Lecturer in Pharmacy Practice, University of Central Lancashire
Cathryn has been working as a community pharmacist in the UK for over 25 years, and as an academic pharmacist for over ten. She has an interest in sexual health, in LGBTQ+ health, and in equality, diversity and inclusion.
Cathryn has worked in pharmacy regulation, and has appeared on radio and TV discussing pharmacy related topics.
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Reader in the Department of Welsh and Celtic Studies, Aberystwyth University
I contribute to language and literature modules for beginners, intermediate and fluent speakers across all undergraduate and postgraduate schemes in the department. I have also developed modules in my own areas of expertise encompassing modern and contemporary literature as well as the literary culture of the early modern period (1500–1800).
Traddodiad Benywaidd? Merched a Barddoniaeth yng Nghymru cyn 1800 (A Female Tradition? Women and Poetry in Wales before 1800)
Y Golygydd a Diwydiant Cyhoeddi Cymru (The Editor and Wales’s Publishing Industry).
Testunau'r Enfys: Llunio Profiadau LHDT+ (Rainbow-coloured Texts: constructing LGBT+ experiences; co-delivered with colleagues from TFTS).
Women’s Poetry in Ireland, Scotland and Wales 1400–1800.
My research into early modern and contemporary literature includes critical evaluation, editorial scholarship, and literary translation in the following intersecting areas:
Women’s literature and literary culture: Honno’s Welsh-language Classics; women’s poetry in a Welsh and pan-Celtic context.
Literary negotiations of identity: gender, self-identity, regional and national identity, and Britishness in a ‘four nations’ context.
Literary culture: networks and the burgeoning public sphere in eighteenth-century Wales and beyond.
Environmental Humanities / Ecocriticism: weather literature and historical meteorology.
Eschatology: literary negotiations of death and dying.
Publications on women’s literature include the first comprehensive anthology of Welsh-language women’s poetry up to 1800, Beirdd Ceridwen (2005) and new editions of forgotten works by women in Honno’s Welsh Classics series, e.g. Pererinion & Storïau Hen Ferch (2008). Work in progress includes edited texts, translations, notes and critical evaluation for an anthology (CUP, 2025) and critical companion (CUP, 2026) that will present work undertaken for the Leverhulme-funded project ‘Women’s Poetry in Ireland, Scotland and Wales 1400–1800’ (2013–17). I have written about identity and literary culture more broadly in Bardic Circles (2007), Welsh Poetry of the French Revolution (2012), ‘Networking the nation…’ (2013), ‘Perfformio’r genedl…’ (2017) and ‘Brawdgarwch cenedlgarol…’ (2020). A handful of articles, listed below, engage with weather literature, and I am currently completing an anthology of Welsh-language weather literature for Cyhoeddiadau Barddas, Trysorfa’r Tywydd (2025).
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Lecturer, School of Agricultural, Environmental and Veterinary Sciences, Charles Sturt University
I obtained a BA (Hons) from Sydney University in 1996. I have since completed a Master of Animal Science qualification with a focus on equine behaviour and welfare. I recently completed a PhD at Charles Sturt University in applied neuroscience, equine behaviour and learning.
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Director, Wilf Malcolm Institute of Educational Research, University of Waikato
My research interests straddle science, technology and STEM education across the school years, with a strong focus on innovative approaches to education in these disciplines. I am proud to be Director of the award-winning Science Learning Hub - Pokapū Akoranga Pūtaiao and Principal Investigator for On2Science: Multiple affordances for learning through participation in online citizen science. I was formerly Director of Education for the Centres for Asia-Pacific Excellence, including leading the development of teachapac.nz.
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Directrice de recherche au CNRS (LATMOS/IPSL), professeure invitée Université libre de Bruxelles, Sorbonne Université
Après une thèse en Sciences Physiques dans le domaine de la spectroscopie (Université Libre de Bruxelles) et plusieurs séjours aux USA, j’ai orienté mes recherches vers l'étude de l'évolution de la composition atmosphérique sous l’influence des activités humaines, à partir de données satellite obtenues par spectroscopie infrarouge. Je collabore avec les agences spatiales et j'ai aussi eu l'occasion de contribuer aux rapports du GIEC et WMO-ozone.
Mon projet-phare c'est la mission IASI, qui vole actuellement sur la famille de satellite Metop. Ces dernières années avec mon équipe j'ai démontré le potentiel des sondeurs infrarouges pour surveiller les pics de pollution, les grands feux de biomasse, les panaches de cendres volcaniques que les avions doivent éviter, les émissions d’ammoniac associées à l’agriculture intensive, et la formation du trou dans la couche d’ozone.
Affiliations: Directrice de recherche CNRS et Professeure invitée ULB
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Professor of Developmental Clinical Psychology, University of Oxford
My research mainly focuses on the development, maintenance and treatment of anxiety disorders in children and young people. My team in The Oxford Psychological Interventions for Children and adolescents (TOPIC) research group apply a broad range of methods (including experimental, longitudinal, clinical trial and qualitative methods and systematic reviews) with children, young people and families in both community and clinical settings, with the ultimate aim of improving access to and outcomes from psychological treatments for these common conditions.
https://www.psy.ox.ac.uk/people/catharine-creswell
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Associate Professor, Faculty of Arts and Design; Coordinator, Play, Creativity and Wellbeing Project, Centre for Creative and Cultural Research, University of Canberra
Associate Professor Cathy Hope is Engagement and Impact Director in the Faculty of Arts and Design, and Coordinator of the Play, Creativity and Wellbeing Project in the Centre for Creative and Cultural Research at the University of Canberra. This applied research project critically examines the role and capability of play in cultural practice across the lifespan and is currently investigating the potential of play in enlivening cities, growing communities and enhancing wellbeing.
Cathy has facilitated hundreds of local collaborative and innovative real world cross-sector projects and produced multiple government and industry reports that aim to improve people and place outcomes and wellbeing in the ACT. In 2019 Cathy led the national award-winning Haig Park Experiments with a cross-sector consortium, which piloted 26 creative ‘experiments’ to transform the once unsafe and unused Canberra green space into a loved community hub. Cathy also founded Play Activation Network ACT – an interdisciplinary and collaborative collective of over 80 local professionals dedicated to making Canberra a more playful and playable city. In 2021 Cathy won the UC Citizen of the Year Award for her significant contributions to Canberra.
Cathy has written extensively on alternative cultures in their initial experimental phases – including film festivals, farmers’ markets and Australian youth radio station Triple J. Cathy programmed films for the early Canberra International Film Festivals, and co-directed the Canberra Short Film Festival. She has worked in a freelance capacity for the Australian media, including film and travel reviewer for The Canberra Review, chief editor of a Melbourne city guide and other publications including Rolling Stone magazine.
Play - as a cultural mechanism, as a strategy for enhancing well being, and as an enabler of engagement, creative practice, and disruption – is at the core of Cathy's freelance writing, research, engagement and teaching pursuits and practice.
Cathy thinks herself lucky.
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Professor, Monash University
Cathy Mihalopoulos is the inaugural head of the Division of Health Economics in the School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine at Monash University. Her major field of research interest is the economics of mental health and psychosocial care, with a special focus on economic evaluation and associated methodologies.
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Reader in Psychopharmacology, Liverpool John Moores University
Dr Cathy Montgomery is a Reader in Psychopharmacology and Head of the Institute for Health Research at Liverpool John Moores University. Dr Montgomery’s PhD research investigated the effects of the recreational drugs ecstasy, cannabis and cocaine on working memory and the fractionated model of executive functioning. Since this time, her research has developed to investigate the effects of drugs on various aspects of cognitive function and their neurophysiological, neuroendocrine and neuroelectric effects. From 2006-2019, Cathy was Honorary Secretary of the Psychobiology Section of the British Psychological Society and currently leads the Marginalised Groups sub-theme of the NIHR funded Applied Research Collaboration North West Coast.
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Professor and Chair, Family Medicine, McMaster, McMaster University
On Faculty with McMaster since 1995, working as a family doctor and an educator with a speciality in healthcare and team communication, doctor-patient relationships, systems change and leadership development. Currently Chair of the Department and Lead Physician for our Family Health Team.
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Professor in Law, Macquarie University
Cathy Sherry is a Professor at Macquarie Law School and an executive member of Smart Green Cities and the Centre for Environmental Law. She teaches and researches property law, specialising in high rise and master planned communities. Her research explores the effect of legal form on social relations and communities, and has been widely cited by courts, government and in academic literature. She is the author of 'Strata Title Property Rights: Private governance of multi-owned communities' (Routledge, 2017). She regularly advises governments in Australia and overseas on their laws relating to high density development. Professor Sherry has a particular interest in urban agriculture as a method of greening cities.
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Professor of Creative Practice, Cardiff Metropolitan University
Cathy is Professor of Creative Practice and was one of the founding members of CARIAD. She is currently Principal Investigator on a major international interdisciplinary AHRC design research project: LAUGH (Ludic Artifacts Using Gesture and Haptics). This collaborative research is investigating ways of designing to support the wellbeing of people with late stage dementia.
Her PhD research investigated the ways in which digital imaging technology impacts on the creative practice of artists and designers; the theme of digital technology and creativity is continued in her current research which focuses on the importance of touch, physicality and lived experience.
Cathy is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, has a Master of Arts in ceramics (University of Wales) and a B.A. (Hons.) in textiles and fashion (Loughborough University). Her research interests have been stimulated by her considerable experience working as a designer for industry. She has expertise in large format digital ink-jet printing, three-dimensional printing (rapid prototyping) and is fluent in an array of design software applications. She is an experienced educator, PhD supervisor and examiner and has been a reviewer for RCUK, British Council and a number of academic journals and conferences.
Cathy has undertaken collaborative research with universities in the UK, USA and Australia and regularly presents her research at conferences around the world. Cathy is Visiting Research Fellow in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Bath and Visiting Scholar at University of Technology Sydney, Australia.
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Professor of philosophy, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen
Prof. Catrin Misselhorn is a professor of philosophy at the Georg-August University of Göttingen. Her research is situated at the intersection of philosophy, science and technological culture. She has published numerous articles in the area of socio-technical epistemology, the philosophy of mind and the philosophy of robotics in renowned international journals, e.g., "The Monist, Minds and Machines".
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Content Manager, AustLit, The University of Queensland
Dr Catriona Mills holds degrees from Macquarie University and The University of Queensland. She has published on adaptations of penny-weekly serials to the English suburban stage, authorship attribution in Australian nineteenth-century periodicals, Australian steampunk, and Doctor Who. She has worked for AustLit, for which she is currently the Content Manager, since 2010.
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Professor of Clinical Pharmacology and Global Health, University of Liverpool
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Leverhulme Early Career Research Fellow, University of Sheffield
Dr Cayenna Ponchione-Bailey is an academic and orchestral conductor committed to advancing social justice and environmental sustainability within music both on and off the podium. Cayenna’s bold orchestral initiatives fuse the local with the global, amplify leading environmental research, and engage with the pressing issues social issues of our time. She holds postgraduate degrees in orchestral conducting, percussion and musicology and a doctorate from the University of Oxford. Her research is focused on the social-psychological and socio-political aspects of orchestral music-making -- from the intricacies of co-performer communication in modern and historically informed contexts, to the politics of participation and orchestras' geo-political significance.
Cayenna is Director of Research for Oxford Conducting Institute where she has established the International Conducting Studies Conference series. She has worked as a professional conductor for 18 years in the US, UK and in Europe, is currently the Conducting Fellow of the Oxford Philharmonic Orchestra and was recently featured in the Swedish documentary film about female conductors Call Me Madame Maestro (2021).
Research publications include ‘The Body Orchestral’ (2018), a book chapter exploring the cognitive mechanisms underpinning co-performer communication, ‘Digital Methods in the Study of the Nineteenth-Century Orchestra’ (2020) in the journal Nineteenth-Century Music Review, 'Technologies for investigating large ensemble performance' (2021) in the book Together in music: Participation, coordination, and creativity in ensembles, and ‘Agency, Creativity and (Inter)action in Orchestra Performance’ in the forthcoming edited volume Making Music Together: Analytical Perspectives on Musical Interaction.
Cayenna is currently collaborating with musicians and academic colleagues from Afghanistan to research the historical and contemporary orchestral activities of the country.
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Postdoctoral research associate, University of Liverpool
I'm now a Postdoc at the University of Liverpool on Muon g-2 and MUonE. The MUonE experiment aims at a completely independent and very precise measurement of the leading hadronic contribution to the muon magnetic moment.
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Professor of Gender Studies, Stockholm University
I'am a political scientist and professor in gender studies at the Department of Ethnology, History of Religions and Gender Studies at Stockholm University. My publications include several books on gender and nationalism and on feminist theory and methodology. I have also done extensive work on the gendered institution of the Swedish constitutional monarchy. My work on gendered protection, war-making, and crisis narratives appears in International Feminist Journal of Politics, Cooperation and Conflict, and Journal of Cold War Studies. I have recently publiched the volume Gendering Military Sacrifice. A Feminist Comparative Analysis (Routledge 2019, with Maria Wendt).
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Visiting lecturer in film studies, University of Westminster
Cecilia Zoppelletto, PhD, started her career as a news producer for the London
correspondence bureau of RAI, the Italian National Broadcasting Company, and later
worked as a factual content producer for the Italian network Antenna Tre Nordest. She is
the founder and director of Preston Witman Productions in London. Cecilia made her
directorial debut with La Belle at The Movies (2015), which screened at more than twenty
international film festivals, including the African Film Festival at Lincoln Center, New York,
and the BFI British Film Institute in London in 2019. She is a visiting lecturer at the
University of Westminster in London and in 2020, she initiated the film studies program at
the Académie des Beaux Arts in Kinshasa. In 2023, she completed two documentaries,
which she co-produced and co-directed: the short animation film Ota Benga about the
pigmy who was exhibited at the Bronx Zoo, and the feature AP Giannini: Bank to the Future about the founder of Bank of America. During the same year, she established the company
Zop Media Consulting in DRC. In 2024 Cecilia has joined the Board of Directors of African
Film Festival Inc in New York City. She is a creator and an educator with a keen interest in
archive preservation.
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Assistant Professor of Political Science, Vanderbilt University
Cecilia Hyunjung Mo is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science, with a courtesy appointment at the Peabody College of Education and Human Development for Vanderbilt University. She is also a W. Glenn Campbell and Rita Ricardo-Campbell National Fellow and the Robert Eckles Swain National Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University.
Her research and teaching interests include a broad array of issues in political behavior, public policy, and the political economy of development. She is concerned with basic research on bounded rationality, as well as in integrating insights from theories of bounded rationality into models and empirical analyses of political and economic decision-making and institutions.
Her applied work namely focuses on understanding and addressing important social problems related to inequality, prejudice, gender-based violence, and education. She is currently working on several papers examining how to model biases to which individuals are subject, as well as research on human trafficking vulnerability and public opinion around human trafficking policies. In addition to this work, she has written on a variety of other topics, including anti-immigrant sentiment and education policy.
She is the recipient of the American Political Science Association's 2015 Franklin L. Burdette/Pi Sigma Alpha Award for the best paper presented at the previous year's annual meeting.
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Professor/Associate Director, University of Hong Kong
Cecilia Ka Yuk Chan is Professor at the Faculty of Education and Associate Director at the Centre for the Enhancement of Teaching and Learning (CETL) in the University of Hong Kong (HKU). She has a dual cultural and disciplinary background, with expertise in engineering and education, and has played a key role in enhancing engineering education and teaching and learning in higher education. Prof. Chan has led and conducted research in the areas of assessment, feedback, experiential learning, technology enhanced learning, and 21st century skills and has been involved in over 40 research projects worldwide. She is the Founding President of the Asian Society for Engineering Education and holds a Principal Fellowship with the Higher Education Academy in the UK. Prof. Chan leads CETL's Innovation and Support portfolio and is responsible for teaching and learning initiatives, faculty professional development, and strategic planning at HKU. She is also a leader in teaching and learning, represented HKU in various networks and is often invited to present her work internationally. Prof. Chan has secured more than 50 million research funding, and substantial donations and has received a Faculty Knowledge Exchange Award and HKU University Outstanding Young Researcher Award. She has recently written a book on Assessment for Experiential Learning, and have published widely in the area of teaching and learning particularly on holistic competency. More information can be found: https://tlerg.cetl.hku.hk/
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Senior Researcher, Norwegian Institute of International Affairs
Cedric de Coning is a research professor in the research group on peace, conflict and development at the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI). He co-directs the NUPI Center on United Nations and Global Governance, and the Climate, Peace and Security Risk project. He coordinates the Effectiveness of Peace Operations Network (EPON) and contributes to the Training for Peace programme, the UN Peace Operations project (UNPO) and several others. He is also a senior advisor for ACCORD.
He has 30 years of experience in research, policy advice, training and education in the areas of conflict resolution, peacekeeping, peacebuilding and peace and conflict studies. Cedric has a PhD in applied ethics from the Department of Philosophy of the University of Stellenbosch, and an MA (cum laude) in conflict management and peace studies from the University of KwaZulu-Natal.
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PhD Candidate, UCL Genetics Institute, UCL
I'm a computational biologist specialising in microbial (meta)genomics and I'm currently interested in the ecology and evolution of zoonotic host jumps. I'm currently doing my PhD at the Francis Crick Institute and UCL Genetics Institute under the supervision of Francois Balloux, Lucy van Dorp and Philippa C. Matthews.
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Assistant Professor, Women's and Gender Studies, Mount Royal University
Dr. Celeste Pang is an Assistant Professor in Women's and Gender Studies at Mount Royal University where she is also the co-lead of the QriTical: queer + trans research hub.
Dr. Pang's research, education, and community work focus on aging, disability, and care access and equity, with significant focus on 2SLGBTQIA+ issues. Prior to joining Mount Royal University Dr. Pang completed a PhD and Postdoctoral Fellowship in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Toronto, and worked in a community-based research department.
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Researcher, Institute of Development Studies
Celeste is a Research Officer at the International Centre for Tax and Development, primarily working in the Tax Administrations and Compliance and DIGITAX programmes.
She is researching several projects regarding tax administration, from technology adoption to data management and revenue collection strategies in Sub-Saharan Africa. She has experience with quantitative and qualitative data analysis and fieldwork experience in Uganda, Rwanda and Ghana.
Before joining the ICTD, Celeste worked as Trainee at the UNDP Regional Bureau for Africa in New York. Celeste holds an MSc in Development Economics from the University of Sussex and is a PhD candidate in Economics at the University of Sussex.
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Catedrático de Estudios Ingleses y Fílmicos, Universidad de Zaragoza
Celestino Deleyto es catedrático de Estudios Ingleses y Fílmicos en la Universidad de Zaragoza. Ha dirigido numerosas tesis doctorales sobre Estudios Fílmicos, es el Investigador Principal del equipo de investigación de la DGA "Cine, Cultural y Sociedad" y ha sido IP y co-IP de proyectos de investigación nacionales sobre cine contemporáneo y teorías fílmicas, género cinematográfico, cine transnacional y fronteras, cosmopolitismo y espacio cinematográfico. Ha publicado varios libros y numerosos artículos sobre la teoría e historia de la comedia romántica. Sus libros más destacados son The Secret Life of Romantic Comedy (Manchester UP, 2009), Alejandro González Iñárritu, for the Contemporary Film Directors series (Illinois UP, 2010), co-escrito with María del Mar Azcona, y From Tinseltown to Bordertown: Los Angeles on Film (Wayne State, 2016). En la actualidad está escribiendo junto con María del Mar Azcona una monografía sobre la película Before Sunrise para la editorial Routledge.
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Postdoctoral fellow, Department of Philosophy, University of British Columbia
Celia Edell is a Fonds de recherche du Québec (FRQSC) Postdoctoral Fellow in the Philosophy Department at the University of British Columbia. She holds a PhD in Philosophy from McGill University where she was a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) Doctoral Fellow. Her research lies at the intersection of feminist theory, social epistemology, and ethics with a special focus on guilt, blame, and group oppression.
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Professor of sociology, Australian National University
Celia Roberts is a Professor in the School of Sociology at The Australian National University. She is author of several books on sex/gender, health and technology, including Messengers of Sex: Hormones, biomedicine and feminism (Cambridge UP, 2007), Puberty in Crisis: The sociology of early sexual development (Cambridge UP, 2015), and with Adrian Mackenzie and Maggie Mort, Living Data: Making sense of health biosensing (Bristol University Press, 2019).
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Técnica de Transferencia y de proyectos territoriales y sectoriales, Universitat de Vic – Universitat Central de Catalunya
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Adjunct professor, Institut national de santé publique du Québec, Université Laval
Expert in environmental public health and climate change. Institut national de santé publique du Québec, Université Laval et Institut national de recherche scientifique.
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Adjunct Professor and Senior Fellow, School of Health Sciences, L’Université d’Ottawa/University of Ottawa
Dr. Céline Delacroix is adjunct professor at the University of Ottawa’s School of Health Sciences. She is the Director of the FP/Earth project with the Population Institute. Her interdisciplinary research focuses on analyzing how family planning, population size, and environmental sustainability intersect and are perceived. She is looking for ways to harness these linkages to benefit reproductive rights and improve environmental sustainability. She earned a PhD from the University of Ottawa, a Master’s in Science from the Free University of Brussels (Belgium) and an LLB in Law from Cardiff University (Wales, UK). Dr. Delacroix also served as Executive Director of several human rights and environmental civil-society organizations, including the Conservation Council of New Brunswick and Ethiopiaid Canada.
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Professeur des Universités en Sciences de Gestion, IAE Nantes, NANTES Université, Université de Nantes
Céline Gallen est Professeur des Universités à l'IAE de Nantes Université où elle enseigne le Marketing et pilote le Master Etudes et Actions Marketing. Suite à ses travaux de Doctorat, elle a reçu le prix de la meilleure thèse en Economie et Gestion Agro-alimentaire en 2001. Ses recherches portent sur l’étude des comportements de consommation alimentaire, et plus particulièrement les mécanismes cognitifs d’acceptation des innovations alimentaires. Ses travaux scientifiques font l’objet de publications dans des revues scientifiques nationales et internationales. Elle est chercheur associé au Food Design Lab de l’Ecole de Design Nantes Atlantique. Elle a également participé à titre d’expert à des groupes de réflexion pour la Commission Européenne et le Sénat. Elle est co-responsable scientifique du projet ANR CRI-KEE sur la consommation d’insectes en Europe et partenaire scientifique de la Chaire AApro sur les avantages et l'acceptabilité des proteins végétales.
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