Alkan, E
Dr Erkan Alkan
Research Fellow
H2.53
erkan dot alkan at warwick dot ac dot uk
| Team lead: | ||||
| Dr Marina ²Ñ±ð²Ô»å´Ç²Ôç²¹ | Dr Sabrina Twilhaar | |||
| Research Fellows: | Dr Erkan Alkan |
Dr Andrés Carnero |
||
| Dr Stefano Perna |
Dr Miriam Wuensch |
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| Data Managers: | Kate Evans | Marie Stracke | ||
| PhDs candidates: | Yuyao Cheng | Elif ³Òö²Ô±ð²Ô | ||
| Chunxi Liang | Elsie Wu | |||
| Miranda Wong | Xuan Zhao | |||
| Project Administrator: | Catherine Johnstone | |||
| Honorary Fellow | Dr Ahuti Das Friebel | Dr Yanlin Zhou |
Dr Erkan AlkanResearch Fellow
H2.53
erkan dot alkan at warwick dot ac dot uk
Honorary Research Fellow
ayten dot bilgin at warwick dot ac dot uk
Dr Andrés CarneroResearch Fellow
Andres Carnero is a population health researcher whose work aims to characterise and understand the life course trajectories and mechanisms underlying the long-term outcomes of prematurity. After training in clinical medicine in Peru, Andres focused his career on population health research. He has completed advanced quantitative training in epidemiology, demography and biostatistics, with a special focus on analytic methods relevant for perinatal and life course research. Andres has over 15 years of research experience working as an epidemiologist and data analyst, studying various health conditions in Peru, Africa and the UK, during the latter of which he specialised in preterm birth research. In his last post, as a doctoral student at the National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit, University of Oxford, Andres analysed the shape, heterogeneity and determinants of the school-age trajectories in academic attainment and ADHD symptoms of individuals born extremely preterm, relative to their term-born peers, using data from the EPICure study. Finally, Andres has also over a decade of experience teaching research methodology in postgraduate programmes and undertaking editorial and peer review duties for several scientific journals.
Andres will be joining the ÌÇÐÄTV Lifespan and Neonatal Group as a Research Fellow to collaborate with data documentation and coordinate future analyses from the Bavarian Longitudinal Study, and to conduct and contribute to longitudinal analyses aiming to unravel the environmental and genetic pathways leading to resilience and positive long-term outcomes after preterm birth.
Email:andres dot carnero at warwick dot ac dot uk
Project:
Honorary Research Fellow
Email: r dot eves dot 1 at warwick dot ac dot uk
Catherine JohnstoneProject Administrator and PA to Prof Wolke
H2.53
c dot j dot johnstone at warwick dot ac dot uk
6 BB2UP
Chunxi LiangPhD candidate
1st supervisor: Sabrina Twilhaar
2nd Supervisor: Dieter Wolke
Honorary Research Fellow
Email: Yanyan dot ni at warwick dot ac dot uk
Research Group:
Honorary Research Fellow
Email: j dot spiegler at warwick dot ac dot uk
Research Group:
Marie StrackePhD Candidate
1st supervisor: Professor Dieter Wolke
2nd supervisor: Dr Suzanne Aussems
Research Assistant BB2UP
| Marie dot stracke at warwick dot ac dot uk |
Research Fellow
Email:miriam dot wuensch at warwick dot ac dot uk
Miriam Wuensch is a psychology researcher with experience in a range of topics within developmental and educational psychology during her work in both Germany and the UK. After completing her undergraduate degree in psychology at the University of Munich, she earned an MSc in Psychology: Learning Science at the University of Munich, followed by an MSc in Psychological Research Methods with Advanced Statistics from the University of Sheffield. In her doctoral work at the University of Munich, Miriam investigated whether physiological measures of skin conductance and heart rate can provide insights into emotional and motivational states during testing situations. Alongside her doctoral studies, Miriam held a position as a Research Associate, including responsibilities of lab management, teaching undergraduate and graduate courses, and supervising student projects at the University of Munich.
Miriam is now a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the ÌÇÐÄTV Lifecourse and Neonatal Group, where she explores the long-term outcomes of individuals born prematurely and the predictors of these trajectories with a particular focus on psychological factors. Her work draws on data from the Bavarian Longitudinal Study.
Project: