Monday 8 December

 

Workshops kindly presented by the South Australia Genomics Centre

Dr John Salamon

South Australian Genomics Centre

John is a senior bioinformatician at the South Australian Genomics Centre with interests in data visualisation, network biology, and software development.

Dr Sarah SHah

South Australian Genomics Centre

My academic research focused on the genomes of gut parasites and coral symbionts, with an emphasis on microbial eukaryote evolution. I later worked at Microba, a gut health diagnostics company, where I gained DevOps experience. I have hands-on expertise with a range of sequencing platforms, including Illumina, PacBio, Nanopore, and 10X spatial transcriptomics. My role at SAGC as a bioinformatician involves working on compute architecture and pipeline development.

Tuesday 9 December

Workshops Proudly supported by the Solutions for Manufacturing Advanced Regenerative Therapies (SMART) Cooperative Research Centre (CRC)

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Wednesday 10 December

Jodie Haigh

Australian Research Council | Australian Science Communicators

Jodie Haigh is a strategic communications professional working at the intersection of research, communication, and engagement. She has led digital media and communications at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory, and edited leading scientific journals including Advanced Healthcare Materials and Small. Jodie now manages strategic communications at the Australian Research Council and serves as Treasurer of Australian Science Communicators, a national peer network supporting excellence in science communication. She is passionate about making complex research accessible, advocating for equity in STEM, and empowering researchers to engage with diverse audiences.

Dr Jonathan Berengut

Postdoctoral Research Fellow, UNSW

Jonathan Berengut is a postdoc at the EMBL Australia node at UNSW, but his first career was in the design industry. There, he studied, worked and lectured for more than 14 years, working his way up to senior designer at a small product design consultancy, creating products and graphics for a wide range of clients. Switching to science in 2012, he did a Bachelor of Science with hons and the UNSW University Medal in 2015, and then a PhD on the design and synthesis of DNA origami nanorobots. He’s won prizes including first place at BioMod, the international bio-molecular design competition, and first place at UNSW’s and U21’s global 3-minute thesis competitions. In his scientific career, Jonathan has retained his passion for design, and wants to help scientists be better visual communicators.

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Thursday 11 December

Workshops kindly presented by Microscopy Australia

Dr Jane Sibbons

University of Adelaide, Bioscience Imaging Microscopist

 

Dr Gerry Shami

The University of Sydney

Gerry is a postdoctoral research associate at the University of Sydney, working within Sydney Microscopy and Microanalysis. He completed his PhD under the supervision of Professor Filip Braet, followed by a Postdoctoral Research Fellowship under Professor Leann Tilley at the University of Melbourne. His research spans cell and structural biology, hepatology, parasitology, drug discovery, and the development of advanced biomedical imaging workflows for correlative microscopy. Gerry currently investigates the ultrastructure and function of giant mitochondria in metabolic-associated and alcohol-related liver diseases using volume electron microscopy.

Dr Fiona Whelan

Associate Professor Izzy Jayasinghe

UNSW Sydney

Izzy has a PhD in physiology and biophysics (Auckland, 2011) and works in developing novel microscopy technologies to study cell signalling, esp in the context of heart disease. She founded her research group in 2015 in the University of Leeds before being awarded a UKRI Future Leader Fellowship in 2019, allowing her to move her research group to the University of Sheffield to develop and disseminate the new method, expansion microscopy. For her contributions to microscopy, she was inducted as a Fellow of the Royal Microscopical Society in 2022 and named amongst the ’40 under 40’ New Zealanders in 2023 briefly after joining UNSW. Izzy currently serves as an editor for The Royal Society’s Open Biology journal and a steering committee member for EMBL Australia partner laboratory network.

Dr Ning Liu

SAiGENCI

Dr Ning Liu is a bioinformatician at the Adelaide Centre of Epigenetics (ACE) and South Australian Immunogenomics Cancer Institute (SAiGENCI). His research focus on developing novel computational methods and algorithms to study cell microenvironment and its impact on transcriptome using data generated from single-cell and spatial molecular technologies. As well as integrating the epigenome and transcriptome to discover novel regulations and mechanisms in the context of cell development.
Dr Liu has published in some of the highest-ranking journals in the field, including Nucleic Acids Research, Genome Biology, Immunology and Nature. He has also developed 4 open-source software packages.

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Friday 12 December

 

PRof KAthy ANdrews

Griffith University – Institute for Biomedicine and Glycomics

Prof Kathy Andrews’ research focuses on malaria drug discovery and the discovery of novel vaccine adjuvants (>$30M funding; >115 papers; 7,000 cites). She is the Director of the NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence in Vaccine Adjuvant Discovery and Development (Vaccine-ADD) and former Director of the Griffith Institute for Drug Discovery. Prof Andrews is passionate about mentoring the next generation of researchers and through her That’s RAD! Science project has produced five STEM books that have been distributed to >14,000 children and libraries around Australia with an estimated reach of >30,000 people. In 2022, Prof Andrews published her Impact CV concept in Nature Careers and is using this to help build capability of researchers in planning, tracking and communicating research impact.

PRof DEnis Bauer

CSIRO

Dr Denis Bauer is a government research scientist, adjunct professor at Sydney and Macquarie University, and an AWS Hero. Her unique approach of joining cloud-computing with deep biological domain knowledge translates research into impactful products that have been used for disease gene detection in Motor Neuron Disease and the COVID-19 vaccine development. She chairs the Westmead Research Hub Bioinformatics committee, is the senior author on a Nature Biotechnology publication, as well as keynotes international IT and Medical conferences. She was recognized in the Women in AI awards 2022 and is affiliated with the Australian Institute for Machine Learning. She has attracted more than $50M in funding to further life-science research and digital health.

Dr Luke ISbel

Monica Espinosa Gomez

Department of Industry, Science and Resources

Monica is an Assistant Manager (A/g) at the Strategic Policy Branch of the Department of Industry, Science and Resources. She joined the Australian Public Service in 2023 through the Science Policy Fellowship. She worked at the Office of the Chief Scientist from 2023-2025. Before working in government, Monica worked as a metabolic engineer in the Sydney-based start up All G and as a postdoctoral researcher at RWTH Aachen (Germany). Monica has a PhD in metabolic engineering and extensive experience in industrial biotechnology.

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