Within the Creator Highlight collection, TDS Editors chat with members of our neighborhood about their profession path in knowledge science and AI, their writing, and their sources of inspiration. Right this moment, we’re thrilled to share our dialog with Sara A. Metwalli.
Sara is a quantum computing researcher on the Quantum Software program Lab, exploring how machine studying and quantum methods intersect and the right way to write software program for quantum computer systems. She writes about quantum subjects with a give attention to readability, realism, and separating hype from what truly works. Sara additionally loves figuring out, studying, writing, and exploring the world. She has lived in Egypt, Japan, the US, and now in Scotland.
Once we final spoke with you 5 years in the past — in our very first Creator Highlight! — you have been within the early levels of your PhD program in Japan. What have you ever been as much as?
It seems like without end since we did the final writer highlight! I began writing for TDS in 2019. I used to be getting ready to begin my PhD, did so in 2020, and I completed it in 2024. I have to admit that writing for TDS helped me get by way of the isolation of being a PhD pupil throughout COVID.
I moved to the U.S. in mid-2024, proper after defending my thesis, and labored for six months as an outreach and schooling coordinator earlier than returning to academia for a one-year postdoc. I lastly moved to Scotland in October of final yr.
Within the 5 years since that Q&A, we’ve witnessed the arrival of LLMs and brokers, amongst different improvements. How has the rise of on a regular basis AI instruments affected your work — and life generally?
The rise in recognition of LLMs modified the world and never simply my life. As an individual primarily in academia, I’ve at all times learn the papers and talked to the researchers who labored on these applied sciences. I labored with them and mentioned their concepts. I at all times discover it fascinating how analysis grows exterior of analysis labs — how researchers don’t understand how a know-how can be used as soon as everybody has entry to it.
The sudden, explosive recognition of generative AI made me extra conscious of the significance of sharing analysis because it develops, reasonably than solely when it matures.
I do imagine LLMs can be utilized to make lots of people’s lives simpler, however they are often misused to trigger hurt. Discovering the stability on a private stage, on knowledgeable stage, and on a neighborhood stage is a problem that any rising know-how faces at first.
Your curiosity in quantum know-how began lengthy earlier than the sector began to generate critical buzz previously couple of years. What drew you to this space within the first place?
My curiosity in quantum tech began someplace round 2018! I used to be doing my grasp’s and dealing as a educating assistant for a quantum physics class. I loved the category significantly, and the professor did an amazing job explaining issues I by no means understood earlier than.
Once I was contemplating pursuing a PhD, the sector of quantum computing was simply beginning to bloom: IBM had shared its intention to make its gadgets public and launched Qiskit. It was thrilling, complicated, and mentally difficult (the three issues that entice me to any subject). It had the maths, the potential, and the coding. I requested the professor I used to be working with if he knew anybody prepared to tackle a PhD pupil with no quantum background to do a PhD, and to my shock, he did. The particular person he launched me to turned out to be my PhD supervisor.
I like software program and math, and quantum combines these two with the potential for nice purposes. Right this moment, I’m a researcher within the Quantum Software program Lab on the College of Edinburgh, in Scotland. I’m engaged on the bridge between knowledge science and quantum computing, in addition to on quantum machine studying and the purposes of quantum computing.
Your public writing on TDS has shifted previously yr or two to focus nearly completely on quantum. Why is it necessary for knowledge and ML professionals to find out about this know-how?
Since “quantum” is a buzzword, misinformation about it has exploded. As somebody within the subject, I hate seeing folks being misled by false data. I do see the potential of quantum, and I see how briskly it’s growing. I believe the one cause it’s bettering so rapidly is the involvement of individuals exterior academia. I imagine knowledge scientists are important to the event of quantum computing, and quantum computing has the potential to alter the best way we take into consideration knowledge science and machine studying.
I personally imagine that knowledge scientists ought to care about quantum computing as a result of lots of the core duties they already work on (equivalent to optimization, sampling, and large-scale linear algebra) are precisely the sorts of issues quantum algorithms intention to hurry up or deal with in another way. Quantum approaches, such because the Quantum Approximate Optimization Algorithm and Quantum Machine Studying, have the potential to enhance efficiency in areas equivalent to mannequin coaching, complicated simulations, and decision-making underneath uncertainty.
Realistically, immediately’s {hardware} continues to be restricted, however the long-term influence might reshape how troublesome knowledge issues are solved. So it’s a likelihood not simply to be prepared for the subsequent massive step in tech, but additionally to be a part of shaping that know-how.
What’s your expertise been like as a public writer within the age of ChatGPT, Gemini, and the remainder? What motivates you to jot down lately?
That could be a nice query! I like generative AI; it exhibits how far we, as people, have been capable of take know-how. However it’s, in spite of everything, a machine; it’s an algorithm that finds patterns: it has no soul, no expertise.
I proceed to jot down and browse posts by authors I like as a result of educating or transferring data is a human factor. ChatGPT can provide the fundamentals of a subject, however somebody who has been by way of the educational course of can inform you extra, as they may contemplate the obstacles they confronted and the challenges they overcame. They will relate to the readers greater than AI can — and that, for me, is essential.
To be taught extra about Sara’s work and keep up-to-date along with her newest articles, you possibly can observe her on TDS.















