Themis is a Reader in Nanoelectronics and EPSRC Fellow affiliated with the Nanoelectronics and Nanotechnology Research Group and the Southampton Nanofabrication Centre of ECS at the University of Southampton. He previously held a Corrigan Fellowship in Nanoscale Technology and Science, funded by the Corrigan Foundation and LSI Inc., within the Centre for Bio-inspired Technology at Imperial College London and a Lindemann Trust Visiting Fellowship in EECS UC Berkeley.
Dr Prodromakis is a Senior Member of the IEEE, and a Member of the INE and the IET, and also serves as member of the BioCAS, Nanoelectronics and Gigascale Systems and the Sensory Systems Technical Committees of the IEEE Circuits & Systems Society. He also represents the CAS society on the IEEE Nanotechnology Council and is a member of the ITRS Emerging Research Devices Working Group.
He is an Associate Editor for Nature's Scientific Reports, the IEEE Sensors and the Frontiers in Neuromorphic Engineering. His background is in Electron Devices and micro/nano-electronics processing techniques, with his research being focused on bio-inspired devices for biomedical applications.
Themis's research has led in establishing a wide-number of bio-inspired devices and technologies for mimicking biological functions as well as linking these with electronics, with some examples including: memristive elements, integrated CMOS chemical sensors, cell-culture platforms, biocompatible encapsulation techniques, advanced neural interfaces and lately ion-channel mimetic (single-molecule) transducers.
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PhD Candidate, Social Sciences, Loughborough University
Theo is a social science PhD candidate researching the intersection of sport and environmental sustainability.
His PhD titled ‘Fossil Fuel Sport Sponsorship: An Exploration into Legitimacy’ focuses on the multi-level institutional legitimacy of fossil fuel sponsorship in sports, driven by concerns for the natural environment and its societal impact. His research integrates insights from various disciplines, including Energy Humanities, Sport Sociology and Sport Management.
Theo is a member of Loughborough University London’s research and innovation hubs ‘Climate and Ecological Transitions’, ‘Policy, Sport and Geopolitics in an Unstable World’ and a member of Loughborough University's SCAN Network (Sport for Climate Action and Nature).
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Assistant Professor in Information Technologies, HEC Montréal
Théophile Demazure is an Assistant Professor at HEC Montréal and an IVADO Professor. His research merges Information Systems and Neuroscience, focusing on the cognitive and behavioral effects of our natural interactions with digital technology. Passionate about the societal impact of AI, Théophile Demazure also explores how it reshapes collaboration, feelings, and perceptions of our world in individuals.
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Lecturer in Geography and Map Curator, The University of the West Indies
My interdisciplinary research includes agriculture and climate justice, landscape change and history , geomorphology, climate change responses and modelling, vegetation ecology and archaeology. Historical maps, aerial photographs, satellite imagery and Geographical Information Systems (GIS) are key components of my research and analyses. Since 2004 my work has focused on environmental management and sustainable development, with particular emphasis on biodiversity, forestry, watersheds, agriculture and protected areas management. I have written and co-authored technical reports and papers for Jamaica and the Caribbean on behalf of several development agencies.
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Professor, University of Pretoria
I am a clinician scientist working as a consultant HIV clinician and heading the HIV Immunopathology laboratory in the Department of Immunology at the University of Pretoria. After obtaining a medical degree (MBChB), I completed a Masters degree in Biomedical Ethics and a Master of Public Health degree in Epidemiology and Biostatistics. I have two PhDs, one in Philosophy (Ethics) and one in Immunology. I am currently the president of the South African Immunology Society (SAIS).
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Health Economist ,Department of Environmental Health, Kintampo Health Research Center
Theresa Afia Serwaa Tawiah, a distinguished senior research officer and health economist, has made significant contributions to public health research in Ghana. She is currently a PhD candidate at the University of Ghana, specialising in public health. Her research portfolio spans diverse projects, such as the economic evaluation of health programmes, clean energy access for non-communicable disease prevention, and the impact of COVID-19 on household energy use. She has played a pivotal role in multiple research initiatives, including those related to clean cookstoves adoption to reduce exposure to household air pollution from polluting fuels,
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Researcher and Scientific Writer at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, University of Washington
Theresa A. McHugh, PhD, is a scientific writer at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, where she focuses on neonatal and child health and disease expenditure research.
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Fashion Professor, Michigan State University
Therèsa M. Winge is a Professor of Fashion, Design, and Technology at Michigan State University, where she teaches fashion, sustainability, and technologies. Winge researches visual and material cultures, dress, and narratives that reveal structures of meaning and identity. Her book, Body Style investigates subcultural body modifications; Costuming Cosplay: Dressing the Imagination explores the Cosplay fandom; and her forthcoming book examines Science Fiction films and fashion in popular culture.
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Senior Lecturer in English, University of Cape Coast
Theresah Patrine Ennin is a Senior Lecturer at the Department of English, College of Humanities and Legal Studies at the University of Cape Coast, Ghana, where she teaches and engages in research in African literature, Literary theory, Masculinities, and Literary and artistic constructions of gender and sex. She is also a research fellow at the University of South Africa, UNISA. She obtained her PhD in African Languages and Literature from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 2013 in the USA where she was a Fulbright Scholar. Currently, she is a member of the African Literature Association, the African Studies Association and the Modern Languages Association. Her academic awards include an ASA Presidential Fellows Award and an ACLS/African Humanities Program Fellowship. She has been a guest speaker at the University of the Western Cape in South Africa, The University of South Africa and Iowa State University in the USA, and she has published in Journals such as the West Africa Review, Spectrum: A Journal on Black Men, Research in African Literatures and the African Studies Quarterly. Dr Ennin is the author of the book, Men Across Time: Contesting Masculinities in Ghanaian Fiction and Film (2022), published by NISC.
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Associate Professor of Thomistic Studies, University of Notre Dame
I work on medieval theories of mind, cognition, and personhood, with special focus on the thought of Thomas Aquinas and his thirteenth-century interlocutors. Themes that animate my research include, e.g., the nature of consciousness, the history of the self/person and concepts of subjectivity, what it means exactly to be "immaterial," Aristotelian hylomorphism and how it applies to mind, and problems connected with mental representation and intentionality, the relationship of imagination and intellect, and medieval theories of light and vision. In approaching these themes, I'm particularly interested in uncovering different ways of "modeling" the mind and its activities. I am engaged in a research cluster funded by Notre Dame's Office of Research, titled "Modeling the Mind in the European History of Philosophy" (2020-2023). I also direct the History of Philosophy Forum and The Jacques Maritain Center at Notre Dame.
Another central research interest of mine is how Islamic philosophers--such as al-Farabi, Averroes, Avicenna, and the author of the "Liber de causis"--shaped Scholastic thought in medieval Christian Europe. Getting into the mindset of medieval philosophers, on my view, requires a scholarly community that is committed to rediscovering the broader shared philosophical tradition that connects Muslim, Jewish, and Christian thinkers in the Middle Ages, and tracing its patterns of development from late antiquity. To that end, I serve on the executive committee of the "Aquinas and the Arabs Project."
I am also a member of the Pontifical Academy of St. Thomas Aquinas.
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Associate researcher, Internal Medicine, University of the Witwatersrand
Therese Dix-Peek, PhD, is a research associate in Translational Research, Department of Internal Medicine, Wits University. She is particularly interested in the biology of breast cancer and kidney disease.
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PhD researcher, School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Xi'an Jiaotong-Liverpool University
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PhD Candidate, School of Social Sciences, The University of Queensland
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enseignant-chercheur, directeur du CREA, Université Cheikh Anta Diop de Dakar
Thierno Thioune est maître de conférences titulaire, directeur du Centre de recherche économiques appliquées (CREA) de l'université Cheilh Anta Diop de Dakar. Il est membre du Laboratoire d'Analyse, de Recherche et d’Etudes du Développement (LARED);
Maître de Conférences Titulaire en Sciences Economiques
Il est Docteur en Sciences Economiques, Diplôme obtenu entre l’université de Montpellier en France et l’Université Cheikh Anta Diop de Dakar, il a bénéficié du financement du Gouvernement Français avec séjour doctoral à l’Université de Montpellier, pour lequel il a été major des bénéficiaires à l’issue d’une procédure sélective et rigoureuse. Également, il a obtenu de l’Agence Universitaire de la Francophonie (AUF) et du Gouvernement Roumain le financement de « Eugen Ionescu » avec séjour doctoral à l’Université « Dunarea De Jos » de Galati en Roumanie. Le CODESRIA l’a également primé dans le cadre de son programme de subvention de Thèse.
Thierno Thioune est l’actuel Directeur du Centre de Recherches Economiques Appliquées (CREA), depuis janvier 2022. Il a été l’ancien Directeur des études du Centre de Recherche et de Formation pour le Développement Économique et Social (CREFDES), de janvier 2017 à décembre 2021. Enseignant-chercheur chevronné, il intervient et dispense des cours dans les établissements publics et privés au Sénégal comme à l’étranger. Au Sénégal, en plus de ses enseignements à la Faculté des sciences Economiques et de Gestion, la FASEG, il intervient à l’Ecole Nationale de la Statistique et de l’Analyse Economique (ENSAE), au groupe SupDeco-IST, à l’Académie Internationale des Hautes Etudes de la Sécurité (AIHES), au Groupe ESTEL, au CREFDES, à l’institut Supérieur de Finance (ISF).
Sur le plan de la recherche, ses domaines de recherche portent sur l’économie de l’énergie, l’économie des réseaux, l’économie publique, l’économie industrielle, centres d’intérêts pour lesquels Docteur Thierno Thioune est expert et conseiller de plusieurs institutions publiques comme privées nationales et internationales. Dans ce cadre, il est l’un des expert de la Convention-cadre des Nations unies sur les changements climatiques (CCNUCC) qui ont porté l’étude sur la tarification carbone au Sénégal. Par ailleurs, il est membre du Comité d’orientation de l’Observatoire de la qualité des services financiers (OQSF) du ministère des finances et du Budget du Sénégal.
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PhD candidate/ Lawyer, University of Waikato
LLB(Hons), LLM(Hons), BEd (Primary), GradDip (ECE), GradCert (Business), PhD candidate
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Lecturer in the department for Economics and Related Studies, University of York
Before I became a lecturer at the department for Economics and Related Studies at the University of York, I received a B.Sc. in Business Computing from the Universität Paderborn, an M.Sc. in Information Systems from Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, and a PhD in economics with my advisor Nikolaus Wolf at Humboldt.
My main research focuses on long-run growth, especially market integration and institutions, and its geographic determinants. My academic background provides me with a solid range of empirical methods, especially concerning very large datasets, calculation-intensive modeling, and geographic information.
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Lecturer in Modern South Asian Studies, Oxford School of Global and Area Studies., University of Oxford
Thiruni Kelegama is a Lecturer in Modern South Asian Studies. Working at the intersection of political geography and development studies, her research looks at political and infrastructural transformations triggered by development in the Global South. It builds on a foundation in the political economy of development and deals with the politics of access and territorialisation.
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Professor of Practice, Human Sciences Research Council
Professor of practice, Faculty of Engineering and Built Environment, University of Johannesburg and principal investigator, National Food and Nutrition Security Survey, Human Sciences Research Council. Established the science and technology programme from scratch at the Africa Institute of South Africa. Previously worked as departmental manager, environmental systems certification at the South African Bureau of Standards, where he was responsible for ISO 14001, OHSAS 18001 and ISO 90001 system certification. Served as a member of the standing advisory committee on intellectual property rights of South Africa (2002-2017). The committee advises the minister of trade and industry on issues relating to South Africa’s international positions on intellectual property. It also recommends amendments to intellectual property laws and policies of South Africa. For research and publications, have served as a member of the research and publications committee of AISA (2009-2014). Also served as a member of research ethics committee of Human Sciences Research Council (2014-2017). Served as a council member of the South African chapter of System Dynamics Society (2012-2018). Have published in a number of international scientific journals and edited (some co-edited) 19 books (books and monographs). Have so far produced a total of 84 publications.
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Research Manager, University of the Witwatersrand
Thokozile is the research manager at the Southern Centre for Inequality Studies at Wits University. Using her master's degree in political theory, she has worked in climate justice, development cooperation, public finance focusing on health financing and gender-responsive budgeting, national, subnational and parliamentary governance, transparency and accountability. Over the years, she has served as programme manager for the Heinrich Boell Foundation, deputy director at the Alternative Information Development Centre (AIDC), coordinator of the Budget Expenditure Monitoring Forum (BEMF) and an organiser for the People's Health Movement South Africa (PHM-SA). She also worked at the International Budget Partnership (IBP) as a programme officer for the IBP's Zambia partnership initiative. She was a trainer/technical assistance provider in the IBP's training programme. Her love for activism deepened when she worked at the Public Service Accountability Monitor (PSAM) at Rhodes University. Her other full-time job is parenting an extraordinary rebel girl and writing poetry while plotting a feminist revolution.
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PhD Candidate, International Relations, Macquarie University
PhD Candidate at Macquarie University. Vice President of the Australian Institute of International Affairs NSW. Research Fellow with Remi AI. National Research Assessments Leader with Macquarie University.
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Senior Lecturer in Psychology, Loughborough University
Thom Wilcockson completed his BSc, MSc, and PhD at Swansea University. During his PhD, he conducted research into factors affecting eye movements. Thom then performed post-doctoral research for two years at London South Bank University, where he was able to continue eye tracking research. In May 2015, Thom moved to Lancaster University to work on a large eye tracking project, investigating whether eye tracking techniques could be utilised to aid in patient diagnosis.
Thom joined the School of Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences at Loughborough University as a Psychology Lecturer in January 2019, and was promoted to Senior Lecturer in February 2023.
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Associate Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of Florida
Professor Angelini received his Ph.D. in 2005 from the University of Illinois. His research interests include collective cell motion, mechanical instabilities in tissue cell assemblies, bacterial biofilm physics, soft matter physics, biomolecular self-assembly, and tribology of soft matter interfaces.
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Research Analyst, Motu Economic and Public Policy Research
Thomas joined Motu Research in May 2022 after completing an Honours degree in Economics at the University of Auckland. His dissertation investigated the impact of large government debt on the effectiveness of government spending in New Zealand. Before this, he completed a Bachelor of Commerce majoring in Economics and Finance, during which he spent one semester on exchange in London.
At Motu Research, Thomas works on a diverse range of topics. His current work is on the impact of urban water pricing on water use behaviour in Aotearoa New Zealand. He is also researching the impact of employment in the arts on wellbeing.
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Research Associate Professor of History, University of Tennessee
Dr. Coens joined the Papers of Andrew Jackson and the University of Tennessee History Department in 2004. He graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Yale in 1996 with a bachelor’s degree in history. Awarded a Mellon Fellowship in 1998, he received his Ph.D. from Harvard in 2004, writing a dissertation entitled “The Formation of the Jackson Party, 1822-1825.”
Dr. Coens is broadly interested in American political, intellectual and social history from the Revolution through the Civil War. His essay “The Jackson Political Party: A Force for Democratization?” appeared in A Companion to the Era of Andrew Jackson (Wiley-Blackwell, 2013). He has co-edited volumes 7 to 12 of the Papers of Andrew Jackson, covering the years 1829 to 1834. He is currently writing a monograph on nuclear fear in the 1980s.
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Research fellow, Deakin University
Thomas Corbin is a Research Fellow at the Center for Research in Assessment and Digital Learning (CRADLE) at Deakin University. He works primarily on Generative AI with a particular focus on what appropriate assessment design means in the context of AI.
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Professor of Economics, University of Essex
I am a Professor of Economics at The University of Essex and also a Research Fellow at the Centre for Research and Analysis of Migration at UCL, and at IZA. I previously worked at the University of York (2015-2019) and at University College London (2008-2015). My research interests are in Applied Microeconomics, in particular Labour and Education Economics.
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Honorary Researcher, Environment Centre, Lancaster University
Thomas Davies is an Honorary Researcher at Lancaster University and a consultant at Small World Consulting. His role involves conducting carbon footprint assessments for a wide range of organisations, developing carbon calculator tools, and researching the environmental impacts of food, land use, and ICT. He also has a PhD in Plant Molecular Biology from the University of Sheffield.
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