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Ina Ganguli

Associate Professor of Economics, UMass Amherst
I am an Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and Director of the UMass Computational Social Science Institute.

My research areas are labor economics, the economics of science and innovation, and international development.

I am a Research Fellow at the Institute of Labor Economics (IZA), an Affiliated Researcher at the Stockholm Institute of Transition Economics (SITE) at the Stockholm School of Economics, and a Faculty Associate at the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies and the Laboratory for Innovation Science (LISH) at Harvard University.

In 2018, I received the Russian National Prize in Applied Economics, awarded biennially to recognize published research on the Russian economy, and previously received honorable mention for the W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research Dissertation Award. I was a Fulbright scholar in Ukraine in 2004 and have served as a U.S. Embassy Policy Specialist Fellow in Russia, Azerbaijan and Tajikistan.

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Ina Schuppe Koistinen

Associate Professor, Karolinska Institutet
I hold the position as Alliance Director at the Centre for Translational Microbiome Research, Department of Microbiology, Tumor and Cell Biology, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.

My current research focus is in understanding the role of the microbiome in gastrointestinal diseases and women’s health. The research aims to describe the microbiome in healthy women of reproductive age as well as in pregnant women and investigates associations between the vaginal, oral and gut microbiota and the risk for diseases, such as HPV infection, fertility or pregnancy complications.

I complement my research with a career as an artist. My paintings have been used to illustrate books, scientific presentations and publications and are displayed at many research labs and private collections around the world. In 2022 I published a popular science book on women's health and our research in the microbiome field called Vulva: Fakta, myter och livsomvälvande insikter.

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Inácio Bó

Associate Professor of Economics, University of Macau
Ph.D in Economics from Boston College (USA) (2008-2014) , was a Postdoctoral Researcher at the WZB Berlin Social Science Center (Germany) (2014-2019), Lecturer (Assistant Professor) at the Department of Economics and Related Studies at the University of York (U.K.) (2019-2021), Southwestern University of Finance and Economics (2021-2023) and is since May 2023 an Associate Professor at the Department of Economics at the Faculty of Social Sciences of the University of Macau. His main fields of research are market design, matching, behavioral and experimental economics. He has published in journals such as The Economic Journal, American Economic Journal:Microeconomics, Games and Economic Behavior, among others.

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Iñaki Arrieta Baro

Librarian and Head of the Jon Bilbao Basque Library, University of Nevada, Reno
Iñaki Arrieta Baro is the head of the Jon Bilbao Basque Library, a highly specialized unit focused on serving researchers from all around the world interested in Basque Studies. He leads the planning, promotion, advocacy, and policy development efforts for the Basque Library. In collaboration with other librarians and faculty from other departments, he has taken part in the organization of workshops and conferences in connections with Basque topics and digital humanities. Iñaki works with both local researchers and scholars worldwide, collaborates with the Basque American community on preservation efforts of documents in different physical forms and digital assets, and works with donors in obtaining new materials for our Basque collections.

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Indigo Willing

Social Science Fellow, The Sydney Social Science and Humanities Advanced Research Centre, The University of Sydney. Adjunct Research Fellow, Griffith Centre for Social and Cultural Research, Griffith University
Dr Indigo Willing (she/her) is a sociologist with a PhD from the University of Queensland. Her work spans social worlds that reflect her own diverse background and lived experiences as a Vietnam War orphan and adoptee, and as an academic and skateboarder who has co-founded award-winning inclusive community-building projects. Her new book is 'Skateboarding, Power and Change' co-written with Anthony Pappalardo (2023, Palgrave MacMillan).

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Ines Ayostina

Fox Research Fellow, Yale University

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Ines Bramao

Senior Lecturer in Psychology , Lund University
My primary academic focus is to understand the cognitive and neural processes underlying episodic memory. Episodic memory enables mental time travel, allowing us to relive specific, personally experienced events tied in time and place.

With this purpose, I use behavioral and cognitive testing in combination with advanced analysis methods (e.g., multivariate pattern analysis – MVPA) applied to high-temporal resolution brain data (Electroencephalography – EEG). This approach allows the investigation of memory reactivation as it unfolds in time as well as its consequences for current and future thinking and behaviour.

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Ines Lange

Senior Research Fellow in Coral Reef Ecology, University of Exeter
My research addresses questions about the response of coral reef ecosystems to natural and human-induced environmental variability. Synthesizing research on ecological and physiological responses of reef organisms to their environment and the importance of reef carbonate structures for habitat provision, coastal protection and sediment supply to low-lying islands, I am currently focussing on quantifying reef geo-ecological functions. In this sense I am evaluating the impacts of environmental change on the state and functioning of reef carbonate structures and the potential beneficial effects of active management interventions, such as reef restoration or rat eradication from islands.

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Inês Varela-Silva

Senior Lecturer in Human Biology, Loughborough University

I am a Human Biologist with a keen interest in global health and well-being throughout the lifespan. My research focus on child growth and health in low-income countries, and among children suffering from poverty, and discrimination. I use a biocultural approach on my research, which puts in perspective the symbiotic effects biology and culture have on humans. I am passionate in disseminating my research through artistic outputs. Science and arts should mingle more. (see my CV here https://www.visualcv.com/dr-ines-varela-silva)

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Ines Zuchowski

Senior Lecturer, James Cook University
Ines has extensive work experience as a social worker in social welfare practice since 1992, exposing her to a broad range of interventions and fields of practice Research has been an integral part of Ines’ professional social work practice. Examples include two projects at the North Queensland Domestic Violence Resource Service one developing perpetrator programs, the other the education in schools project as well as conducting the NQDVRS’s self-assessment against the Practice Standards of the Department of Communities. Over the years, Ines’ work in this area has attracted three Queensland Domestic Violence Prevention Awards and an Australian Violence Prevention Merit Award.

Ines is currently teaching and working in the field education team in Social Work and Humans Services at JCU. She completed her PhD in 2015, and her thesis topic was ‘Social Work Field Education with External Supervision’.Ines has published widely, with a particular focus on field education and social work education. Ines social work practice experience and research interest are particularly centred around, child and youth welfare, violence prevention, professional development of supervision, social justice and human rights, women’s issues and field education for social work students.

He partnership research with the Townsville Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Service explored young peoples' perceptions of service delivery, the Lighthouse and the community, Her current research explores social work in General Practice.

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Inés Gregori Labarta

Lecturer in Creative Writing, Lancaster University
I am a writer of speculative fiction especially interested in the weird, horror and genre-bending work. My research interests include the novella as a form - I am the author of two novellas, 'McTavish Manor' (Holland House, 2016) and 'Kabuki' (Dairea, 2017) although I am also a keen writer of novels and short stories. My latest novel, 'The Three Lives of Saint Ciarán' (Blackwater Press, 2024), expeirments with different genres (including magic realism, the weird and dystopia) and languages to establish cultural and literary connections between Ireland and Spain and celebrate characters that move across genders and cultures.

Other research interests are multilingual and transcultural narratives, migrant narratives, queer literature, magic realism, RPGs, monstrous fiction and the gothic. I'm also keen on graphic novels - and have years of experience as freelance illustrator and cartoonist. I am also interested in podcasts - I worked as a radio journalist for a while and I have been a frelance podcast editor, writer and producer since 2014 - I was Litro's magazine podcast editor from 2020-2021 and I produced podcasts like The Writing Life and The Wandering Bard.

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Inga Smith

Associate Professor in Physics, University of Otago
Associate Professor Inga Smith is based in the Department of Physics at the University of Otago. Inga researches and lectures in climate change related topics: Antarctic sea ice; greenhouse gas emissions from international transport; climate change physics; fluids and thermodynamics. She works on research projects funded by the Marsden Fund, Deep South National Science Challenge, and the Antarctic Science Platform. Inga is on the World Climate Research Programme's CLIVAR (oceans and climate) Scientific Steering Group, and she is co-director of He Kaupapa Hononga: Otago's Climate Change Network.

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Inge Amundsen

Senior Researcher, Chr. Michelsen Institute
Amundsen is a political scientist focusing on political corruption, democratic institutionalisation, political economy, parliaments, and political parties. His main study areas are Angola, Malawi, Palestine, Bangladesh, Nigeria, and Ghana. Amundsen earned his PhD in comparative African studies at the University of Tromsø in 1997. He was research director at CMI from 2000-2003, director of the U4 Anti-Corruption Resource Centre from 2002-2006, and he has coordinated three CMI institutional cooperation programmes.

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Inger Fabris-Rotelli

Academic - statistician, University of Pretoria
Prof Inger Fabris-Rotelli is currently an associate professor in the Department of Statistics, University of Pretoria. She has been at the Department of Statistics since 2004.

She holds a PhD in mathematical sciences, obtained in 2013, an MSc in applied mathematics, a double BSc (Hons) in mathematical statistics and applied mathematics and a BSc in applied mathematics.

She has supervised 56 honours and 24 master's students to completion, and is currently supervising 6 honours, 6 master's and 7 doctoral students, and has a particular passion for postgraduate supervision. She has published 27 peer-reviewed journal articles, 21 peer-reviewed conference proceedings papers and 1 book chapter.

She was on the executive of the South African Statistical Association (SASA) from 2012 to 2018, and from 2019 has been a director on the ICCSSA (Institute of Certificated and Chartered Statisticians in South Africa) board. She is the current president of SASA and the CEO of ICCSSA. She is also a member of ISI, SIAM and IMS internationally, and the Golden Key Society, SASA, S2A3, SAMS, ICCSSA (registered as a chartered statistician from 2019), GISSA, SAMSA, GASA and RLadies Johannesburg co-chair locally. She is a SACNASP council member elected 2021 – 2025.

Her research interests are in spatial statistics and GIS, as well as remote sensing and general image processing, including spatial epidemiology and criminology.

She has a number of countrywide research collaboration groups, namely SEPIMOD (Spatial Epidemiological Modelling) and StatSNetSA (a capacity development research group for building doctoral supervision skills in academic statistics in South Africa and further in general supporting the young academics in statistics in South Africa). Both these groups have resulted in a number of publications, postgraduate student growth and young academic development.

She has a National Research Foundation Y2 rating in recognition of her research and received the University of Pretoria Exceptional Young Researcher award in 2023.

Prof Fabris-Rotelli is an Abe Bailey Fellow (2007 tour award), is a 2018 fellow of the TUKS Young Researcher Leadership Program (TYRLP), and was selected as a BRICS Young Scientist 2020 in Artificial Intelligence.

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Ingo Grass

Professor, Department of Ecology of Tropical Agricultural Systems, University of Hohenheim

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Ingrid Chadwick

Associate Professor of Organizational Behaviour & Human Resource Management, Concordia University

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Ingrid Obsuth

Senior Lecturer in Clinical Psychology, The University of Edinburgh
I am a Senior Lecturer in Clinical Psychology at the School of Health in Social Science.

I received my PhD in Clinical Psychology from Simon Fraser University (SFU) in 2010, followed by a 2-year post-doctoral research fellowship at Harvard Medical School (HMS), Department of Psychiatry. Subsequently I worked for 5.5-years as a research associate at the University of Cambridge (UoC), Institute of Criminology.

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Inmaculada Martínez-Zarzoso

Professor in Economics, Universitat Jaume I
Inmaculada Martínez-Zarzoso is Professor at the Universities of Göttingen(Germany) and at Jaume I (Spain). She obtained her PhD in Economics from the University of Birmingham (England) in 1998. She has extensive teaching experience in several bachelor and master programs at the Universities of Birmingham, Valencia and Nottingham and has been actively engaged in building and managing international networks. Currently, she chairs the cluster in Social Sciences, Economics and Law of the Enlight Consortium, and is a member of the steering committees of the Center for Global Migration Studies and the CliMigHealth Network, as well as a board member of INFER.

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Intigam Mamedov

Postdoctoral research fellow in social sciences, Northumbria University, Newcastle
Intigam Mamedov is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Department of Social Sciences, Northumbria University. His area of interests include critical security studies, international relations, Russian and Post-Soviet Politics. Intigam earned his PhD degree in Politics from Lomonosov Moscow State University. His current research focuses on the role of narratives in the Russia-Ukraine conflict.

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Ioanna Stamataki

Lecturer in Hydraulics and Water Engineering, University of Greenwich
Dr Ioanna Stamataki, is a Lecturer in Hydraulics & Water Engineering in the School of Engineering at the University of Greenwich. Ioanna's primary research interests revolve around analysing and modelling extreme events like flash floods, utilising laboratory experiments and computational fluid dynamics (CFD) modelling to enhance our understanding of these phenomena. Ioanna's contributions to the field of civil engineering extends beyond academia as she has actively led and participated in outreach initiatives, engaging the general public in discussions around the crucial topic of flooding.

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Ioannis Costas Batlle

My research explores the extent to which youth sport programs can meet the needs of socioeconomically disadvantaged young people. I am particularly interested in youth sports programmes delivered by UK charities.

As a stand-up comedy enthusiast, I am also interested in exploring how comedy can enhace the dissemination of social science research.

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Ioannis Glinavos

Senior Lecturer in Law, University of Westminster

Ioannis Glinavos is Senior Lecturer in Law at the University of Westminster. He studied at Essex (LLB) and Kent (LLM, PhD) before taking a Teaching Fellowship at SOAS (Contract Law). He then held lectureships at Kingston (Contract Law) and Reading (Company and Commercial Law). Ioannis has published two books with Routledge (2010, 2013) and a series of articles on Law and Development, Law and Economics and Investment Arbitration.

He is currently researching foreign investor rights in the context of the economic crisis. Ioannis is also a blogger and commentator on Greek politics.

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Ioannis Tsalavoutas

Professor in accounting and finance, University of Glasgow
After completing his undergraduate studies at the Technological Educational Institute of Athens (BSc in Business Administration), Yannis undertook the MBA Programme at the University of Stirling with specialisation in Corporate Finance. In November 2009, he completed his PhD in Accounting at the University of Edinburgh. Yannis' work experience includes positions as an accounting assistant (in Greece) and as a financial accounting and reporting analyst at Company Reporting Ltd in Edinburgh. Prior to joining the University of Glasgow in January 2015, Yannis was a Lecturer in Accounting at the University of Stirling.

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Iona Fitzpatrick

Research Associate, University of Bath
Iona is a researcher in the Tobacco Control Research Group at the University of Bath. Her research focuses on the commercial determinants of health, with a focus on narrative and scalable research methodologies. Her current work examines how commercial organisations can influence public understandings of health, harm and science. She has carried out research in a variety of areas, notably social media research, place-making in online contexts and consumer research.

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Ione Fine

Professor of Psychology, University of Washington
Over the last few years my laboratory has been focusing on the effects of long term visual deprivation on human visual processing. Long term visual deprivation results in deficits in high level visual processing (such as face and object recognition) that cannot be explained by low level amblyopic deficits, and suggest that the role of visual experience differs widely across different types of processing. As well as characterizing the behavioral effects of deprivation, we have been examining the neural effects, using functional magnetic resonance imaging.

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Ipshita Basu

I am a political sociologist and my primary area of research over the last 10 years has been on the politics of identity, representation and violence in relation to development and governance. I believe that good research should make a social impact and I have taken inspiration from and evolved through connections with academic, practical and policy spheres.

Soon after completing my PhD in International Development from the University of Bath in 2010 I joined BRAC University’s Institute of Governance Studies (now called Institute of Governance and Development) as their Head of Research between 2010-2012. I was steering the IDRC’s Think Tank Initiative programme and during my tenure I led the research team on the publication of the first and very influential State of Cities report on Dhaka. In 2012, I joined the University of Surrey’s Department of Politics where I was engaged with the Centre for Critical Research on International Intervention. I came to the U.K. for the first time in 2001 to study for a Master’s in Gender Studies at the University of Warwick, returned to India to work as a journalist and then a scholarship brought me back to the U.K. in 2004 for an M.Res and Phd in International Development. At present, I am settled in the U.K. but like most cosmopolitan migrants I remain connected with my peers in India, Bangladesh and the rest of South Asia.

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Ira Lamster

Clinical Professor of Periodontics and Endodontics, Stony Brook University (The State University of New York)
Dr. Ira B. Lamster received his D.D.S. from the State University of New York at Stony Brook (1977), his M.M.Sc. from Harvard University (1980) and a Certificate of Special Training in Periodontology from the Harvard School of Dental Medicine (1980). Dr. Lamster served as Dean of the Columbia University College of Dental Medicine from 2001 to 2012, and Senior Vice President of Columbia University Medical Center from 2006 to 2012. From 2012 until 2017 he was in the Department of Health Policy & Management of the Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health.

Dr. Lamster is currently Dean Emeritus, Columbia University College of Dental Medicine, and Clinical Professor at the Stony Brook University School of Dental Medicine. He is also a member of the Santa Fe Group. Dr. Lamster’s research efforts have focused on diagnostic testing and risk assessment for periodontal disease, the interrelationship of periodontal disease and systemic disease, the oral health care needs of older adults and the future of dental education and practice. His research has been supported by NIH, corporations and foundations.

Dr. Lamster is the author of more than 200 manuscripts and book chapters and has delivered more than 200 guest and invited lectures. He is the editor of “Improving Oral Health for the Elderly,” published by Springer U.S. in February 2008, both the January 2011 and October 2012 issues of the Dental Clinics of North America (addressing “Contemporary Concepts in the Diagnosis of Oral Dental Disease”, and “Primary Health Care Activities in the Dental Office”, respectively). He is the editor of “Diabetes Mellitus and Oral Health: An Interprofessional Approach” published by Wiley/Blackwell in 2014, and the October 2016 issue of Periodontology 2000 (“Geriatric Periodontology”). He served as Editor-in-Chief of the International Dental Journal from 2015 -2021.

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Irem Sepil

Lecturer in Evolutionary Biology, University of Oxford
I am an evolutionary biologist broadly interested in reproductive ageing, nongenetic parental effects, sexual selection and life-history theory. My postdoc work addressed an important but understudied aspect of reproductive ageing: declining ejaculate performance with male age. I used a short-lived tractable animal model, the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster to investigate sperm- and seminal fluid-mediated male reproductive ageing and interventions to delay it.

Now, as a Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin Fellow, I am interested in understanding how paternal age and paternal diet influence the fitness of the offspring. Recent evidence suggests that a father’s age and diet can have important effects on offspring physiology. These studies highlight that paternal effects are likely to be powerful determinants of offspring fitness, yet many important questions in the study of paternal effects remain unanswered, such as why and how they occur. I use fruit flies to identify the causal relationship between paternal age, diet and offspring fitness, and to uncover the ejaculate-mediated mechanisms driving these relationships. My group also studies the transgenerational effects of gametic ageing and experimentally tests the predictions of life-history and ageing theories.

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Irene Botchway

Clinical Psychologist , University of Ghana
I conduct psychological assessment, neuropsychological assessment and psychotherapy. I engage in teaching and research (quantitative and qualitative researches). I engage in career/ vocational counselling.

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Irene Georgescu

Full Professor, Université de Montpellier
Irène Georgescu is full Professor since 2013 (and at University of Montpellier since 2014)

She had obtained a PHD in 2010 (University of Montpellier)

Research area and topics of interests are :

* effects of evaluation on attitudes and behaviors in health care area (quantitative and qualitative evaluations, feedback, roles conflicts and ambiguity, commitment, identity, extreme work, motivation, upcoding ...)

* effects of digital feedback platforms in health area

* effects of extreme climate and weather events on health care organisations

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Irene Huertas-Valdivia

Associate Professor at the Business Administration Department (A.D.O)., Universidad Rey Juan Carlos
I received a PhD in Economics and Business Cum Laude from the University of Granada (with Special Mention for the International Doctorate). I also earned my University Master's in Economics and Business Administration, Bachelor's of Science in Labor Studies, Diploma in Tourism, and CAP (Certificate of Pedagogical Aptitude) from the University of Granada.

My research and publications focus on human resources management and leadership in the hotel industry. I worked for two years as a visiting professor and researcher in the Department of Tourism of the University of Guadalajara (Mexico), where I also participated in various research projects with the Mexican Secretary of Tourism.

I hold a specialist's certificate in Hotel Leadership and Management from the University Alfonso X El Sabio (Madrid). For 9 years, I held middle management positions in the hotel chains AC Hotels and Marriott International.

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Irene Lorenzoni

Professor of Society and Environmental Change, University of East Anglia
I am interested in how individuals, groups and collectives perceive the challenges of global environmental change, how they engage and respond to them. As an environmental social scientist, my research focuses on the relationships between individual perceptions and understandings of environmental issues - specifically climate change - and behaviours. An important component to my work is understanding how and why such responses are enabled or hindered, with a focus on societal and political processes shaping climate futures. Therefore my work also encompasses governance of climate change at various societal and geographical levels, both in relation to mitigating climate change and adapting to its effects.

I pursue these strands drawing from a variety of social science disciplines in an interdisciplinary manner. My current research includes societal transformations and low carbon futures (see ESRC-funded CAST centre), deep decarbonisation (see ERC-funded 'DeepDCarb' - Deep Decarbonisation: the Democratic Challenge of Navigating Governance Traps’ project), communication and accessibility of climate data in visual form (including work in collaboration with the IPCC), coastal adaptation and resilience. I serves on the editorial board of the academic journal Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews (WIREs) Climate Change. I am also member of the Science, Society and Sustainability (3S) Research Group at UEA and and of the Tyndall Centre.

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Irene Reppa

Assistant Professor, Psychology, Swansea University
My research the last few years has been on understanding cognitive operations behind performance. Recently, my colleagues and I have been looking into whether and how attractive visual stimuli can influence time-critical performance.

Another recent line of work concerns our use and understanding of icons, signs and symbols. Considering they are part of a new global visual language, we know relatively little so far about how they are perceived and understood by people across languages, cultures, ages, and ethnic backgrounds. Discovering this over the next few years is an exciting new venture for us.

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Irene Rujas Pascual

Profesora Ayudante Doctora. Facultad de Psicología, Universidad Complutense de Madrid
Doctora en Psicología por la Universidad Autónoma de Madrid.

Profesora del Departamento de Investigación y Educación en Psicología, en la Facultad de Psicología de la Universidad Complutense de Madrid.

En los últimos años, ha trabajado con niñas y niños con dificultades de aprendizaje, tanto en contexto escolar, como en contexto clínico.

Está interesada en el estudio del desarrollo del lenguaje y en el diseño de herramientas para su evaluación y la detección de dificultades tempranas.

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Irene Xagoraraki

Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Michigan State University
My students and I are working on water quality and public health issues. We study the fate of pathogens in the built environment and in natural systems. Since 2017, our research focuses on environmental surveillance approaches for prediction of outbreaks.

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