As a health economist, I specialise in the economics of infectious diseases and the economic evaluation of complex public health interventions.
As a health economist, I specialise in the economics of infectious diseases and the economic evaluation of complex public health interventions.
I’ve been actively involved with research in various aspects of digital signal processing, digital image processing, digital filter design, and communications for more than 50 years. (more…)
I’ve been at Imperial College for just over three years now, following undergraduate studies and postgraduate studies at La Trobe and Melbourne Universities in Australia.
I’m a mathematical (or sometimes not so mathematical) physicist in the Department of Mathematics, where I am a Royal Society Research Fellow and Senior Lecturer.
I gained an MBA from Vanderbilt University and a DBA in Management at the IE Business School in Madrid. (more…)
I gained a BSc in Organic Chemistry from Ramon Llull University in Barcelona before pursuing a PhD in Medical Engineering and Medical Physics at MIT followed by a postdoc fellowship at Brigham and Women’s Hospital (Harvard Medical School). (more…)
I completed my master’s in operations research and my PhD in probability and stochastic processes at the Technion (Israel Institute of Technology), before going on to postdoctoral positions at Hong Kong University of Science Technology, and the University of Rochester in New York NY. (more…)
Since completing my BSc and PhD in Bremen Germany, and Edinburgh, Scotland, I’ve worked in both academia and industry.
I completed my undergraduate degree and PhD in Mechanical Engineering at Victoria University in Melbourne, focussing on heavy goods vehicle dynamics.
I received an MSc and PhD degree from Leeds University, where I spent six months as a postdoctoral research fellow investigating the application of computational approaches to the prediction of the biological effects of nanomaterials. (more…)