Summary
Princess Ojiaku is a content strategist and science-data journalist with a decade of experience translating neuroscience, public policy, and messy datasets into clear, engaging narratives and interactive experiences. With a background as a working neuroscientist and an M.S. in Biology plus a Master’s in Public Affairs, she bridges lab‑level research and policy storytelling—having written for Scientific American, Popular Science, The Washington Post, and Quartz. At 18F she applies content strategy and UX writing to public-facing digital services, while her independent work fuses data journalism, R/Python analysis, and JavaScript-driven interactivity. She has built patient-centered educational tools and tools for data storytelling, combining medical literacy with design and coding to make complex science accessible. Known for decoding technical literature and turning longitudinal brain-imaging and survey data into actionable narratives, she pairs rigorous quantitative skills with a journalist’s instinct for compelling, human-centered stories.
9 years of coding experience
5 years of employment as a software developer
Master's Degree, Public Affairs, Master's Degree, Public Affairs at University of Wisconsin-Madison
B.S., Biological Sciences, B.S., Biological Sciences at Louisiana State University
M.S., Biology, M.S., Biology at North Carolina Central University
Swahili