quinta-feira, 23 de agosto de 2012

NOSSOS PALESTRANTES - Reconhecimento e referência internacional!

  

Professional Summary

Claudio L .Battaglini, PhD, is an Associate Professor of Exercise and Sport Science (Exercise Physiology Specialization) at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Dr. Battaglini received his BS degree from the Catholic University of Brasilia Brazil (1992) and his MA (1999) and PhD from the University of Northern Colorado in 2004. Dr. Battaglini’s research focuses on the effects of acute and chronic exercise on physiological, psychological, and physical functioning in cancer patients. He Co-directs the Get REAL & HEEL Breast Cancer Research Program and the Integrative Exercise Oncology Laboratory. Over the past 10 years, Dr. Battaglini has been the recipient of 22 funded research grants and has published over 60 journal articles and scientific abstracts and 2 textbooks chapters related to exercise oncology. Dr. Battaglini was the 2010 recipient of Tanner Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching and Mentoring presented by the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill College of Arts and Sciences. Prior to Dr. Battaglini’s involvement in exercise oncology research, he was an international level endurance sports coach, with some of his athletes achieving World Champion status, Pan-American Champion status, and Olympic Game appearances.
Research activities
Dr. Hackney's research focus is on endocrine and metabolic responses to physical stress (e.g., exercise). He directed research for the Department of Defense into the human endocrine and metabolic adaptations associated with chronic cold exposure in humans. He conducts research on how reproductive steroid hormones are modulated by the stress of physical exercise. He is the author of more than 100 publications in the exercise physiology and endocrinology area. Dr. Hackney teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in basic human physiology and exercise physiology. He lectures in the medical school on biochemistry and endocrinology. Dr. Hackney is a member of Sigma Xi, American College of Sports Medicine, Southeast American College of Sports Medicine and Triangle Consortium for Reproductive Biology. Currently, he is an external reviewer for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Human Nutrition division, the National Academy of Sciences-Institute of Medicine and the U.S. Army, Department of Defense. Dr. Hackney is a two time recipient of Fulbright Scholar awards, one in Medical Sciences (in Lithuania) and one in Public Health (in Poland). He currently serves as the Assistant Chairman of the Department of Exercise & Sport Science.

Professional Summary
Dr. Darin Padua is the Director of the Sport Medicine Research Laboratory and Associate Professor in the Department of Exercise and Sport Science where he serves as Director of the Undergraduate Athletic Training Education Program. He is an adjunct faculty member in the Departments of Orthopaedics, Biomedical Engineering, and Allied Health Sciences. In addition, Dr. Padua serves as the Director of the National Academy of Sports Medicine (NASM) Research Institute, whose mission is to provide scientifically valid, evidence-based assessments and interventions for the effective promotion of physical fitness, performance enhancement, injury prevention, injury rehabilitation and post-rehabilitation conditioning.
Dr. Padua received his B.A. degree (Exercise and Nutritional Science, emphasis in Athletic Training) from San Diego State University (1996) and M.A. degree (Exercise and Sports Science emphasis in Athletic Training) from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He then proceeded to the University of Virginia and obtained his Doctoral Degree (PhD in Sports Medicine, 2001).
His primary research interests focus on neuromuscular control of knee and lumbo-pelvic stability, identification of risk factors associated with knee injury (focus on ACL injury), identification of evidence based prevention strategies for ACL injury, and validation of performance enhancement training techniques. Current research includes investigating predictive factors for ACL injury, biomechanical comparison of ACL injury prevention interventions, examination of modifiable neuromuscular factors that contribute to knee valgus angle and anterior tibial shear force, validation of clinical movement assessment techniques to predict muscle imbalances and injury risk, and validation of corrective exercises commonly used for injury prevention and performance enhancement.

Professional Summary
Dr. Richard M. Southall is presently an associate professor of Sport Administration and Coordinator of the Graduate Sport Administration Program at The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He received his doctorate in Sport Administration from The University of Northern Colorado in 2001. His undergraduate degree (B.A. – summa cum laude) from Western State College of Colorado included a triple-major in English, history, and philosophy. Dr. Southall’s areas of professional expertise include sport marketing, legal and ethical issues in college sport, sociology of sport, and sport facility and event management. He is a former president of the Sport and Recreation Law Association (2004-2005).
Over the past eight years Dr. Southall has authored/co-authored 19 peer-reviewed articles dealing with such issues as: NCAA’s institutional logics, university policy responses to criminal behavior by college athletes, legal and marketing implications of National Football League ticket transfer policies, academic fraud scandals in college sport, and organizational culture dynamics in college athletic departments. In addition, he has authored/co-authored seven book chapters and has given over 70 presentations (both refereed and invited) at national and international academic conferences. Dr. Southall is second-author of a facility and event management text: Sport facility management: Organizing events and mitigating risks. He is currently Director of The College Sport Research Institute at The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill