Helen Thomson is a writer and consultant with New Scientist. She has also written for the Guardian, Daily Mail, BBC Future and Psychologies and has won various awards for her journalism.
Her research has taken her from coffee with five psychopathic mass murderers in Broadmoor to poking around in the Large Hadron Collider.
She has exclusively revealed plans for the world's first head transplant, learned how to rule at roulette, had her fat zapped, scrubbed up for a cutting-edge prostate cancer operation and watched a paralysed man walk for the first time using a mind-controlled exoskeleton.
But her greatest fascination remains writing about the brain, especially those that don't look like everyone else's.
Helen has a BSc in Neuroscience and an MSc in Science Communication. She lives in London with her husband and her Spanish Water Dog. This is her first book.