Dr. Andrea Nero is a historian of science whose work sits at the intersection of knowledge, authority and modern technological culture. She holds a PhD from the University at Buffalo, where her research examined how systems of expertise are constructed and contested, and she completed advanced museum studies training through Harvard University, refining her focus on public knowledge, institutions and cultural memory. Her scholarship has appeared in leading venues in the field and she has peer-reviewed for major journals, bringing both academic rigor and curatorial sensibility to her writing. Known for translating dense intellectual traditions into sharp contemporary analysis, her work draws on intellectual history, science and technology studies and cultural theory to interrogate who is granted credibility, how authority travels and why expertise matters in an age increasingly shaped by artificial intelligence.