 I have an educational background from Auckland University. I obtained my BSc there and then I went on to do a Masters and my thesis topic was looking at the Bola-Shivens telescope and a search for gamma rays in the Southern Hemisphere. And after that I decided to change direction and moved on to an undergrad ploma in biological sciences at Auckland University. And then, furthering my education, I decided to combine my skills in both biological sciences and physics to do a PhD on mathematical and numerical modelling of bacterial colony growth on high nutrient surfaces. And having completed that, I went on to do a postgraduate deployment in biological sciences. And then before I was able to continue an academic career, I was looking for post-doctorate positions and then the editing opportunities came up and I ended up doing that full time instead of pursuing an academic career. So, because of that I don't have a huge publication record but I've published a few papers, notably one in the Springhand book of nanomaterials which was a review paper called Understanding Bacterial Colonies which was published in 2009. And another one was spatial temporal modelling of bacterial colony growth on solid media which was published in molecular biosciences in 2008. Now in between all that while I was completing my PhD I also completed a paid project for environment wikato in New Zealand looking at the geothermal features in the wikato region so I also have a report published on that for environment wikato. Now after going on to get my editing experience I completed editing in a wide range of topics so I've done everything from mathematics to bioinformatics, neuroinformatics, computer modelling, lots on physics, lots on engineering and lots on diverse topics like architecture. So when I am editing I take my editing jobs very seriously whether they're large or small I put my best effort into it. One thing that I try and do which I've learned to do over the years is to try and preserve the author's voice while I am editing their paper to make it academically acceptable for high-end academic journals. So this is quite a skill and I'm still acquiring it really but I've been editing four times since 2013 so I'm homing my skills and as the editor I always try and give my clients the best job that I possibly can and so I'm going to end this short video by saying that editing is where I am right now and is where I hope to continue and I hope to keep learning and growing my skills. Thank you for listening.