After completing his doctoral program, Becker wrote and lectured on scientific concepts, providing lay-friendly professional commentary on science. Becker has written for several news and periodicals concerning science for the interested layperson, including the
BBC (which culminated in a video series),
NPR,
New Scientist ,
Scientific American,
The New York Times,
Aeon, and the global educational program
NOVA on
PBS. In 2014, while employed at the
Public Library of Science, Becker was a lead developer in a project that produced
Rich Citations, which were an extensive expansion to the capabilities of digital cross-referencing across the
PLOS platform.. In 2018, after publishing
What Is Real?, Becker was appointed as a visiting scholar at the Office for History of Science and Technology at the
University of California, Berkeley. In 2020 he accepted a position as a visiting researcher in the Department of Logic and Philosophy of Science, at
University of California, Irvine. Becker has also been a member of the California Quantum Interpretation Network, "a research collaboration among faculty and staff at multiple UC campuses and other universities across California, focusing on the interpretation of quantum physics." Becker's second book,
More Everything Forever, moves away from the controversy surrounding his earlier work,
What Is Real?, and instead examines the relationship between science and the
consumer technology industry that has developed and spread globally from California's
Silicon Valley. In her review for
The New York Times, Jennifer Szalai called the book "smart and wonderfully readable". == Selected publications ==