
Hi, I’m Anayancy. I’m a microbiology PhD student at Emory, going into my 5th year, and an HHMI Gilliam Fellow (‘24–‘27), Robert W. Woodruff Fellow, and Centennial Scholars Fellow.
My research
I study two bacteria, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus, that co-infect the lungs of people with cystic fibrosis. I focus on how P. aeruginosa adapts to S. aureus over the course of an infection. I want to understand how they adapt and outcompete each other over time. My work is part wet lab and part bioinformatics: I run experiments at the bench, then use phylogenetics and sequence data to see what’s happening at the genetic level.
A few of the threads I’m pulling on right now:
- Microevolution: the small genetic changes these bacteria pick up over short timescales.
- Competition and coexistence: what decides whether one of them pushes the other out or they both stick around.
- Bench to genome: connecting what I see in experiments to the signals left behind in sequence data.
You can find my publications here.
Organizing
Outside the lab (though I’d argue it isn’t really outside), I’m a labor organizer. I’m the elected VP of Communications for EmoryUnite!, our graduate-worker union, and I lead its International Student Working Group. EmoryUnite! won its union election in 2023 and ratified its first contract with Emory in 2025; I stepped into organizing in 2026.
As lead of the International Student Working Group, I helped organize the DeFlock Emory Coalition, a cross-campus effort to remove Flock Safety’s automated license-plate readers from our campus. We collected over 1,000 petition signatures, built relationships with AAUP and student groups, and produced teach-in, op-ed, and outreach materials that made the stakes legible to our community. I’ve also led a session on anti-racist practices in my PhD program and pushed for a more transparent, equitable recruitment process.
I organize because the people who do the teaching, research, and care work that keep a university running deserve a real say in their conditions, and because international, undocumented, and other vulnerable workers are too often left out of that conversation. Again and again, I’ve watched decisions get made for marginalized communities without their input, by people who assume they already know what’s best.
I also mentor undergraduate researchers, because who gets to do science matters to me as much as the science itself.
On being public
I’m a DACA recipient, and I don’t hide it. I almost didn’t make it to college. DACA students in Georgia can’t access federal aid or state tuition assistance, and I’m here because of programs like TheDream.US Opportunity Scholarship and people who decided to invest in me. Staying quiet keeps no one safe, so I’d rather use whatever platform I have. If that’s not for you, that’s okay.
Why this site
I made this to keep notes on what I’m learning, mostly in R, and to share pieces of my research and the computational side of biology as I go. If any of it turns out to be useful to you, even better.
Find me
- GitHub: @anayancycodes
- LinkedIn: anayancy-ramos
- Bluesky: @anayancy.bsky.social