Bachelor’s Degree in Journalism (UCM) and Master’s and Doctorate in the Information and Knowledge Society (UOC). She works with a practical and critical approach, contributing qualitative methodologies to deepen the understanding of what is possible to know through quantitative and computational methods.
In 2025, she defended her doctoral thesis (cum laude and international distinction), titled “Communication Against Hate. Concepts and Methods for the Analysis of Political Antagonism in the Digital Public Sphere” (publication expected in 2026). In this work, she offers a mapping of the practices devised by citizen activism against online hate speech, based on interviews with relevant actors, and proposes a horizon for their updating and strengthening, in light of the results of two case studies that she analyzed with a novel mix of methods, in which she combined social network analysis with frame analysis.
Currently, she is a postdoctoral researcher on the Aging in Data project, in the Communication Networks & Social Change research group of the UOC. In this research, she critically analyzes the perceptions of older adults regarding two digital paradoxes: the privacy paradox and the disinformation paradox.