical associated with aging, DNA damage

Treatment with a simple chemical restores DNA repair to aging mice. → Read More

Simple dietary supplement may help block postpartum blues

Blueberry extract and amino acid supplements may prevent postpartum depression. → Read More

Simple dietary supplement may help block postpartum blues

Blueberry extract and amino acid supplements may prevent postpartum depression. → Read More

fMRI may sort intentional crimes from reckless crimes

But it only works if you’re monitoring a brain while the crime’s taking place. → Read More