
Building a Network for Black Women in Science with Tomi Akingbade
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Tomi Akingbade is the founder of the Black Women in Science Network and a Ph.D. student in Neurochemistry at the University of Cambridge. Tomi’s scientific research centers on the inflammatory mechanisms of aggregates in Alzheimer’s disease. Interested in science since childhood, Tomi founded the Black Women in Science Network as a response to the lack of frank conversations about being a Black woman in science, and the supportive community such conversations generate. The image of what it is to be a scientist is changing, and must continue to do so, if the sciences are to achieve a comprehensive understanding of nature. Partly to that end, Tomi is working to expand the Black Women in Science Network into a global organization.
Cambridge University neurochemistry Ph.D. student, Tomi Akingbade is founder of the Black Women in Science Network. Tomi’s scientific research centers on the inflammatory mechanisms of aggregates in Alzheimer’s disease.
Our conversation covered a range of topics, including the following:
- How Tomi discovered neuroscience early in high school, but didn’t study in the field until years later because she didn’t know it was a career path
- The trials and tribulations of finding your way to – and through – a Ph.D. program, and the importance of supportive mentors throughout
- How Tomi started work in a virology lab in February 2020 – just before the COVID pandemic started
- How Tomi decided to start the Black Women in Science networking group in 2018
Episode Resources:
- Tomi Akingbade on LinkedIn
- Black Women in Science Network
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