XClose

UCL Department of Civil, Environmental and Geomatic Engineering

Home
Menu

EPICentre's Alessandro Massazza makes national shortlist for science writing competition

29 April 2019

PhD student Alessandro Massazza was recently announced as one of 12 finalists for a national science writing competition.

Alessandro Massazza

The Psychology and Language Sciences researcher, based in CEGE’s EPICentre, is focussing his current research on the 2016-17 Central Italy earthquakes and the mental health consequences of such complex emergencies.

Speaking on his nomination, Alessandro said “I am very pleased to receive this nomination for my work. Disasters like the devastating 2016-17 Central Italy earthquakes can have serious effects on the psychological wellbeing of those who lived through them. It is extremely gratifying to be nominated for this award as it demonstrates that the wider community does regard this research highly.”

Read the full UCL Brain Sciences article Alessandro’s nomination below:
 

Psychology and Language Sciences researcher makes shortlist for national science writing competition

PhD student Alessandro Massazza was a runner-up for a national science writing competition organised by the Economic and Social Research Council, called Better Lives.

Alessandro’s paper focused on intrusive memories, a symptom of the diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). These are vivid, highly sensory memories of sections of the trauma that can sometimes pop up in the minds of survivors without them wanting to and can feel as though the trauma is happening all over again.

His research addresses why only ‘certain moments’ of a trauma are encoded as intrusive memories, while the remaining moments of the same trauma are encoded as normal autobiographical memories.

He collected qualitative and quantitative data on intrusive memories from 104 earthquake survivors by living for several months in the most hardly hit disaster zone of the 2016-17 Central Italy earthquakes.

The ESRC, in partnership with SAGE Publishing, organised its third student writing competition and ESRC-funded PhD students were asked to explain how their research has an impact on improving the lives of people. Alessandro was one of 12 finalists from 117 applicants.

“It was fantastic to receive the news that I had been selected as one of the finalists for the ESRC and SAGE BetterLives science writing competition. The breadth of topics tackled through this competition was truly striking, encompassing migration, climate change, and health. I was glad that mine and others’ research on mental health conditions were included side by side to key contemporary issues,” said Alessandro.

The competition celebrates and fosters the writing skills of the next generation of social scientists, while engaging the public with the incredible breadth and depth of social science research taking place throughout the UK.

Entrants were encouraged to use their imagination to write 800 words that would capture the interest of the public, engage people with their research and demonstrate their writing and communication skills. A judging panel selected the 12 finalists.

Professor Shamit Saggar, Director, The University of Western Australia Public Policy Institute, and a judge for the competition said: “The judging panel of the 2019 Better Lives competition examined many excellent examples of work that showed the very best of ESRC-supported doctoral research that was both intellectually strong and highly focused on tackling real-world practical social problems. The finalists amply demonstrate that social science matters in shaping evidence-led solutions. Investment in doctoral research is therefore vital and reflects the seriousness in our ambitions as a society to drive prosperity and social cohesion.”

All shortlisted candidates will get the opportunity to attend a writing masterclass on how to get published, run by SAGE publishing.

Links