


http://sites.agu.org/honors/winners/keith-beven/


His research generally explores the innate differences between males and females and how the environment, both social and ecological, modifies these differences. He's also interested in how individuals maximize fitness in what seems to be a chaotic and unpredictable world. He's fascinated by how individuals use the information available during development to best make allocation decisions across suites of traits to best succeed in a future environment.
http://www.michaelkasumovic.com/about-me/

Professor Boyer says:
I have been teaching in the Department of Geography since 1998, actually teaching my first course (World Regional Geography) as I was finishing up my Master's degree research. At the time, the course had an enrollment of 50 students and was one of the biggest offered in our small department. In the last decade, I have grown that course to an enrollment of 575, offered every semester, and am teaching it to 2700 students this Fall...the third time I will be breaking a record for the largest class offered at Virginia Tech. This one will be incorporating elements of on-line video and on-line student interaction, as I continue to push the envelope incorporating new technologies into the learning environment.
What does Academic Beards think about all this? We are undecided.
See for yourself: http://thejohnboyer.com/

Dr Alan Goddard, Postdoctoral Researcher, Oxford University Biomembrane Structure Unit
Goddard is interested in how G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) come together to form dimers and how this influences, and is influenced by, ligand binding and G protein activation. He uses a variety of techniques including ensemble FRET and single molecule fluorescence approaches in collaboration with Dr Mark Wallace's group in the Department of Chemistry.
http://www.bioch.ox.ac.uk/aspsite/index.asp?pageid=787

Ricercatore, Dipartimento di Informatica, Ex Facoltà di appartenenza Scienze matematiche fisiche e naturali, Università degli studi di Verona.
Research Area: Calculus of variations and optimal control; optimization. Viscosity solutions for Hamilton–Jacobi equations. Optimal transport problems. Nonsmooth Analysis and applications to Optimal Control Theory.
http://www.di.univr.it/?ent=persona&id=6498&lang=it


Arvind Krishna Mehrotra, professor of English at Allahabad University, had hoped to be the first Indian in 300 years to be elected Oxford Professor of Poetry when a successor to Christopher Ricks was chosen in 2010. But alas, he was pipped at the post by Geoffrey Hill who won the position and its “lousy” salary (£6,901 a year).
http://department-of-english-au.info/faculty/10-arvind-krishna-mehrotra

Professor Hill was elected as Oxford’s 44th Professor of Poetry in June 2010. A graduate of Oxford, Hill read English at Keble College and his prolific and much honoured career as a poet has been accompanied by a series of academic posts at Bristol, Leeds, Cambridge and Boston University. While at Boston he was, with outgoing Professor of Poetry Christopher Ricks, a founding co-director of the university’s Editorial Institute. Geoffrey Hill gives a rare interview on Newsnight:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geoffrey_Hill

I am a lecturer in Sustainable Heritage at the UCL Centre for Sustainable Heritage. I graduated in Physics from the University of Ferrara, Italy, with a dissertation on technical imaging applied to easel paintings and I completed my PhD at the same institution with a dissertation on Nuclear Activation Analysis.
Following a post-doctoral fellowship at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and the Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel, where I studied prehistoric flint tools using a particle accelerator, I collaborated with the Getty Conservation Institute, Los Angeles, US, on a project entitled Organic Materials in Wall Paintings. This project aimed to deepen our present understanding of the use of organic materials in wall paintings by means of scientific investigations.
While working on this project, I became interested in conservation-related issues. I decided to study for a Masters in Conservation of Wall Paintings at the Courtauld Institute of Art. I completed the course in 2007 and in the same year I was appointed a Mellon Fellow at the British Museum, where I developed multispectral imaging in the conservation of artistic and archaeological materials. Special attention was given to the development and implementation of visible-induced luminescence digital photography, a novel technology for the non-invasive identification of Egyptian and Han blue pigments. Using visible-induced luminescence imaging, it was possible to prove, for the first time, that the frieze and the pedimental sculptures of the Parthenon at the British Museum were originally painted using Egyptian blue.
I applied the same imaging technique on several artworks, including the sarcophagus of Seti I at the Sir John Soane’s Museum; the wall paintings in the Tomb of Tutankhamen, as part of a project coordinated by the Getty Conservation Institute and the Egyptian Antiquity Authority; the tomb paintings of Nebamum; the Mausoleum at Halykarnassos and the Temple of Artemis at Ephesos at the British Museum.
https://iris.ucl.ac.uk/research/personal?upi=GVERR68

Dear Sir/Madam,
I have devotedly followed your website and facebook page ever since your
'champion' academic beard was that of my beloved PhD supervisor, Prof
Keith Beven. Whilst I can never claim to ever rival his
'bearded' excellence, I do have a beard of my own - would it be possible
to be cited in your journal of academic facial pubes? It would mean a
lot to both myself and my folically-challenged students... (two, albeit
weak, ginger beard photos attached)
I did send a similar email to the Royal Society on my non-beard related
excellence - they suggested that I go and procreate... You are truly my
last hope of achieving any distinguished recognition in my field.
Best wishes, Stewart
A/Prof Stewart W. Franks
School of Engineering
University of Newcastle
http://www.newcastle.edu.au/staff/research-profile/Stewart_Franks/
Our Reply:
Dear A/Prof Stewart W. Franks,
Sorted. Say 'hi' to Prof Keith next time you see him. We've never met him, but he feels like an old friend by now (he's still our Twitter beard of choice).
Can we ask for a small service from you in return, which will benefit the whole community? Can you put in a request that your university media office includes releases from http://academicbeards.blogspot.co.uk/ in its media reports. We fear that press officers fail to understand the full gravity of our attention.
Yours,
Academic Beards

Andrew is the Director of Studies at the Institute of Law, Jersey. He is Professor of Public Law at Queen Mary, University of London (since May 2006), where he is Director of Teaching and Learning in the Department of Law. He previously held academic posts in the University of Birmingham (as Barber Professor of Jurisprudence, 2001-2006) and UCL (Lecturer, then Reader in Laws, 1988-2000). He is a qualified Barrister in England and Wales and a 'bencher' of Middle Temple. His research and teaching is in the field of constitutional and administrative law and he is editor of the journal Public Law.
http://www.lawinstitute.ac.je/default.asp?contentID=606

Professional Career:
- Acting Parliamentary Ombudsman of Iceland from 1 January 2009.
- Professor of Constitutional and Statutory Interpretation from 1 November 2006 (tenured position) (On leave from 1 January 2009).
- Associate Professor of Law, University of Iceland, from 1 August 2004 (tenured position).
- District Court Judge (provisional appointment) from 1 April 2004 to 15 May 2004.
- Deputy Parliamentary Ombudsman of Iceland from 1 January 2002 to 31 July 2004.
- Adjunct Professor of Law, University of Iceland, from 1 September 2000 to 30 June 2002 (part-time).
- Assistant Professor of Law, University of Iceland, from 1 July 2002 to 31 July 2004 (part-time).
- Legal Adviser, Office of the Parliamentary Ombudsman, from 15 August 1998 to 31 December 2000. On leave from 15 September 1999 to 10 August 2000.
- Assistant District Court Judge from 15 September 1997 to 1 July 1998.
- Legal Adviser, Office of the Directorate for Tax Investigations, from 14 May 1997 to 14 September 1997.
- Lecturer on law, University of Iceland, from 1 February 1997 to 31 August 2000.
- Elected Dean, Faculty of Law, University of Iceland, From 1 July 2010 – 30 June 2012.
- Acting Dean, Faculty of Law, University of Iceland, from 1 January 2008 – 30 June 2008.
- Elected Vice-Dean, Faculty of Law, University of Iceland from 30 August 2007.
- Appointed by the Minister of Justice as Acting District Judge in Case No. E-1939/2006: Guðjón St. Marteinsson vs. The Icelandic State.
- Editor-in-Chief. Review of the Lawyer’s Association of Iceland from 2005.


Alexander Egan, Graduate Student, Department of Entomology, University of Minnesota.
My interests in entomology include population ecology, geographic range, and use of indicator species for resource protection or remediation efforts. I am currently working to identify invertebrate communities utilizing coastal rock pools at several national parks of Lake Superior, recognize rare or alpine-arctic disjunct invertebrate taxa, and assist the parks in long term management strategies for protecting coastal habitats. Because international shipping lanes pass near or through the parks, an important use of these data will be for geographic triage during spill response, and shoreline habitat restoration in the event of oil or fuel spills.
http://www.entomology.umn.edu/People/GradStudents/index.htm


They used to be seen as highly attractive and a symbol of
masculinity, but new research has found the beard may have fallen
out of favour.
Wellington anthropologist Barnaby Dixson has published his doctoral thesis
on the significance of the beard, and whether old theories about
their evolution still hold true.
Charles Darwin said that men evolved beards as a result of
sexual selection - theorising that women chose a partner based on a
man's facial fur.
But Dixson found that the ability of a beard to attract women and scare off rivals may not be as strong in the 21st century.
The findings may be unwelcome reading for famous beardies like Brad Pitt, Piri Weepu, Willie Apiata, Liam Finn, Daniel Vettori, Leonardo DiCaprio, Billy Connelly and the Christchurch wizard.
Dixson's study tested the responses of 200 modern women from different ethnic backgrounds to pictures of a group of men with beards, and the same men without beards.
The women said that they found the men more attractive when they were clean shaven, but the findings also revealed bearded men were thought of as more socially dominant.
Both men and women looking at the photos also said faces with full beards looked older and angrier.
Dixson said the result stacks up against traditional theories about beards, as it shows facial hair can make people look more aggressive - a trait which would have traditionally been attractive to partners.
Published: 9:19PM Wednesday March 07, 2012 Source: ONE News
tvnz.co.nz/national-news/women-don-t-care-facial-hair-study-4764862

Post-doctoral Associate
D.B. Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources
The University of Georgia
http://kbarrett.myweb.uga.edu/home.html
- Impacts of climate change on animals and their habitats
- Land-use alteration of habitats, especially as it relates to urbanization
- Environmental stressors that drive stream occupancy in vertebrates
- Conservation biology, especially as it relates to reptiles and amphibians


Lecturer
School of Psychology
Bangor University
In broad terms, Richard Ramsey's research examines how the human brain processes dynamic social information from the environment, such as other people's actions, eye-gaze, knowledge and beliefs in order to coordinate behaviour. To do so, he uses a variety of methods, which include behavioural measures of performance (e.g., reaction times and error rates) and state-of-the-art functional brain imaging techniques (e.g., repetition suppression, multi-voxel pattern analysis and connectivity analysis). Recent lines of investigation have focussed on a number of different questions, which aim to examine the cognitive and brain systems that underpin our ability to understand the actions and mental states of other people. These include: How does the identity or knowledge-state of another person shape the perception of their actions? How are the actions of human and non-human agents (e.g., robots and animated shapes) processed in the brain? What cognitive and brain systems are involved in taking another person's perspective? How is the perception of other people's eye-gaze coordinated in the brain and how does another person's gaze-direction influence one's own imitative behaviour?
http://www.bangor.ac.uk/