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I'm still hoping to work more on improving this article, but haven't made much progress lately. — jmcgnh(talk)(contribs) 05:37, 27 August 2017 (UTC)
Add categories, particularly "women in science" and whichever nationality category turns out to be appropriate. I'm sure there are more categories that would be appropriate. See if any of the following make sense: DONE
Women Physicists
Brandeis alumni
Stanford alumni
Living People
Science bloggers
people from Mexico City
Mexico skeptics? no specific Mexico skeptics category
TV personalities with Mexican origin
People who have given TEDx talks? nothing found
Any category involving BigThink talks? nothing found
living persons with unknown birth year
OK, I used HotCat for the first time to add/subtract categories. Just barely a labor-saving device – I expected a better way to browse the category hierarchy and discover suitable new categories.
Determine a source for nationality, right now infobox has ethnicity. Check whether switching to a different infobox style is appropriate. U.S. citizen?
It appears that "thesciencebabe.com" is being redirected to "sciencewithdebbie.com", so references and links should be updated to reflect preferred domain name. This seems to be the source of all of the warnings found by Checklinks.
Check her activity on Twitter, Facebook, Google+ other social media?
LinkedIn has been fruitful for filling in the timeline, but masters degree timeline seems a bit unclear. More to be mined there.
There may well be other video that could be added to the External video box. She does plenty of self-promotion, some of it may be useful.
Any more photos that can be used?
More biographical details would be helpful, such as birth year, birth place (more specific than Mexico City).
It would be good to get a better sense of balance between "working physicist" and "STEM popularizer" and other activities.
Properly done, the lead should not contain footnotes. The information should appear at appropriate points in the body of the article.
There may be some references or external links in the es.wikipedia that are not given here. Check to see if they are useful. PULLED
Columnize references. DONE
There is a REDIRECT here from "Science Babe". Check what else links to the page. DONE
Check out the Yvette d'Entremont (SciBabe) page for other ideas of what to look for and include. DONE
Figure out what "cellular wave transmission" in the lead is really talking about.
Being a member of the American Physical Society is not notable. Being a Fellow would be, but becoming a member is just a matter of signing up. But she has a "Careers" profile up on the APS website that's worth noting.
Too much of the current article depends on primary sources.
Fix CS1 errors in references. DONE
Check refs for possible authorlinks
Lots of missed opportunities in the article for wikilinks.
There is nothing in the body of the article that supports the "Skeptics" categorization. Try NECCS video. It appears she may have been a speaker at more than one conference.
Has there been criticism of the "babe" aspect of her chosen nickname (see SciBabe article)?
DB is profiled at the American Physical Society site [but don't see "why" aside from unspoken "she's inspiring because she's a woman". Makes clear that her "day job" is not really physics although physics training was one of the several ways to become a Wall Street "quant".]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7plWdeamsEg This should be from a talk at NECSS; may establish cred as skeptic (found via palantelatino.com article above) (already in External video box)
'''Deborah Berebichez''' ([[Ciudad de México]]), es una doctora en física graduada en [[Stanford University]] y divulgadora de ciencia.
En su tesis bajo la dirección de
Thesis advisors:
[[George C. Papanicolaou]]
<ref>http://web.archive.org/web/http://georgep.stanford.edu/~papanico/ Professor George C. Papanicola - [[Stanford University]]</ref>
y el físico (1998) [[Robert B. Laughlin]]
<ref>http://www.stanford.edu/dept/physics/people/faculty/laughlin_robert.html Professor Robert B. Laughlin-[[Stanford University]]</ref>
Berebichez desarrolló un nuevo método para focalizar la [[onda electromagnética]] con extrema exactitud en tiempo y espacio.<ref>
Abstract of the thesis: http://www.math.nyu.edu/~debbie1/abstract.htm ''TIME REVERSAL OF ACOUSTIC WAVES'' </ref>
<ref>http://www.thesciencebabe.com/media/DrDebbieDissertation.pdf thesis 2004] - (pdf 22 MT) see also " Weblinks"
</ref>
La aplicación de este método es útil para una [[transmisión de datos|transmisión segura de datos]] de un punto a otro de manera práctica.
== Referencias ==
{{reflist}}
== Enlaces externos ==
* Debbie Berebichez: [http://www.scienceblogs.de/personagrata/2009/02/debbie-berebichez-science-of-everyday-life.php ''Science of Everyday Life''] - Selbstdarstellung im "Science Blog" - Deutsch
* Debbie Berebichez: [http://www.thesciencebabe.com/bio.php ''Biographie''] auf ihrer Homepage "Science Babe"' English
* [http://www.tvmainstream.com/default.cfm?ID=8977&type=wmhigh&clip=2 Interview with Debbie Berebichez] - (12 min Video) 17. Oktober 2007 - MIEG (Media Information Exchange Group), N.Y. - English
* Debbie Berebichez: [http://web.archive.org/web/http://menorcatechtalk.com/guests/deborah-berebichez/ TechTalk] - [[Menorca]] - 18. Juni 2009 - English
Article text begins here
"Science Babe" redirects here. For the blogger and chemist known as "SciBabe", see Yvette d'Entremont.
Deborah Berebichez
Outrageous Acts of Thinking-Berebichez - NECSS 2015.JPG
Physicist Deborah Berebichez speaks on Outrageous Acts of Thinking at the Northeast Conference of Science and Skepticism (NECSS) on April 12, 2015 at F.I.T. Haft Auditorium in New York City.
Deborah Berebichez is a Mexican physicist, data scientist, TV host, educator and entrepreneur who dedicates her career to promoting education in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) fields. She was the first Mexican woman to graduate with a Ph.D. in physics from Stanford University. She has developed models for cellular wave transmission which are in the process of being patented. Sometimes known as "The Science Babe", she appears in mainstream television and radio segments where she explains concepts in physics in everyday life.
Deborah Berebichez is a Mexican physicist, data scientist and TV host, active in promoting education in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) fields. She was the first Mexican woman to graduate with a Ph.D. in physics from Stanford University. Sometimes known as "The Science Babe", she appears in mainstream television and radio segments where she explains concepts in physics in everyday life.