Emma Byrne (author) explained

Emma Byrne
Nationality:British
Alma Mater:University College London
Occupation:Writer and scientist

Emma Byrne is a contemporary British writer and scientist, working in the fields of swearing, artificial intelligence and robotics.

Career

Scientist

Byrne completed her PhD in Expectation Violation Analysis[1] at the University College London, UCL, Department of Computer Science in 2005. Her work showed how it is possible to automatically identify and rank unexpected, and therefore interesting, news from the large volumes of news are available around the clock and around the world.

She later worked at the University of Aberystwyth as part of a team that created a robot scientist.[2] This robot used artificial intelligence to generate functional genomics hypotheses about the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae and experimentally tested these hypotheses by using laboratory automation. During this time, she also won the British Computer Society AI group's annual machine intelligence award.[3]

As part of her work in medical informatics, she studied the introduction of the summary care record, a centrally stored, shared electronic patient record and made recommendations about the implementation of large scale information technology projects in health care.[4]

Writer

Byrne has written about science, business and culture for Wired,[5] the FT,[6] The Guardian[7] and many others.[8]

Her first book was a popular science book called Swearing is Good for You,[9] published in 2017. The book outlines the science behind swearing: how it affects us both physically and emotionally, and how it is natural and beneficial. She concludes that often, including swear words in our language can actually help us gain credibility and establish a sense of camaraderie. The book has been described as "entertaining and often enlightening"[10] and has been translated into multiple languages.

Her second book is called How to Build a Human: What Science Knows About Childhood.[11] This reviews what science can teach about childhood and Byrne suggests that parents can adopt the methods of science to help raise their children. This includes focusing on the variance, as well as the average, of behaviours and characteristics, rather than following prescriptive instructions for parenthood.

Media and events

As an expert in swearing, robotics and artificial intelligence, Byrne has made numerous appearances on Sky News, BBC news and radio,[12] and at science festivals and literary festivals.[13] She was featured in the documentary "Holy F***"[14] presented by Ardal O'Hanlon on RTE One, where she discussed gender differences in swearing.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Byrne . Emma . The expectation violation analysis framework: the analysis and evaluation of interesting news by means of inconsistency with expectations. . 2005 . UCL . London . 21 May 2021.
  2. King . Ross . Rowland . Jem . Oliver . Stephen . Young . Michael . Aubrey . Wayne . Byrne . Emma . Liakata . Maria. Markham . Magdalena. Pir . Pinar. Soldatova . Larisa. Sparkes . Andrew. Whelan . Kenneth. Clare . Amanda. The Automation of Science . Science . 3 Apr 2009 . 324 . 5923 . 85–89 . 10.1126/science.1165620 . 19342587 . 2009Sci...324...85K . 14948753 . 21 May 2021.
  3. Web site: Byrne . Emma . Whelan . Ken . Electrolux Sponsored Machine Intelligence Awards 2006 goes to 'Adam - the Robot Scientist' . BCS SGAI . BCS . 21 May 2021.
  4. 337. Greenhalgh. Trisha. Stramer. Katja. Bratan. Tanja. Byrne. Emma. Mohammad. Yara. Russell. Jill. Introduction of shared electronic records: multi-site case study using diffusion of innovation theory. BMJ. 2008. a1786. 10.1136/bmj.a1786. 18948344. 3269664. 1063210.
  5. Byrne . Emma . From ethics to accountability, this is how AI will suck less in 2019. Wired . Condé Nast . 21 May 2021.
  6. News: Byrne . Emma . Accolades for pioneers in world of science . 21 May 2021 . Financial Times . 14 June 2012.
  7. Web site: Byrne . Emma . Philip Pullman's swearwords are a useful lesson for children. 21 May 2021. The Guardian. 24 October 2017 .
  8. Web site: Byrne . Emma. Writing. Emma Byrne . 10 February 2017 . 21 May 2021.
  9. Book: Byrne . Emma . Swearing is Good For You . 2 November 2017 . Profile Books . 240 . 9781781255780 . 21 May 2021.
  10. News: The power of profane language . 21 May 2021 . The Economist . The Economist Newspaper Limited . 27 Jan 2018.
  11. Book: Byrne . Emma . How to Build a Human . 1 July 2021. Profile Books . 354 . 21 May 2021. 9781788164917.
  12. News: Marr . Andrew . Start the Week . 21 May 2021 . BBC . 20 Nov 2017.
  13. Web site: Byrne . Emma . Speaking . Emma Byrne . 18 January 2017 . 21 May 2021.
  14. Web site: HOLY F*** . RTE Press Centre . RTE . 21 May 2021.