Meet Our Authors

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na Chubykalo-Fesenko Instituto de Ciencia de Materiales de Madrid, CSIC, Madrid, Spain; tel. +34-91-3349054; and email [email protected]. Chubykalo-Fesenko is a senior researcher at the Institute of Material Science of Madrid, Spanish National Research Council (CSIC). She received her PhD degree in condensed matter theory at Kharkov State University, Ukraine. She then worked at the University of Oxford (UK), Complutense University (Madrid, Spain), University of Como (Italy), University of the Basque Country (Spain), and the IBM Almaden Research Center (San Jose, USA). Her research interests include different aspects of the theory of nanomagnetism, including advanced micromagnetics of magnetic nanostructures, atomistic models, thermal effects in nanoparticles and nanostructures, and magnetization dynamics. She has authored around 130 articles in research journals. Thomas M. Crawford University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, USA; tel. 803-777-7151; and email [email protected]. Crawford is an associate professor in the Physics Department at the University of South Carolina. He received his PhD degree in condensed matter physics from the University of Colorado at Boulder, and after being an NRC postdoc at NIST-Boulder, spent more than six years at Seagate Technology as a research staff member. His research interests focus on nanomagnetism, specifically advanced magnetic measurements, recently employing magnetic recording for nanomanufacturing advanced materials from magnetic nanoparticles. He has authored over 40 papers and holds 11 patents. He is a winner of the University of South Carolina’s Michael J. Mungo undergraduate teaching award and in 2013 was recognized as a “Rising Star” by the university’s office of research. Jon Dobson J. Crayton Pruitt Family Department of Biomedical Engineering, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, & Institute for Cell Engineering and Regenerative Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA; tel. 352-2739222; and email jdobson@ufl.edu. Dobson is a professor of Biomedical Engineering and Biomaterials and Director of the Institute for Cell Engineering and Regenerative Medicine (ICERM) at the University of Florida. He received his PhD degree in natural sciences from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, ETH-Zurich. His research focuses on biomedical applications of micro- and nanoparticles and includes studies of nanomagnetic actuation of cell surface receptors for cell engineering and regenerative medicine, nanomagnetic gene transfection, iron biomineralization related to neurological disorders, magneto-microfluidics and MNP harvesting technologies for disease diagnosis and treatment, and development of novel magnetic actuation systems for bioMEMS devices. He has authored over 120 papers and has nine granted patents. He has received a Royal Society of London Wolfson Research Merit Award (2004) and is Fellow of the Institute of Nanotechnology and the Society of Biology. Richard Evans Department of Physics, The University of York, York, United Kingdom; tel. +