Carsten Könneker

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Carsten Könneker
Carsten Könneker in 2014
EducationWashington University in St. Louis (MA)
University of Cologne (Diploma in Physics)
Board member ofUniversity of Konstanz, Science Media Center Germany, Max Planck Institute for Astronomy

Carsten Könneker (born February 15, 1972, in Leverkusen, West Germany) is a German science journalist and science communication researcher. From 2010 to 2019, he was editor-in-chief of Spektrum der Wissenschaft, the German edition of Scientific American. From 2012 to 2018, he was professor of science communication and science studies at Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, and founding director of the German National Institute for Science Communication, Karlsruhe. From 2019 to 2022, he was one of the managing directors of the Klaus Tschira Foundation.

Education[edit]

Carsten Könneker studied German literature, philosophy and art history (Master of Arts, Washington University in St. Louis, USA, 1997) and physics (Diploma, University of Cologne, Germany, 1998).[1] From 1998 to 2000, he wrote his dissertation on the literary, aesthetic, and political-ideological reception of relativity theory and quantum mechanics during the Weimar Republic and Nazi Germany.[2] The dissertation was supported by a scholarship from the German National Academic Foundation.[3]

Career[edit]

In 2000, Carsten Könneker became an editor at Spektrum der Wissenschaft, the German edition of Scientific American, which later became part of Springer Nature's Nature Portfolio. In this position, he played a key role in the development of the popular science magazine Gehirn & Geist, founded in 2002, which provides interdisciplinary coverage of neuroscience, psychology, artificial intelligence, and philosophy of mind, and which was later, since 2004, published in the U.S. as an adapted edition under the title Scientific American Mind. Also in 2004, Könneker became editor-in-chief of Gehirn & Geist.[4] In 2010, he became editor-in-chief of Spektrum der Wissenschaft as well as its online platform Spektrum.de.[5] In 2011, Könneker founded Spektrum Neo as a children's science magazine in the Spektrum portfolio.[6] He received the Werner-und-Inge-Grüter-Prize for Science Communication for that magazine in 2012.[7]

Also in 2012, in addition to his editorial work, Könneker was appointed full professor for science communication and science studies at Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT),[8] where he helped establish the research field Science of Science Communication at that institution. He was also the founding scientific director of the German National Institute for Science Communication in Karlsruhe, jointly funded by KIT and the Klaus Tschira Foundation.[9]

Actor model of science communication by Carsten Könneker (first published in 2016)

Könneker is the originator of the actor model of science communication, which he first published in 2016. In the journal Science, Könneker has argued that the advent of social media represents an epochal development for science communication as well, as it opens up new opportunities for researchers in particular to engage in external science communication in a self-mediated way.[10]

In 2019, Könneker became one of two managing directors of the Klaus Tschira Foundation, one of Europe's largest private foundations dedicated to science and science communication, a post he held until 2022.[11]

Appointments and service[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Zur Person: Prof. Dr. Carsten Könneker".
  2. ^ "Dissertation published in 2001 under the title "Auflösung der Natur. Auflösung der Geschichte".Moderner Roman und NS-"Weltanschauung" im Zeichen der theoretischen Physik".
  3. ^ "Scholarships and awards as noted on Könneker's profile page of the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology".
  4. ^ "Perso spektrum".
  5. ^ "Könneker kommt 2011 für Breuer".
  6. ^ "Ende August startet "Spektrum neo"".
  7. ^ "Preisträger 2012".
  8. ^ Karlsruhe, W. M. K. (March 29, 2023). "KIT - Department für Wissenschaftskommunikation - Team". www.wmk.itz.kit.edu.
  9. ^ "KIT - das KIT - Medien - Presseinformationen - Archiv Presseinformationen - Wissenschaftskommunikation: Zehn Jahre NaWik". 15 February 2023.
  10. ^ Könneker, Carsten; Lugger, Beatrice (October 4, 2013). "Public Science 2.0—Back to the Future". Science. 342 (6154): 49–50. Bibcode:2013Sci...342...49K. doi:10.1126/science.1245848. PMID 24092719. S2CID 206552338 – via CrossRef.
  11. ^ "Klaus Tschira Stiftung künftig mit neuer Doppelspitze". Klaus Tschira Stiftung.