Laura Helmuth
Laura Helmuth is an American science journalist specializing in health, cognitive neuroscience, and related fields, holding a PhD in cognitive neuroscience from the University of California, Berkeley.[1] She served as editor-in-chief of Scientific American from April 2020 to November 2024, overseeing the publication's content during a period marked by heightened political engagement, including its unprecedented endorsement of Joe Biden in the 2020 U.S. presidential election.[2][3] Prior to her role at Scientific American, Helmuth held editorial positions at prominent outlets such as the health and science desk at The Washington Post, National Geographic, Slate, Smithsonian, and Science magazine, accumulating over two decades of experience in science journalism.[4] She also served as president of the National Association of Science Writers, contributing to professional standards in the field.[5] Her career highlights include freelance contributions to The New York Times and authorship on topics ranging from neuroscience to public health policy.[6] Helmuth's tenure at Scientific American drew criticism for steering the magazine toward more ideologically driven coverage, diverging from its traditional focus on empirical science, as evidenced by articles emphasizing social justice themes over rigorous data analysis.[7] This culminated in her resignation in November 2024, prompted by inflammatory social media posts on election night disparaging Donald Trump supporters as "fascists" and expressing regret over her generation's failure to prevent his victory, which amplified concerns about partisan bias in scientific publishing.[8][9]Early Life and Education
Upbringing and Influences
As a child, Helmuth displayed an early fascination with the human brain, reportedly pondering its composition with the question, “What is this spongy thing inside my skull?” This innate curiosity about cognition shaped her subsequent pursuits in psychology and neuroscience.[10] Helmuth experienced bullying during her childhood, which she later described as a profoundly negative period tied to long-term mental health consequences, especially in light of studies documenting elevated risks of depression, anxiety, and self-harm among victims into adulthood.[11]Academic Training and Degrees
Laura Helmuth earned a Bachelor of Science degree in biology and psychology from Eckerd College in 1991.[12] She subsequently pursued graduate studies at the University of California, Berkeley, where she completed a Ph.D. in cognitive neuroscience.[13] Following her doctoral work, Helmuth transitioned toward science journalism and obtained a graduate certificate in science communication from the University of California, Santa Cruz in 1998.[13] This program emphasized practical training in conveying complex scientific concepts to broader audiences, aligning with her emerging career interests.[13]Professional Career Beginnings
Entry into Journalism
Helmuth's transition to journalism occurred shortly after earning her PhD in cognitive neuroscience from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1997.[14] Rather than accepting a planned postdoctoral position in academia, she enrolled in the one-year graduate program in science writing at the University of California, Santa Cruz, to pursue a career communicating scientific findings to broader audiences.[15] Her interest in writing emerged during her Berkeley graduate studies, when she accepted a temporary summer position authoring entries for a budget travel guide focused on Eastern Europe, including Slovakia and the Czech Republic; this experience highlighted her aptitude for explanatory prose over original lab research.[15] Exposure to science journalists at a Society for Neuroscience conference further directed her toward formal training in the field, prompting her application to the UCSC program.[15] Upon completing the UCSC program, Helmuth secured internships in science writing before landing her first full-time role as a reporter in the news department of Science, the flagship publication of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).[15] [16] There, she specialized in neuroscience reporting, leveraging her doctoral expertise to cover developments in brain science and related topics.[17] Over five years at Science (approximately 1998–2003), she advanced to an editorial position managing life sciences coverage, editing articles on biology, health, and behavioral research.[17] This period established her foundation in journalistic standards for accuracy, skepticism toward preliminary findings, and translation of complex data for non-specialist readers.[15]Early Editorial and Writing Roles
Helmuth's entry into professional science journalism followed her completion of a graduate program in science writing at the University of California, Santa Cruz, after earning a PhD in cognitive neuroscience from the University of California, Berkeley.[15] She secured a series of internships in the field, which facilitated her transition to full-time roles.[15] Her first significant editorial position was at Science magazine, the publication of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), where she began as a temporary editor handling science stories and advanced to a full-time staff reporter and editor.[15] She remained in this role for five years, contributing to coverage of health, neuroscience, and related topics, drawing on her academic expertise.[15] [16] Subsequently, Helmuth joined Smithsonian magazine as a science editor, eventually rising to senior editor by 2011, where she oversaw content on scientific research, history, and culture.[18] [15] In this capacity, she edited articles emphasizing empirical findings and interdisciplinary intersections, building a reputation for rigorous selection of stories grounded in peer-reviewed evidence.[15] From 2012 to 2016, she served as science and health editor at Slate, managing a portfolio of online features that analyzed current scientific debates and public health issues with a focus on accessibility and skepticism toward unsubstantiated claims.[19] During this period, she also contributed freelance pieces and maintained involvement in professional organizations, such as the National Association of Science Writers, which she later led as president.[5] These roles honed her skills in commissioning, editing, and promoting content that prioritized data-driven narratives over speculative or ideologically driven interpretations.[15]Leadership at Scientific American
Appointment as Editor-in-Chief
On March 11, 2020, Scientific American announced the appointment of Laura Helmuth as its new editor-in-chief, effective April 13, 2020.[2] She succeeded Mariette DiChristina, who had held the position since 2009, becoming the ninth editor-in-chief in the magazine's nearly 175-year history.[2] Helmuth brought extensive experience in science journalism to the role, having served most recently as the health, medicine, and environment editor at The New York Times, where she directed coverage on topics including the opioid crisis, telemedicine expansion, and climate policy impacts.[2] Prior to that, she was science editor at Slate and an editor at Smithsonian magazine, with her academic background including a PhD in ethology and animal behavior from the University of California, Davis, and a BS in cognitive science from the University of California, Santa Cruz.[2] [13] In statements accompanying the announcement, Helmuth emphasized the magazine's tradition of making science accessible, stating, “From the beginning, Scientific American has been devoted to the idea that science belongs to everyone,” and expressing intent to highlight scientific discovery's societal effects.[2] Publishers at Springer Nature, which owns Scientific American, praised her editorial leadership and vision for advancing rigorous, impactful science communication amid evolving media landscapes.[2] She was to be based in the New York office, overseeing a staff focused on print, digital, and multimedia content.[2]Editorial Direction and Initiatives
Helmuth's editorial direction emphasized expanding Scientific American's coverage to highlight the societal and policy implications of scientific research, positioning the magazine as a voice against misinformation during crises like the COVID-19 pandemic. Upon her appointment on April 13, 2020, she stated her goal to "honor its history and build on its mission to publish engaging, enlightening, awe-inspiring coverage," underscoring the urgency of "trustworthy and inclusive science and science communication."[2] [13] This approach sought to make scientific insights more accessible and relevant to public discourse, moving beyond pure discovery to address real-world applications in health, environment, and technology. A key initiative was prioritizing evidence-based assertions over balanced reporting on disputed scientific matters, with Helmuth articulating a preference for "tell[ing] what we know to be true and how we know it" rather than equivocating with fringe views.[20] This manifested in editorial choices that integrated social dimensions, such as articles examining equity in scientific institutions and the human elements of research, exemplified by features on social justice movements' intersections with biology and environmental science.[21] She also promoted internal creativity, fostering collaborative sessions for headline development that encouraged unconventional ideas to boost engagement without compromising factual rigor.[20] The tenure saw heightened attention to diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) within science journalism, reflected in job postings that explicitly committed to advancing DEI and social justice alongside scientific reporting.[22] This included publishing content critiquing structural biases in research practices, though such emphases later faced scrutiny from observers arguing they diluted the magazine's traditional focus on empirical neutrality.[23]2020 Presidential Endorsement
In September 2020, shortly after Laura Helmuth assumed the role of editor-in-chief in April, Scientific American issued its first presidential endorsement in the magazine's 175-year history, supporting Democratic candidate Joe Biden over Republican incumbent Donald Trump.[24][25] The editorial, published in the October 2020 print issue but announced online on September 15, attributed the decision to Trump's rejection of evidence-based policymaking, which it claimed had "badly damaged the U.S. and its people."[24] Specific criticisms included Trump's handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, where over 190,000 Americans had died by mid-September; the editorial accused him of lying about the virus's dangers, promoting unproven treatments, flouting mask-wearing, and undermining public health measures, thereby exacerbating the crisis.[24] Additional concerns cited Trump's proposed budget cuts to agencies like the National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Science Foundation (NSF), and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC); rollbacks of environmental protections; and denial of climate science consensus.[24] In contrast, the board praised Biden for proposing fact-driven initiatives, such as a national COVID-19 testing infrastructure, expanded healthcare access via the Affordable Care Act, and aggressive climate action including rejoining the Paris Agreement and investing in clean energy.[24] Helmuth described the editorial board's consensus as unanimous and reached rapidly, emphasizing that the extraordinary circumstances—particularly the pandemic's scale and policy failures—necessitated breaking tradition to uphold the magazine's commitment to evidence over politics.[3] The move elicited immediate backlash from commentators who argued it compromised Scientific American's scientific neutrality, risking alienation of readers across political divides and amplifying perceptions of institutional bias in science media during a polarized election.[26][27] Critics, including some in conservative outlets, contended that endorsing a partisan figure conflated empirical inquiry with electoral advocacy, potentially eroding public trust in scientific institutions amid ongoing debates over pandemic origins, lockdowns, and vaccine mandates—issues where Trump's administration had prioritized rapid Operation Warp Speed development despite early controversies.[7] While Helmuth noted an influx of supportive reader feedback, the endorsement fueled broader discussions on whether science journalism should engage in explicit political interventions.[28]Controversies and Criticisms
Shift Toward Ideological Content
Under Laura Helmuth's editorship from April 2020 to November 2024, Scientific American faced criticism for shifting editorial priorities toward social justice advocacy, often framing scientific topics through lenses of systemic racism, patriarchy, and identity politics, which detractors argued subordinated empirical rigor to ideological narratives.[7][29] Critics, including evolutionary biologist Jerry A. Coyne, pointed to articles such as "Denial of Evolution Is a Form of White Supremacy" (July 2021), which equated skepticism toward Darwinian evolution with racial supremacy despite data showing higher creationist views among Black Americans than whites, as evidence of injecting unsubstantiated political claims into scientific discourse.[29][30] Similarly, pieces like "Modern Mathematics Confronts Its White Patriarchal Past" (August 2021) attributed gender and racial underrepresentation in math to historical oppression while downplaying factors like applicant pools and interest disparities.[7] Editorial decisions amplified perceptions of bias, including the termination of longtime contributor Michael Shermer in 2021 after he questioned progressive orthodoxies on gender and free speech in his column, and the rejection of a rebuttal letter defending entomologist E.O. Wilson against a December 2021 obituary labeling him racist for sociobiological views on human behavior.[30] Other examples included "Why the Term ‘JEDI’ Is Problematic for Describing Programs That Promote Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion" (September 2021), which critiqued the acronym's Star Wars origins as evoking "white saviorism" and "toxic masculinity" rather than evaluating DEI initiatives' scientific efficacy, and coverage promoting puberty blockers (November 2023) that overlooked emerging evidence of risks in youth gender treatments.[31][7] These choices, per analyses from outlets like Quillette and the Manhattan Institute's City Journal, marked a departure from the magazine's historical emphasis on neutral, evidence-driven reporting toward advocacy that aligned with progressive cultural priorities, eroding trust among scientists wary of politicized science.[29][7] Helmuth defended the direction, asserting in a 2024 interview that Scientific American had long engaged social-political issues, such as the 1925 Scopes Trial, and that reader feedback to initiatives like the 2020 presidential endorsement was predominantly positive.[7] However, skeptics contended this reframing—evident in articles like "The Racist Roots of Fighting Obesity"—prioritized causal narratives of oppression over multifactorial empirical analysis, contributing to broader concerns about institutional bias in science journalism where left-leaning viewpoints dominate without sufficient counterbalance.[7][29]COVID-19 Coverage and Scientific Neutrality
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Scientific American under Laura Helmuth's editorship, which began in April 2020, prioritized coverage aligning with prevailing public health consensus, including strong endorsements of masks, social distancing, and vaccines while framing skepticism as misinformation. Helmuth's September 2020 article outlined key lessons, asserting that masks reduce transmission based on accumulated evidence overturning early doubts due to supply shortages, and warned that misinformation—such as claims downplaying risks—contributed to excess deaths by eroding trust in evidence-based measures.[32] The magazine published pieces debunking what it termed "persistent myths," including the notion that SARS-CoV-2 was engineered in a Chinese laboratory, which it attributed to scapegoating amid geopolitical tensions and cited U.S. intelligence reports concluding the virus was not genetically modified. Other debunked claims encompassed mask ineffectiveness (contradicted by studies like one in The Lancet), hydroxychloroquine as a viable treatment (revoked by FDA after trials showed no benefit), and fears of rushed, unsafe vaccines despite rigorous testing protocols. Such articles emphasized psychological factors driving belief in these views, like distrust in elites, but critics contended this approach stifled debate by equating hypothesis-testing with conspiracy-mongering.[33][33] Criticism of this coverage centered on a perceived abandonment of scientific neutrality in favor of institutional alignment, particularly in downplaying the lab-leak hypothesis early on; a March 2021 Scientific American article likened increased scrutiny of it to KGB disinformation tactics, which delayed rigorous investigation despite later acknowledgments in pieces like a September 2021 feature deeming the theory "not totally irrational" but tying its promotion to figures dismissive of mitigation measures. Analysts argued this reflected broader biases in scientific media, including reluctance to question officials like Anthony Fauci, as independent reporting revealed inconsistencies in guidance such as the six-foot distancing rule, which Fauci later testified lacked strong empirical basis. By supporting consensus without sufficient caveats for evolving data—such as subsequent studies questioning universal mask efficacy in low-risk settings or vaccine durability against variants—the coverage was faulted for prioritizing narrative cohesion over causal scrutiny of policy impacts, including lockdowns' disproportionate harms.[7][34][35] Later Scientific American articles, such as a June 2021 examination of the lab-leak hypothesis, outlined scientific uncertainties but maintained emphasis on zoonotic origins as more probable based on prior coronavirus precedents, even as U.S. agencies like the FBI (assessing moderate confidence in a lab incident) and Department of Energy (low confidence) diverged toward lab-related risks by 2023. This lag in reevaluation, amid revelations of gain-of-function research at the Wuhan Institute of Virology funded by U.S. grants, underscored critiques that Helmuth-era editorial choices amplified systemic pressures in academia and media to conform to politically palatable explanations, potentially undermining public trust when initial dismissals clashed with accumulating circumstantial evidence.[36][7]2024 Election-Related Statements and Resignation
On November 5, 2024, the night of the U.S. presidential election in which Donald Trump defeated Kamala Harris, Laura Helmuth posted several messages on the social media platform Bluesky expressing dismay at the results.[37] In one post, she described Trump voters as "the most bigoted group of people I've ever encountered, including Gen X, which turns out to be the worst and most embarrassing generation."[38] Another message called some Trump supporters "fascists" and included profanity, such as referring to the election outcome as a "fucking awful" development.[8] [39] These statements came shortly after Scientific American, under Helmuth's leadership, had endorsed Harris for president on October 29, 2024, marking the magazine's second consecutive Democratic endorsement following its support for Joe Biden in 2020.[40] The posts quickly drew widespread criticism online, with detractors arguing that they undermined the publication's credibility as a neutral source of scientific information, especially given Helmuth's role in steering Scientific American toward more opinionated content during her tenure.[41] On November 6, 2024, Helmuth issued an apology on Bluesky, stating that her comments were "offensive and inappropriate" and attributing them to "shock and venting" in a private group chat that she had inadvertently made public.[37] [42] She emphasized that the remarks did not reflect the views of Scientific American or its staff, though critics, including scientists and former contributors, highlighted them as indicative of broader ideological biases in the magazine's editorial direction under her editorship.[8] [39] Helmuth announced her resignation as editor-in-chief on November 14, 2024, nine days after the election, citing in a statement to staff that it was the "right time to move on" amid ongoing discussions with the magazine's leadership.[41] Scientific American confirmed the departure, with publisher Axel R. Krause praising her contributions but not directly addressing the controversy, while an internal memo described the transition as planned rather than abrupt.[40] The resignation followed subscriber complaints and public calls for accountability, with some attributing it to the posts' amplification of perceptions that Helmuth prioritized partisan expression over scientific objectivity.[37] [42] No evidence emerged of formal disciplinary action, but the timing linked directly to the backlash from her election-night statements.[39]Post-Scientific American Activities
Transition to Slate and Current Role
Following her resignation from Scientific American on November 14, 2024, amid backlash over social media comments criticizing supporters of President-elect Donald Trump, Laura Helmuth transitioned to a new role at Slate.[41][8] In February 2025, Slate launched "Good Job," a flagship advice column addressing workplace challenges, co-authored by Helmuth and Doree Shafrir.[43] The column debuted on February 11, 2025, with contributions from both writers focusing on issues such as colleague dynamics, professional boundaries, and career dilemmas.[43] This marked Helmuth's return to Slate, where she had previously served as science and health editor from 2012 to 2016.[19] As of October 2025, Helmuth continues as a co-columnist for "Good Job," handling submissions anonymously and providing guidance on modern work complexities, including health care isolation, shift scheduling conflicts, and interpersonal office tensions.[44][45] The role represents a departure from her prior emphasis on science journalism toward broader professional advice, though she draws on her editorial experience in responses.[46]Ongoing Contributions and Public Engagements
Following her resignation from Scientific American in November 2024, Helmuth has co-authored the "Good Job" advice column for Slate, focusing on workplace dilemmas such as colleague dynamics, scheduling conflicts, and professional boundaries.[47] Launched in early 2025, the column addresses reader-submitted queries anonymously, with Helmuth collaborating with Doree Shafrir on responses emphasizing practical strategies for career navigation.[48] Examples include advice on managing crushes in academic settings (October 16, 2025) and handling unkept job promises affecting health (October 2, 2025).[49] [48] Helmuth also contributes periodic essays to The Last Word On Nothing, a collective blog by science writers. She joined the platform in May 2025, producing pieces on topics like historical problem-solving in science ("We Need to Remember Problems We Solved," May 14, 2025) and personal reflections on scientific travel ("Science Vacations Are the Best Vacations," October 20, 2025).[50] [51] These writings maintain her focus on science communication while exploring broader societal intersections, aligning with her freelance editorial work.[52] In public engagements, Helmuth delivered a virtual talk at Stevens Institute of Technology's Center for Science Writings on March 26, 2025, titled "When Science and Politics Clash." The Zoom event examined her Scientific American tenure, critiques of specific policy approaches to science, and challenges to journalistic objectivity amid political polarization.[53] No additional major speeches or panels were documented through October 2025, though her prior roles have positioned her for continued involvement in science journalism forums.[54]Publications and Bibliography
Selected Articles and Books
Helmuth has authored articles on topics including neuroscience, animal behavior, and scientific curiosities for publications such as Smithsonian Magazine and Scientific American.[55][56] Selected articles include:- "Your Brain, By the Numbers," Smithsonian Magazine, presenting key statistics on human brain anatomy and capacity, such as the brain containing approximately 86 billion neurons.
- "How Do Birds Find Their Way Home?," Smithsonian Magazine, examining avian navigation mechanisms, including magnetic field detection and landmark recognition.
- "We Are Living in a Golden Age of Apples," Scientific American, discussing advancements in apple breeding and genetics that have expanded varieties and improved disease resistance since the mid-20th century.
- "Curiosity, Horses and Hypochondria," Scientific American, exploring psychological and neuroscientific aspects of curiosity, equine cognition, and health anxiety.[56]