Aron Emmi

Currently, Aron Emmi serves as Assistant Professor of Human Anatomy at the Institute of Human Anatomy, Department of Neuroscience of the University of Padova, where he has previously obtained his degree and doctoral degree (PhD) and completed his post-graduate training in neuropathology and clinical neuroanatomy. He have also undergone post-doctoral training in forensic neuropathology.

 

His research activity focuses on the discovery and validation of central and peripheral neuropathological biomarkers for neurodegenerative diseases, particularly Parkinson’s Disease. Other research interests include clinical neuroanatomy of the human brainstem, nervous control of respiratory centers, infectious and inflammatory pathology of the brain and its relationship with neurodegeneration.

 

In the last 5 years Aron Emmi has published 50+ peer-reviewed articles in international journals in the field of neuroscience, neuropathology and human anatomy and presented his research activity as a speaker at over 60 national and international conferences. He serves as ad-hoc reviewer for several high-impact scientific journals (Nature NPJ Parkinson’s Disease, Movement Disorders, Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry, Neurobiology of Disease). He have co-authored 4 academic textbooks for students and specialists on neuroanatomy and microscopic anatomy.

 

Aron Emmi is a member of several national and international scientific organizations, including the Royal College of Pathologists, the European Confederation of Neuropathological Societies, and the italian group for neuromorphology.

Stefano Masiero

Stefano Masiero is Full Professor in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at the University of Padova.

 

Present position

Director of the Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine School at the University of Padua.
Chair of Rehabilitation Unit at the Padua University-General Hospital.
Director of Laboratory of Robotic and Bioengineering and Clinical of Movement of Padua University-General Hospital.
Postgraduate Diploma in “Epidemiology and Medical Statistics” at the University of Verona.
During his career, he received several academic awards and funding and published over 200 peer reviewed manuscripts including some book of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation.

 

Major Research Interests:

– Neurorehabilitation with robot-therapy, neurostimulation, etc. in post-stroke subjects

– Functional Electrical Stimulation (FES)  in Neuromusculoskeletal disorders

– Assessment in Neuromusculoskeletal disorders (gait analysis study, Morphometric analysis, etc.)

-Study of Neurophysiological effects of the exercise in neuro-musculoskeletal disorders

– Aquatic therapy and hydrotherapy in neurological diseases (Parkinson disease)

Maurizio Corbetta

Maurizio Corbetta is Full Professor and Chair of Neurology in the Department of Neuroscience at the University of Padua.

 

He is the former Norman J. Stupp Professor of Neurology, and Professor of Radiology, Anatomy and Neurobiology, and Bioengineering at Washington University School of Medicine. From 2001-to 2016 he was the Chief of the Division of Neuro-Rehabilitation, and Director of Neurological Rehabilitation at Washington University. As of October 1, 2016 Dr. Corbetta is Full Professor and Chair of Neurology in the Department of Neuroscience at the University of Padua, Italy. He is also the founding director of the new Padua Neuroscience Center, a highly interdisciplinary research programme centered on the idea of brain networks in health and society.

 

Prof. Corbetta has pioneered experiments on the neural mechanisms of human attention using Positron Emission Tomography (PET). He has discovered two brain networks dedicated to attention control, the dorsal and ventral attention networks, and developed a brain model of attention that has been cited in the literature more than 5,000 times. His clinical work has focused on the physiological correlates of focal injury. He has developed a pathogenetic model of the syndrome of hemispatial neglect.

 

He is currently developing novel methods for studying the functional organization of the brain using functional connectivity MRI, magneto-encephalography (MEG), and electro-corticography (EcoG). He is also working on the effects of focal injuries on the network organization of brain systems with an eye to neuromodulation.

 

His research has been recognized with several awards including a Highly Cited Researchers by Thompson Reuter based on the top 1% rate of citations in the last decade.

 

H index Scopus=62

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Paolo Meneguzzo

Paolo Meneguzzo is a researcher (RTD-B) at the Department of Neuroscience of the University of Padova.

 

He graduated in Medicine and Surgery in 2012 and completed his psychiatry residency in 2018 at the University of Padova. He completed a Ph.D. in neurosciences at the University of Padua in 2021 with a thesis on neurodevelopmental trajectories in patients with anorexia nervosa, investigating the cognitive and structural effects of malnutrition on the brain of adolescents and adult women. During his studies, he spent two internship periods at the Department of Neuroscience and Functional Pharmacology of the University of Uppsala (Sweden) and at the Department of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy of the University of Tübingen (Germany).

 

He participates in numerous national and international research collaborations on psychosis, eating disorders, and body image dissatisfaction. His primary research interests revolve around eating disorders from a clinical neuroscience perspective, with a specific focus on cognitive, emotional, and interpersonal aspects. His research area also includes gender diversity, environmental effects on mental health, and psychotherapies.

 

Google scholar: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=RRcIAAgAAAAJ&hl=it

Patrizia Trevisi

Patrizia Trevisi is Associate Professor of Audiology at Padua University (Neurosciences Dept, Med 32).

 

She is also President of the School of Speech Therapy; representative of Pediatric Audiology at Padua Hospital; coordinator of the Universal Hearing Screening in Veneto Region. Member of the CRANIO group of the European Reference Networks fo Rare Diseases and rare ENT conditions.

 

Her research fields of interest concerne hearing impairment in children, cochlear implants, hearing impairment associated to additional disabilities and rare diseases, clinical application of Cortical auditory evoked potentials (CAEPs).

 

She is author of about 45 papers on peer reviewed international journals and book chapters and 2 monographs. She also presented lectures to 38 national and international scientific congresses and courses as invited speaker.

 

She is teacher for classes at School of Medicine, at University Diploma of Logopaedia, of Audioprosthesis and for the Resident Schools for Audiology and Phoniatrics (MED 32). Her most important clinical activities concerne Paediatric Audiology and rare disease and rare ENT anomalies. She is a member of the cochlear implant equipe of the ENT Dept.

Manfredo Atzori

Manfredo Atzori is Associate Professor at the Department of Neuroscience of the University of Padova.

 

He received a M.Sc. in Physics and a Ph.D. in Bioengineering in 2006 and 2009 at the University of Padova. He is Associate Professor at the Department of Neuroscience of the University of Padova. He has been research scientist at the Institute of Information Systems of the University of Applied Sciences Western Switzerland (HES-SO Valais) since 2011.

His research interests are related to the development of machine learning techniques targeting multimodal data analysis, particularly in the biomedical domain.

 

Since 2019 he is the Scientific Coordinator of the Horizon 2020 project ExaMode, involving seven international partners and targeting weakly-supervised knowledge discovery from multimodal medical data, such as text and images, in the context of digital pathology (htttp://www.examode.eu/).

Since 2011 he collected and has managed Ninapro, a publicly available database aiming at improving the control of robotic hand prostheses with machine learning and data fusion, currently having several thousand users worldwide (http://ninapro.hevs.ch/).

He has been the coordinator of the Hasler Fundation financed ProHand project, targeting the development of 3D printed robotic prosthetic hands controlled via machine learning approaches.

Between 2016 and 2019, Prof. Atzori had a leading role in the MeganePro Project, involving three international partners. The project was aimed at improving robotic prosthesis control with eye-hand coordination and at better understanding the neurocognitive effects of amputations. Multimodal data were released in the context of the project, including electromyography, intertial, gaze tracking, visual, behavioral and clinical data for prosthetics and phantom limb sensation analyses.

Since 2015 he has worked on the development of computer aided diagnostic systems for cancer in byopsies using computer vision techniques such as convolutional neural networks.

In 2015, Prof. Atzori was among the first researchers worldwide in developing convolutional neural networks for surface electromyography data analysis.

Prof. Atzori is author of over 80 peer reviewed scientific publications with over 2’000 citations and he presented his work, also as invited speaker, at several international conferences.

He is member of the editorial board of Scientific Data (Nature Publishing Group).

Finally, Prof. Atzori has strong experience in developing scientific projects in collaboration with academic research groups and companies.

Fabio Sambataro

Fabio Sambataro is Associate Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Padova from 2019.

 

Trained as a psychiatrist at the University of Catania, where he received a PhD in Neuroscience in a joint program with the University of Bari (Prof. A. Bertolino). During his post-doctoral training at the NIMH (Prof. D. Weinberger), and the Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (Prof. G. Rizzolatti) he has investigated the brain mechanisms underlying cognition, aging and psychiatric disorders. He was the director of the Clinical Imaging Lab of the pRED, NORD DTA, Roche Innovation Center, Basel, in 2014-2015, when he became associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Udine.

 

His research interests entail the brain mechanisms underlying the pathophysiology and the response to treatment of major psychiatric disorders, including schizophrenia and mood disorders.

 

To pursue our research interests, we use structural and functional neuroimaging, neuropsychology, and genetics using uni- and multivariate models.

 

Publication list:

https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2102-416X
https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=5WQpLh4AAAAJ&hl
https://www.scopus.com/authid/detail.uri?authorId=15053801700

Edoardo Midena

Edoardo Midena is Board Certified in Ophthalmology, Full Professor of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences at the University of Padova, School of Medicine, and Chairman of Ophthalmology at Padova University Hospital.

 

He is member of the scientific board of the G.B. Bietti Foundation for study and research in ophthalmology (Rome, Italy), he is elected member of  the Club Jules Gonin, the Retina Society, the Macula Society,  and the European Academy of Ophthalmology, EURETINA (also Board Member), General Secretary of the Italian Retina Society.

 

Professor Miden’s major scientific interests are chorioretinal diseases, ocular oncology, and diagnostic techniques in ophthalmology. The interest in retinal diseases has been devoted  to chronic acquired diseases, investigated from bench to bedside. He has contributed to the knowledge of the effects of different treatment modalities (radiation, thermotherapy, threshold and subthreshold photocoagulation, intraocular drugs) on retinal and choroidal circulation, and on retinal function. He has also particularly worked on new psychophysical visual function diagnostic techniques as microperimetry, applied to retinal blinding conditions .

His research on visual functions is integrated with multimodal retinal imaging.

Enrico Collantoni

Enrico Collantoni is Associate Professor at the Department of Neuroscience of the University of Padova.

 

He graduated in Medicine and Surgery in 2010 and completed his residency in Psychiatry in 2016 at the University of Padova.

He completed a Ph.D. in neurosciences at the University of Padua in 2019 with a thesis on a MRI evaluation of the structural brain patterns in anorexia nervosa. During his residency and Ph.D., he spent two internship periods at the neuroimaging Unit of the University of Salerno and at the Neurophysiology & Interventional Neuropsychiatry section of the University Clinic of Psychiatry of the University of Tübingen.

 

He participates in numerous national and international research collaborations and is an active member of the Enhancing Neuroimaging Genetics through Meta-analysis (ENIGMA) Consortium & Eating Disorders working group. His research interest entails the neural mechanisms underlying eating behaviors and the pathophysiology of eating disorders.

 

In his research activity, he employs neuroimaging techniques and cognitive/behavioral assessment methods using mobile applications and virtual reality.

Ettore Ambrosini

Ettore Ambrosini is currently Associate Professor at the Dept. of Neuroscience in Padova.

 

He graduated in Psychology in 2009 at the University “G. d’Annunzio” of Chieti and earned a PhD in Neuroimaging in 2013 at the same University. After a post-doctoral position at the University of Chieti (2013), he was a post-doctoral fellow at the Department of Neuroscience, University of Padova, where (from 2017) he currently holds the position of Associate Professor.

 

His research interests include the understanding of the organization and the neural underpinnings of executive functions, the perception of objects and their semantic representation, and the perception and anticipation of others’ goal-directed actions. To study these topics, he uses different techniques such as psychophysics, eye tracking, brain stimulation (TMS), and neurophysiology (EEG). He is an expert in experimental methodology and data analysis.

 

He has authored about 40 peer-reviewed articles in international scientific journals (h-index 14), and serves as Review Editor for Frontiers in Psychology (Cognition section) and as ad-hoc reviewer for a number of important international journals within the domains of experimental psychology and cognitive neuroscience. He has received several awards for his research work.

 

He has supervised numerous trainees and master students and a PhD student (co-supervision) and has held advanced courses for research methodology and techniques. He currently teaches Neuropsychology.


Publications:

https://scholar.google.it/citations?user=IXzK9J8AAAAJ&hl=en;

https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Ettore_Ambrosini

Alessandra Del Felice

Alessandra Del Felice is Associate Professor, University of Padova, Department of Neuroscience.

 

She is an academic clinician in the area of Neurorehabilitation. Her basic training has been as a neurologist, with a special interest in neurophysiology and neurorehabilitation, and holds a Ph.D. in Neuroscience. She has attracted funding at UNIPD, with an on-going H2020 project and several international and national grants.

Her current research area allows her to draw on her experience and skills in neurophysiology and extensive collaboration with national and international medical engineering Departments to improve methodology and outcome measures in this important area of rehabilitation. She has a track record in EEG signal analysis EEG-TMS co-registration, and neurostimulation.

Her current research portfolio includes validation of inertial sensors for movement analysis in clinical practice; EEG-EMG co-registration during overground gait in healthy subjects and during exoskeleton gait in stroke survivors; early neurophysiological and neurobiological biomarkers of recovery after stroke; technological tools prevent falls in the elderly; recovery and long term prognostic markers after coma.

 

She has an extensive collaborative research network, with current national and international collaborations.

She has around 80 peer reviewed articles or book chapters to her name. She has been given several awards for her work and these include the Italian Clinical Neurophysiology Society Young Investigator Award, the Italian Neuroepidemiology Association “Giulia Benassi” Prize and the “G. Pampiglione” Prize by the Italian Neurological Society.

 

Twitter: A_DelFelice

Alessandro Salvalaggio

Alessandro Salvalaggio is a neurologist, researcher (RTD-A) at the Department of Neuroscience of the University of Padova.

 

He graduated in Medicine and Surgery in 2012 and completed his residency in Neurology in 2018 at the University of Padova. He completed his PhD in Neuroscience in 2022 at Padova Neuroscience Center, with a thesis on brain disconnection in focal lesions (stroke, gliomas).

 

Main interests:

  • Impact of brain tumors and cancer treatments on clinical outcomes (cognitive and neurological impairment, survival) mediated by structural and functional disconnection.
  • Neurological complications of cancer.
  • Transthyretin amyloidosis and peripheral neuropathies.

 

Scopus: https://www.scopus.com/authid/detail.uri?authorId=56359388100

Google scholar: https://scholar.google.it/citations?user=WwsDAwsAAAAJ&hl=it

Andrea Guerra

Andrea Guerra is an Assistant Professor in Neurology at the Department of Neuroscience, University of Padua.

 

He graduated in Medicine and Surgery in 2010 and completed his residency in Neurology in 2016 at the Campus Bio-Medico University of Rome (Paolo Maria Rossini’s group and Vincenzo Di Lazzaro’s group), where he developed skills in neurodegenerative disorders (movement disorders and dementia) and clinical neurophysiology.

 

In 2015, he had a clinical-research fellowship in Experimental Neurology and Movement Disorders at the University of Oxford (Peter Brown’s group), where he worked on invasive (i.e. Deep Brain Stimulation – DBS) and non-invasive brain stimulation methods to modulate brain oscillations in patients with movement disorders. From 2016 to February 2023, he worked at the Department of Human Neurosciences, Sapienza University of Rome (Alfredo Berardelli’s group), where he completed his PhD in Clinical-Experimental Neuroscience, spent two years as a post-doc and then became Assistant Professor in Neurology (RTD-A). During these years, he improved his skills in neuropharmacology and advanced treatments for movement disorders, particularly Parkinson’s Disease (PD). In the last ten years, he received various awards from national and international scientific societies for his research and has been an invited speaker at several academic congresses. He has recently won competitive grants funded by the Italian Ministry of Health (“Ricerca Finalizzata”, GR-2021) and the Italian Ministry of University and Research (“Progetti di Rilevante Interesse Nazionale”, PRIN 2022 PNRR), as research project’s PI. In 2022, he was awarded the National Scientific Qualification as Associate Professor of Neurology, and in March 2023 moved to the University of Padua.

 

His research activity focuses on studying brain excitability, connectivity and plasticity changes in patients with movement disorders using various neurophysiological techniques, including transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and high-density electroencephalography (HD-EEG). He also applies non-invasive brain stimulation methods in these patients to modulate neurophysiological and behavioural functions with potential therapeutic purposes. Finally, he investigates the clinical and neurophysiological effects of DBS in movement disorders and uses local field potentials (LFPs) recordings from the basal ganglia nuclei to improve the understanding of the pathophysiology of these diseases and optimize DBS clinical effects.

 

Scopus: https://www.scopus.com/authid/detail.uri?authorId=24437794700

Angela Favaro

Angela Favaro is Full professor MED/25  (Psychiatry), Padova University School of Medicine. She is also Chief of Psychiatric Clinic at the Hospital of Padova; Chief of the Eating Disorders Unit at the Hospital of Padova; Director of Psychiatry Residency Program.

 

Major Research Interests

– Psychopathology, epidemiology and therapy of eating disorders

– Genetic and neurodevelopmental risk factors for the development of eating disorders. The Eating Disorders Padova Research Group in collaboration with Professor Maurizio Clementi (Clinical Genetics Unit) host a DNA biobank (BIOVEDA)

– Neurocognition in eating disorders and in other types of psychiatric disorders. Functional connectivity correlates of executive functioning in psychiatric disorders.

– Structural and functional neuroimaging in eating disorders, psychiatric disorders, and rare genetic diseases

– Neuroconnectomics of psychiatric disorders.

– Non-invasive repetitive stimulation as a treatment in psychiatric disorders

Antonino Vallesi

Antonino Vallesi is Full Professor in Neuropsychology and Cognitive Neuroscience.

 

He pursued his master degree in Psychology (cum laude) from University of Padua in 2003 and his PhD in Neuroscience (cum laude) at SISSA, Trieste in 2007.  During his PhD, he visited the Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, UCL, London (2005). He was a post-doctoral fellow at the Rotman Research Institute at Baycrest, Toronto (2007-2009) and an Assistant Professor at SISSA (2009-2012), and then at University of Padua (2012-2014), where he was then promoted as Associate Professor (2014-2022) and is currently full professor in Psychobiology and Physiological Psychology.

 

In 2011 he received the Bertelson Award from the European Society of Cognitive Psychology, and the “Outstanding Young Person” national award for his research activity from Junior Chamber International-Italy. In 2017, he was the recipient of the SIPF Prize from the Società Italiana di Psicofisiologia e Neuroscienze Cognitive. In 2013 he was funded with an FP7 ERC starting grant with a project on Life Experience Modulation of Executive Function Asymmetries (about 1.5 MEuros; GA #313692).

 

His research interests include the anatomo-functional organization of executive functions, cognitive aging and temporal processing. The methods he uses include neuroimaging, EEG, neuropsychology, neuromodulation and experimental psychology.

 

Prof. Vallesi has supervised over 10 PhD students, 13 postdoctoral fellows, and more than 65 undergraduate, master’s, and trainee students.

 

He has authored approximately 145 peer-reviewed articles in international scientific journals, contributed to 7 book chapters, co-edited one book, and organized various symposia and both national and international conferences. He has also been invited to speak at numerous conferences and research institutes around the world.

 

At the University of Padua, prof. Vallesi has taught courses in Cognitive Neuroscience, Neuroimaging and Brain Stimulation, Foundations of Psychology, and Methodology for the Behavioral Sciences.

 

He is currently Specialty Chief Editor for Frontiers in Psychology: Cognition, and has served as Associate Editor, Guest Editor, Academic board member of various international journals. He has served as an ad hoc reviewer for numerous international journals including Plos Biology, Brain, Neurosci Biobehav R, Cereb Cortex, Neurobiol Aging, Neuroimage, Hum Brain Mapp, J Cogn Neurosci, Cortex, Neuropsychologia etc.

 

Prof. Vallesi has been a grant reviewer for Horizon 2020 MSCA-IF-2016 & FET 2014; MIUR SIR 2014; FP7 HBP Call 2013; NSERC Canada 2011-12; Romanian NCDI 2011-13; OPUS-National Science Centre, Poland etc.

 

If interested in our research, have a look at the Executive Function Lab at Unipd

Arianna Menardi

Arianna Menardi works as a Researcher (RTD-A) at the Department of Neuroscience, University of Padova.

 

During her career, she collaborated with several national and international research groups. In 2017, she joined the Berenson-Allen Center for Non-invasive Brain Stimulation at Harvard Medical School, where she worked under the Supervision of Prof. Alvaro Pascual-Leone and Dr. Emiliano Santarnecchi in studying cortical excitability (as assessed by Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation-TMS) in Alzheimer’s Disease patients. In 2018 she joined the Brain Investigation and Neuromodulation Lab in Siena, where she worked on network-targeted interventions by means of multi-electrodes transcranial electrical stimulation (tES) during concomitant functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), under the supervision of Prof. Simone Rossi and Dr. Emiliano Santarnecchi. In 2019 she started her PhD at the Padova Neuroscience Center, under the supervision of Prof. Antonino Vallesi, Prof. Maurizio Corbetta and Dr. Emiliano Santarnecchi. Her PhD project focused on the study of interindividual differences in the brain topographical properties for the selection of personalized stimulation targets in the brain. Collaborators to this project included Prof. Marie Banich and Prof. Naomi Friedman for the University of Colorado Boulder, Prof. Albert-Laszlo Barabasi and Dr. Emma Towlson from the Notheastern University, in Boston.

 

More recently, Arianna won a Grant for Young Researchers by the Italian Association for Research on Alzheimer’s Disease to investigate individual alterations in the functional connectivity as a potential early biomarker of pathology progression.

Camillo Porcaro

Camillo Porcaro is an Associate Professor in Bioengineering at the Department of Neuroscience of the University of Padova.

 

He is a computational neuroscientist with a core interest in developing analytical methods for extracting information from non-invasive measures of brain activity. His research focuses on identifying functional brain sources from data obtained through neuroimaging techniques. In 2008 he defended with honours his doctoral thesis in “Functional Neuroimaging: from Cells to Systems” at the Institute of Advanced Biomedical Technologies (ITAB), University of Chieti, Italy. The same year, he became a Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Birmingham – School of Psychology, using simultaneous EEG/fMRI. In 2011, he joined the Institute of Neuroscience, Newcastle University, after gaining a highly competitive independent research position.

From October 2011 to September 2021, he was an Independent Researcher at the Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies (ISTC) – National Research Council (CNR), Rome, Italy. Furthermore, in 2014 and 2015, he was invited as Visiting Professor at the Neural Control of Movement Lab, Department of Health Sciences and Technology ETH, Zurich, Switzerland and from 2015 to 2022 as an Adjunct Professor at the Department of Information Engineering at the Polytechnic University of Marche, Ancona (Professor of Bio-imaging and Brain Research at the Department of Biomedical Engineering). In addition, from 2016 to 2020, he was Visiting Professor at the Department of Human Kinesiology, Movement Control & Neuroplasticity Research Group, KU Leuven, Belgium and from 2018 to 2021, he was Head of the Research hdEEG Lab at S. Anna Institute and Research in Advanced Neurorehabilitation (RAN), Crotone, Italy. Finally, since October 2021, he has been appointed Associate Professor at Padua University – Department of Neuroscience. His most successful contributions have involved source extraction with advanced methods, including Independent Component Analysis (ICA) and a modification of this algorithm called Functional Source Separation (FSS). Furthermore, he developed various temporal and spectral constraints (the basis for FSS algorithms) for extracting and validating primary cortical areas. Recently, he has started applying
FSS to EEG data recorded in the MRI environment to improve the quality of EEG data at the individual study level. His recent research focuses on developing functional constraints for the identification of complex cortical networks and the identification of resting-state functional networks (RSN) from EEG and fMRI recordings with the ultimate goal of characterising the neuronal dynamics of these networks using complex nonlinear methods such as Fractal Dimension.

 

He currently holds the following roles:

  • Associate Professor at the Department of Neuroscience (ING-INF/06).
  • Academic Board Member of the PhD in Neuroscience (PNC).
  • IEEE Senior Member.
  • External expert assisting the European Research Executive Agency.
  • Honorary Senior Research Fellow – School of Psychology, Birmingham University Imaging Center (BUIC), Birmingham, UK.
  • Ordinary Member of the National Group of Biomedical Engineering.

 

National scientific qualifications (ASN):

  • Associate Professor in Bioengineering (09/G2 – ING-INF/06).
  • Associate Professor in Physiology (BIO/09 – 05/D1)