Expert Directory

Evangeline Mantzioris, PhD

Program Director: Nutrition and Food Sciences

University of South Australia

Mediterranean Diet

Evangeline is the Program Director of the Nutrition and Food Sciences Degree. She is an Accredited Practicing Dietitian (APD) and Sports Dietitian (AccSD), with experience in clinical dietetics and clinical teaching. In 2021 she was appointed to the NHMRC Australian Dietary Guidelines Expert Review Committee.

Evangeline is passionate about communicating nutritional science to the public. She is an invited talker and media communicator for radio, television and print. She is an author and editor, and writer for The Conversation.

Evangeline's research interests include: Fats; Sports nutrition, Mediterranean Diet and the Environment-Food nexus.

Twitter EvangelineMantzioris @EMantzioris

 

Dietitians Association of Australia - Accredited Dietitian/Nutritionist   

Sports Dietitian of Australia - Accredited Sports Dietitian   

Higher Education Research Group of Adelaide

Lorimer Moseley, PhD

Professor of Clinical Neurosciences

University of South Australia

Clinical Sciences,Neuroscientist,Physiotherapy,Psychology

I am fascinated by humans. That fascination has led me to become a physiotherapist, then a neuroscientist, a pain scientist and a science educator. After working as a physiotherapist for seven years, I combined my clinical work with research - a PhD at the University of Sydney Pain Management Research Institute and research positions at the University of Queensland, University of Sydney and Oxford University, UK. My official qualifications are: DSc, PhD, FAAHMS, FACP, HonFFPMANZCA, HonMAPA, BAppSc(Phty)(Hons). In 2020, I was made an Officer of the Order of Australia, for "distinguished service to medical research and science communication, to education, to the study of pain and its management, and to physiotherapy, to humanity at large."

I was appointed University of South Australia's Inaugural Chair in Physiotherapy, and Professor of Clinical Neurosciences, in 2011 and was honoured to be appointed a Bradley Distinguished Professor in 2021.

I have been supported by NHMRC Fellowship/Investigator funding since my return to Australia in 2009.

I am the Chair of PainAdelaide Stakeholders' Consortium, which brings together Adelaide's pain researchers, clinicians and consumers to 'put our heads together' for persistent pain. I established and lead the non-profit grassroots movement called Pain Revolution, which is committed to a bold but realistic vision that all Australians will have access to the knowledge, skills and local support to prevent and overcome persistent pain. Our annual Flagship Event is the Pain Revolution Rural Outreach Tour. Our awareness and fund-raising challenge 'Go the Distance!' encourages pepole to walk, run or ride to meet their own personal challenge, raising awareness of the problem of persistent pain and the possibilities that are emerging with each new scientific discovery. Our ongoing capacity-building programs - Local Pain Educator Program and Local Pain Collectives Project, aim to (i) embed in rural and regional communities the capacity to prevent and overcome persistent pain, and (ii) develop local pain networks to provide sustainable capacity. Learn about Pain Revolution here: painrevolution.org.

I led the establishment of UniSA's Innovation, Implementation & Clinical Translation in Health ('IIMPACT in Health') and was Director from inception until 2023. IIMPACT has grown to about 100 researchers, publishing over 500 scientific articles a year, with a research income of about $2m a year. The research in IIMPACT centres around taking a truly 'biopsychosocial' to a range of significant health conditions, and the primary role that allied health professionals play in discovery and treatment. Central to IIMPACT has been an 'innovation to implementation' approach, led by clinical and consumer needs, with both playing important roles in every phase of the research journey.

I lead the Body in Mind Research Group within IIMPACT. This research group investigates the role of the brain and mind in chronic pain. Pain is a huge problem - it affects 20% of the population and costs western societies about as much as diabetes and cancer combined.  We have a major public engagement and education focus, with our articles and videos attracting over 13 million reads/views, including being on repeat in hospitals and community health centres in several countries. Body in Mind, or 'BIM', research is supported by MRFF and NHMRC Grants and industry funding, and many BIMsters have NHMRC scholarship or fellowship support. We have eight nationalities and several disciplines represented.

For those of you keen on 'metrics', my main metrics are: Total number of papers - about 400; Google scholar H-index - 95; Average Field-weighted citation index - 1.9 - 2.6 in the fields in which I am most active; competitive grant funding - about $22 million over 20 years.

I supervise PhD students and host post-doctoral fellows for between 1 - 3 years. Expressions of interest in joining our group should be directed in the first instance to [email protected]. We have many such expressions of interest each year so it is best to make contact at least 12 months in advance.

I co-developed, with David Moen and Sam Chisolm, a consumer facing resource called Tame the Beast - go to tamethebeast.org.

I established bodyinmind.org in 2009 and was Chief Editor until we handed it to the IASP.  This library of over 900 blog posts is now hosted on their consumer/clinician facing website called RELIEF. You can visit that library here: https://relief.news/relief-to-provide-body-in-mind-content-as-a-free-resource/

Pain revolution is revamping our website, but until then you can find some factsheets you can download and print in a range of languages here: https://www.painrevolution.org/factsheets

I have authored or co-authored several books. You can find them here: https://www.noigroup.com/shop/

Please note that I receive royalties for these books. I have no financial interest in the publisher noigroup.com. I do however, have relevant disclosures - in the last five years, I have received support from the following entities: Reality Health, Kaiser Permanente, ConnectHealth UK, workers compensation agencies in Australia and abroad, AIA Australia, Arsenal Football Club, the International Olympic Committee. Professional and scientific bodies have reimbursed me for travel costs related to presentation of research on pain at scientific conferences/symposia. 

I am on the Board of Pain Australia.

I live and work on Kaurna Country.

augmented reality,pervasive computing,ubiquitous computing

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)

Australian Computer Society (ACS)

Anton Blencowe, PhD

Associate Professor of Applied Chemistry

University of South Australia

Biomedical Engineering,Chemistry,Health,materials engineering

Anton is a research and teaching academic, and the Applied Chemistry and Translational Biomaterials (ACTB) Group leader at the Clinical and Health Sciences (CHS) Unit at the University of South Australia (UniSA). His research group works at the interface between chemistry, biomaterials and pharmaceutical sciences to develop innovative solutions to current and emerging biomedical and environmental challenges. Anton also teaches into first year chemistry, and second year analytical and organic chemistry courses.    

The ACTB Group has a strong focus on the translation of fundamental principles to applied outputs and end-user informed solutions. Currently the group is collaborating with various biotech (Carina Biotech; Vetter Pharm.; D&R Pharm.; CRC CTM) and conservation (FAME; Ecological Horizons) groups to develop innovative technologies to deliver more efficient, efficacious and sustainable processes.  

After completing a PhD in Organic and polymer chemistry from the University of Reading (UK) under the supervision of Prof. Wayne Hayes in 2006, Anton joined the Polymer Science Group at the University of Melbourne as a Postdoctoral Fellow, where he worked on several CRCs (CRC for Polymers; Cotton Catchment Communities CRC) and ARC Linkage (DuPont; PolyActiva) funded projects. In 2009, he was awarded an Australian Research Council Postdoctoral Fellowship. In 2013, Anton moved to UniSA as a Senior Research Fellow to contribute and manage several CRC projects (Vision CRC; Wound Management Innovation CRC; CRC for Cell Therapy Manufacturing (CTM)), before joining Pharmacy School (now CHS) in 2015 to establish the ACTB Group.

Gary Owens, PhD

Senior Research Fellow Future Industries Institute

University of South Australia

analytical chemistry,Molecular Spectroscopy

Dr. Owens has wide and varied background in chemistry both via study and from hands on experience. His doctorate in Physical Chemistry (Polymers) was conferred in 1996. This completed several years of part-time study while working simultaneously in a range of jobs including laboratory technician (Dept. Chemistry), senior demonstrator and tutor (Dept. Chemistry), analytical chemist (Centre for Groundwater Studies), research officer (Dept. Community Medicine) and three years as a private tutor of undergraduate chemistry. In 2001 Gary joined CSIRO Land and Water and worked successfully for many years on a variety of projects before moving to the University of South Australia in 2003 as a founding member of the Centre for Environmental Risk Assessment and Remediation (CERAR).

Dr Gary Owens has been involved in research into environmental chemistry since 2001. In that time he has worked successfully on a number of widely diverse projects touching all facets of that field. This has included 1) studies into the effectiveness of phytoremediation, 2) bioaccumulation and transfer of heavy metals from biosolid amended soils to plants and aphids, 3) degradation of low molecular weight chelates, 4) reclaimed water use on the Northern Adelaide Plains, 5) evaluation of the free ion activity model, 6) beneficial recycling of used foundry sands, 7) effect of NO2 on the incidence of asthma in residents of Port Adelaide and 8) the development of several new analytical techniques, mainly utilizing capillary electrophoresis, for the speciation of metal and organic compounds. In recent years Dr Owens has become more involved in the development of novel remediation techniques, most notably for the in situ immobilization of arsenic contaminated soils and the development of in situ remediation regimes to reduce lead exposure to children.

From January 2003 until January 2013 Dr Owens was employed through the Centre for Environmental Risk Assessment and Remediation (CERAR) where his main role was as an environmental chemist/toxicologist/engineer, with specific attention directed towards, development of new techniques for the determination of metal bioavailability in environmental matrices and to develop novel and practical, cost effective in-situ and ex-situ remediation techniques for contaminated environments. He played a key role in the training of postgraduate students and assistsed in the negotiation of external contracts and completesed complex consultancies on contaminant residues in environmental samples.

In 2007 Dr Owens became the inaugural Program Director for the Masters of Applied Science (Environmnetal Risk Assessment and Remediation) which focuses on providing specialist training within the areas of environmental risk assessment, site assessment and contaminated site remediation. The program develops strong technical competencies together with the detailed knowledge required to assess and characterize contaminant risk, model the behaviour and transport of toxicants and practically implement contaminated site remediation. The program sets the benchmark qualifications for graduates wishing to pursue careers in environmental remediation. In January 2013 Dr Owens was invited to move to the Mawson Institute to commence an ARC Future Fellowship examining “The role of engineered nanoparticles in the transport of environmental contaminants and the implications for remediation”, which is a multidisciplinary project conducted at the interface between material and environmental science.

Dr Owens is currently a Foundation Fellow in the Future Industries Institute (FII) where he leads the Environmental Contaminants Group (ECG) on a number of diverse projects, touching all facets of environmental science and engineering, but primarily concerned with contaminant dynamics in terrestrial environments.

Consumer,Consumer Behavior,Consumer Behavior Psychology,Holiday Shopping,Marketing,Retail,Retail Industry,retail marketing trends,Retail Markets,Shopping,Store

Julio Sevilla, associate professor of marketing at the University of Georgia Terry College Business, studies retail sales and marketing and consumer behavior in retail spaces. His recent work has focused on consumers’ perceptions of scarcity, purity and authenticity.

An award-winning scholar in marketing academia, he is also adept at speaking to a general audience and recently has been cited by journalists at Psychology Today, NPR, Axios and Süddeutsche Zeitung. He is a frequent contributor to CNN en Español.

Omi Hodwitz

Associate Professor, Department of Culture, Society, and Justice

University of Idaho

Crime,Prison,Terrorism

Omi Hodwitz’s expertise sheds light on the nuances of terrorism and crime. Before joining University of Idaho, she worked as a researcher at the National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism at University of Maryland. Hodwitz’s research interests include the role of non-combatants in the escalation of terrorist activity, and she has conducted fieldwork in conflict regions such as Pakistan and Turkey.

Additionally, she has worked extensively to compile the most comprehensive database of missing and murdered Indigenous women, girls and two-spirits (MMIWG2) in the United States and Canada.

Hodwitz also provided the spark for getting U of I involved in the Inside Out Prison Exchange Program. The worldwide program allows U of I students to experience education in our prison system and correctional residents a glimpse at their own potential. As of 2022, thanks in part to Hodwitz’s leadership, incarcerated individuals in Idaho now have greater access to higher education, using the U.S. Department of Education’s Second Chance Pell Experiment.

Available to speak on: 

  • Terrorism and counterterrorism (examining the impact of criminal justice responses and counterterrorism policy on terrorist offending and reoffending patterns)
  • Missing and murdered Indigenous people (examining contributing factors, policy responses and trends across time and space)
  • Prison education (fostering reformation and reducing recidivism through educational initiatives)

Jaap Vos

Professor of Planning and Natural Resources, Director of the Environmental Science Program and Department Head, Natural Resources and Society

University of Idaho

Land Use,population change

Jaap Vos has a passion for strengthening local rural economies, protecting agriculture and helping rural areas retain their unique identity. His research focuses on finding ways to maintain rural communities’ distinct character while also embracing that Idaho is one of the fastest growing states in the nation.

Vos believes that understanding change is more relevant than understanding growth. Past census data shows Idaho is one of the nation’s fastest-growing states. Looking deeper, Vos says, at who Idahoans are now, what they want and how they live, will provide valuable insight into how areas are changing, what residents need and how to shape communities to reflect local values.

In the classroom, Vos inspires students with courses on community planning, sustainable communities and rural planning issues. He’s also the founding co-chair of APA Idaho's Ag Chat, a group of planners and stakeholders who tackle emerging planning issues in rural communities.

Available to speak on:

  • Population change in Idaho
  • Land use change in the American West
  • Rural planning
  • Challenges of planning for amenity rich communities (GNAR communities)
  • Protection of agricultural lands

Shelley McGuire

Director of the Margaret Ritchie School of Family and Consumer Sciences, Professor in the College of Agricultural and Life Sciences

University of Idaho

Breastfeeding,Infant Nutrition

Shelley McGuire has global expertise in maternal and infant nutrition, and she works to make complex concepts accessible to everyone. She's been inducted into the prestigious National Academy of Medicine — University of Idaho’s and the state of Idaho’s first inductee.

McGuire’s primary focus is understanding the impact of maternal diet and nutritional status on human milk composition and health outcomes during breastfeeding. Her team’s groundbreaking research has spanned the globe, and she found the composition of human milk varies greatly based on where the mother lives and believes these differences likely prime babies to thrive in their specific environments.

Available to speak on:

  • Breastfeeding
  • Maternal and infant nutrition
  • COVID-19 and breastfeeding

Agriculture,Biogeochemistry,crop improvement,cropping systems,Food Security,international agriculture,Phosphorus,soil management,Soil Science,urban agriculture

Dr. Andrew Margenot (he/him) addresses the literal foundation of all cropping systems: soils. He advances how we monitor and manage soils as natural capital. His research team evaluates how human activities can enhance or compromise soil services to human societies, with an emphasis on food security from urban and rural agroecosystems in the U.S. Midwest and East Africa.

More information: Margenot is an Associate Professor of Soil and Biogeochemistry at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. With a keen focus on the intricate dynamics of soils, his research delves into the realms of Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) Spectroscopy, soil fertility in East Africa, urban agriculture, phosphorus, and soil organic matter and enzymes. He is dedicated to advancing the understanding of soils as the foundation of cropping systems, and his mission involves not only monitoring and managing soils as natural capital but also assessing the impact of human activities on soil services critical to global food security. Margenot's research has contributed to insights into soil health metrics and spectroscopy applications, and he has also authored chapters in notable books such as "Phosphorus Fertilization and Management in Soils of Sub-Saharan Africa." He was also a recognized U.S. Borlaug Fellow in Global Food Security in 2014. Before joining the University of Illinois faculty, Margenot received his Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy and his Bachelor of Science in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at Connecticut College in 2010. He then moved on to complete his Ph.D. in Soils and Biogeochemistry at the University of California, Davis.

Affiliations: Margenot is an associate professor and faculty Extension specialist in the Department of Crop Sciences in the College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences (ACES) at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. He is an associate director and founding member of the Agroecosystem Sustainability Center and affiliate faculty in the Program in Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation Biology; and the Center for Digital Agriculture

Agriculture,crop improvement,crop management,cropping systems,Crops

Dr. Nicolas Martin (he/him) improves the long-term profitability and stability of cropping systems by exploring applications of quantitative methods on big data. He leverages interdisciplinary efforts to expand the frontiers of agricultural research, investigates quantitative methods on processes at multiple spatial and temporal scales, and studies effective approaches to implement new insights and discoveries in agricultural decisions and operations.

More information:

Martin is a researcher and associate professor at the University of Illinois who is passionate about studying and applying novel techniques in spatial statistics, AIgeostatistics, GIS, crop modeling, remote sensing, and deep learning to address complex challenges and opportunities in agriculture, such as cultivar adaptation, drought tolerance, and data-driven farming. In Martin's research program at the University of Illinois, he leads a cutting-edge research program in spatial analytics as well, teaching and mentoring students at the undergraduate and graduate levels in statistics and data science principles for agriculture and natural resources. Martin has authored several multiple patents and publications while also helping to further research in crop management, crop improvement, soil lead distribution, optimizing nitrogen management, and more. Before joining the University of Illinois, Martin received his Bachelor of Science from the Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata while working as a teacher assistant. He went on to complete his Master of Science and Ph.D. at the University of Illinois.

Affiliations:

Dr. Martin is an associate professor in the Department of Crop Sciences in the College of Agricultural, Consumer Environmental Sciences (ACES) at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

Dr. Dariotis researches and teaches ways to facilitate greater alignment between one’s intentions and behaviors to promote well-being. 

More information: 

Dariotis investigates biosocial determinants of risk-taking, decision-making, stress responsivity and coping, and prevention and intervention programs (e.g., mindfulness-related). She addresses “wicked” problems through whole person research integrating theoretical and methodological approaches across many disciplines—public health, prevention science, biostatistics, evaluation and implementation sciences, behavioral endocrinology, and developmental psychopathology.

Affiliation:

Dariotis is a professor for the Department of Human Development and Family Studies in the College of Agricultural, Consumer, and Environmental Sciences at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She is also affiliate faculty in Biomedical and Translational Sciences, Kinesiology and Community Health, Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology, Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology, Center for Social and Behavioral Science.

Dr. McElwain advances understanding of the dynamic early-life interactions between parents and children that shape children’s developing abilities to regulate stress. She adopts an interdisciplinary approach that combines neuroscience, psychophysiology, linguistics, and developmental psychology. Through investigating stress regulation during early development, she aims to promote healthy parent-child relationships and children’s long-term social and emotional well-being.

Affiliations: McElwain is a research professor in the Department of Human Development and Family Studies in the College of Agricutural Consumer and Environmental Sciences at the Univeristy of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. She is also affiliate faculty in Carl R. Woese Institute of Genomic Biology, National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA), Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology, and Center for Social and Behavioral Science

 

Dr. Ogolsky examines how relational partners maintain healthy romantic relationships across the life course as well as the ways in which law and policy influence daily family life. His work has the potential to inform practitioners and promote policy initiatives designed to enhance family dynamics.

Affiliation: Ogolsky is the Director of Graduate Students in the Department of Human Development and Family Studies in the College of Agricutural Consumer and Environmental Sciences at the Univeristy of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. He is also affiliate faculty in Women & Gender in Global Perspectives and Center for Social and Behavioral Science.

  

Ryan Long

Associate Professor of Wildlife Sciences

University of Idaho

Bighorn Sheep,Climate Change,Elephants,elk,Large Mammals

Ryan Long spends his summers in Gorongosa National Park in Africa’s Mozambique. There, you will find him chasing after the region’s antelopes and elephants, as he explores how the varied ecosystems within the park influence its large mammal community.

Long was instrumental in studying the elephants of the region, which are some of the world’s most elegant examples of human-induced evolution. Poachers battered the local herds during a civil war, and Ryan and his research partners found that the spate of violence led to the evolution of tusklessness in female elephants. The number of female elephants without tusks tripled in the park following the war.

When he's not in Africa, Ryan does research in Idaho on the region's bighorn sheep and elk.

Available to speak on:

  • The effects of climate change on large mammals
  • The evolutionary consequences of trophy hunting
  • Human-wildlife interactions

Samy Cecioni, PhD

Assistant Professor, Department of Chemistry

Universite de Montreal

Glycosciences

Recruited by the Department of Chemistry in 2019, Samy Cecioni is a young researcher who demonstrates exceptional research potential in the emerging fields of biological chemistry and glycomics. He has already published 30 articles in the most prestigious journals and contributed to three protected inventions, not to mention more than 2000 citations, which makes his scientific production globally influential.

In the opinion of his colleagues, he will certainly become an international leader in his discipline. Since his arrival at the Department of Chemistry, he has obtained numerous funding, notably from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) and the Establishment of Young Professors (FRQNT), to name just these organizations. . Its research group is well established and recognized at the MIL Campus Science Complex and it already attracts dozens of local and international students.

Samy Cecioni is also involved in the libraries of the University of Montreal while devoting (another!) part of his schedule to participating in symposia or international events. Not only does he promote his area of ​​expertise on the international scene, but he promotes the entire University.

Samy Cecioni's exceptional commitment to research and teaching will undoubtedly contribute to significant progress in the field of chemistry and health in general. His ambitions are great... and he has all the potential and perseverance to achieve them.

“Our research team is developing new tools to accelerate discoveries in the field of glycosciences. The set of molecules modified by sugars is sometimes described as the dark matter of life, and we propose multidisciplinary approaches at the intersection of chemistry and biology to enable advances relevant to human health,” explains -he.

Dr. Smith is finding ways to contribute to the reduction of mental health disparities for African Americans. She does this by examining racism, social support, and mental health in the family context. She also investigates the barriers to, and facilitators of, mental health treatment among African American youth and their families.

More Information: 

She earned her M.S. in Marriage and Family Therapy from Purdue University-Calumet and Ph.D. in Family Relations from Florida State University. Her research focuses on the effects of social stress exposure on mental and behavioral health outcomes within the African American family context and the role of social support as a protective factor.  A primary area of her research focuses on the intra- and interpersonal effects of racial discrimination on mental health in the parent-child and the couple context. Overall, findings from her research demonstrate within-group variation in how stress exposure impacts the African American family’s mental and behavioral health and highlights the need to go beyond between-group differences.

Affiliations: 

Smith is an associate professor in the Department of Human Development and Family Studies in the College of Agricultural Consumer and Environmental Sciences and in the Department of African American Studies in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. She is also an affiliate faculty for the Center for Social and Behavioral Science. 

Andrew Beer, PhD

Executive Dean of Business

University of South Australia

applied economics,Human geography,Sociology,Urban And Regional Planning

Andrew Beer is the Executive Dean of the UniSA Business School. He is also a leading researcher across a range of areas including Australia’s housing market, the drivers of growth and change in regions, the processes of industry adjustment and the performance of non-metropolitan housing markets. He is a Fellow of the UK’s Academy of Social Sciences and has worked closely with a number industry partners over many years. Andrew is a foremost expert in the outcomes associated with the closure of Australia’s car industry: working on the closure of the Mitsubishi plant at Lonsdale in the early 2000s, and then leading a project examining industry shutdown from 2017. Other significant projects he has led include a study into the drivers of growth in Australia’s smaller cities, the impact of Covid-19 induced disruption in regional housing markets in Australia, how to better govern and deliver place-based programs, the impact of cold housing on health and how to transition regional economies away towards a post-coal mining future.  

Andrew’s research partners have included local governments, the OECD, the Australian Government, the South Australian Government, the Victorian Government, social service providers and collaborators from international universities including Tampere University, Finland; The University of Birmingham, UK; George Mason University, USA; Charles University, Czech Republic and the University of Kiel, Germany.

Carol T Kulik, PhD

Professor of Human Resource Management

University of South Australia

Gender Equality,human resource management,workforce diversity

Carol T. Kulik is a Bradley Distinguished Professor at the University of South Australia, UniSA Business, Centre for Workplace Excellence.  She is the co-author of Human Resources for the Non-HR Manager (2023, Routledge), a book that makes the latest research on people management accessible to managers with no formal training in human resources.

Professor Kulik's research focuses on the effective management of workforce diversity, especially in relation to gender and age. She is leading an ARC-funded project investigating how some organisations "break free from the herd" to become front runners in gender diversity when so many competitors lag behind. Professor Kulik is currently serving on South Australia's Gender Pay Gap Task Force. This 7-minute video summarizes her research into gender pay gaps: Closing Gender Pay and Leadership Gaps. Her research on mature-age workers is highlighted in this 3-minute Academy of Management Journal video: Mature-age Worker Engagement

Professor Kulik holds a Bachelor of Science (B.Sc) in Industrial/Organizational Psychology and a PhD in Business Administration from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Professor Kulik has published over 90 articles in leading management and applied psychology journals. Her research on gender and diversity has been recognised by a scholarship award from the Academy of Management’s Gender and Diversity in Organizations Division. She is an elected fellow of the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology, the Academy of Management, and the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia. 

Professor Kulik has been an Associate Editor at the Academy of Management Journal and the Journal of Management and served on the Australian Research Council’s College of Experts. She served two terms on the Academy of Management's Organizational Behavior Division Executive Committee, first as Representative-at-Large and later as Division Chair, and completed a 5-year leadership track (2015-2020) on AOM's Executive Committee. Professor Kulik's 2019 AOM Presidential Address reflected on the researcher-end user relationship. This 3-minute video presents the fairy tale version (complete with ivory tower and fire-breathing dragons): AOM Presidential Address.

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