Her PhD, funded by the Institute for Advanced Studies at the University of Luxembourg, focused on the LuxTIME Machine project, where she collaborated with researchers in history, eco-hydrology, and environmental cheminformatics. The LuxTIME project aimed to create an inventory of social (e.g., official reports, newspapers) and natural archives (e.g., pollution measurements). By integrating these archives, the project sought to expand possibilities for uncovering historical evidence in exposome research. Through this work, she gained valuable insights into the data visualization challenges faced by the humanities, particularly by historians, and the critical role of data visualization in interdisciplinary research. Her other research interests include data literacy, evaluation methods for data visualization in digital humanities, and data physicalization.