|
|
 |
 | |
 |
Maria Feychting is a Professor
of Epidemiology at the Institute of Environmental
Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
Her research is focused on environmental risk
factors for chronic diseases, primarily cancer
but also neurodegenerative diseases. She has been
involved in epidemiologic research on non-ionising
radiation since 1987, covering both ELF and RF
electromagnetic fields. She has a specific interest
in adult and childhood brain tumour aetiology,
both environmental and genetic factors, as well
as gene-environment interactions. She participates
in the work of the WHO EMF programme, as well
as other national and international scientific
committees. She is scientific secretary of the
Swedish Radiation Protection Authority’s
independent scientific expert group on electromagnetic
fields.
e-mail: Maria Feychting |
 | |
 |
Adèle Green received her
medical degree and her PhD respectively
in 1976, 1984 from the University of Queensland,
Australia and her MSc in Epidemiology in 1985
from the London School Hygiene & Tropical
Medicine, UK. She is now working as Deputy Director
at the Queensland Institute of Medical Research,
Brisbane, Australia and is a Conjoint Professor
at the Australian Centre for International Tropical
Health and Nutrition, at the University of Queensland.
Dr. Green has served ICNIRP SCI since May 2000
and was elected to serve on the Main Commission
in 2008.
e-mail: Adele
Green |
 | |
 |
Kari Jokela received his PhD
in Technology in 1982 from the Helsinki University
of Technology, Finland. Since 1977, he is working
at the STUK, Radiation and Nuclear Safety Authority
(Finland), where he is now a Research professor
and Head of the Non-Ionizing Radiation Laboratory.
His main duties in STUK consist of regulatory
activities, management, public information and
research. He is the author or co-author of numerous
publications dealing mainly with microwaves techniques,
RF measurements, RF dosimetry, EM-field protection
standards, UV radiometry and solar UV climatology. He teaches at the Helsinki University of Technology
lecturing a course on NIR protection. He is also the co-editor of the text book Electromagnetic
Fields published by STUK (in Finnish). He has
served on ICNIRP SCIII since 1994 and was elected
to serve on the Main Commission in 2008.
e-mail: Kari Jokela |
 | |
 |
James Lin is a Professor of
electrical engineering, bioengineering, physiology
and biophysics at the University of Illinois-Chicago,
where he has served as Head of the Departments of Electrical Engineering and Bioengineering, and as Director of Special
Projects for the College of Engineering. He held
an NSC Research Chair from 1993-97, a recipient
of the d’Arsonval Medal of the Bioelectromagnetics
Society and has served as its president. He is
a past chair of IEEE Committee on Man and Radiation
and URSI Commission on Electromagnetics in Biology
and Medicine. He was a vice president of the US
National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements
(NCRP). He is Editor-in-Chief of Bioelectromagnetics,
and Editor of the Springer book series on Advances
in Electromagnetic Fields in Living Systems. He
is the author of numerous journal papers, book
chapters, and several books. His column on telecommunication
radiation safety and health is carried by four
professional magazines.
e-mail: James Lin |
 | |
 |
Rüdiger Matthes received
his M.E. degree in electronic engineering from
the Technical University in Munich. Since 1989
he is Head of the group "Non-Ionizing Radiation
(Dosimetry)" at the German Federal Office
for Radiation Protection. The interests of this
group cover all aspects of NIR protection with
the main focus on dosimetry. He has been the Scientific
Secretary of ICNIRP since 1993. He has served
the Standing Committee on Physics and Engineering
(SCIII) as a Chairman since 2004 and the ICNIRP
Commission since 2004. Since 2008, he is now serving
ICNIRP as Vice-Chairman.
e-mail: Rüdiger Matthes
|
 | |
 |
Agnette P. Peralta received her
BSc in Physics from the University of the Philippines
and her M.Sc. in Medical Physics from the University
of Wisconsin-Madison, USA. She is the Director
of the Bureau of Health Devices and Technology
of the Department of Health, Republic of the Philippines.
She is also a Professorial Lecturer in the Medical
Physics program of the Graduate School, University
of Santo Tomas, Manila. Main research and work
interests are radiation protection, radiation
dosimetry, and radiation regulation. She is a
member of the International Advisory Committee
of the World Health Organization EMF Project.
She has served the ICNIRP Commission since 2004.
e-mail: Agnette Peralta |
 | |
 |
Richard Saunders graduated from
the School of Biological Sciences at Birmingham
University in 1969 and received a PhD in Zoology
and Comparative Physiology in 1973. He then worked
briefly at the Institute of Human Physiology,
Milan University, Italy, and at the Neurocommunications
Research Unit, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham.
In 1975 he joined the National Radiological Protection
Board. He now works part-time in the Radiation
Effects Department, having previously headed the
Non-Ionising Radiation Effects Group at the Radiation
Protection Division of the United Kingdom Health
Protection Agency. His main research interests
are in the biological effects of EMFs. In 2004,
he spent a sabbatical year working for the WHO
EMF Project in Geneva, Switzerland, and has been
a member of several WHO EMF Environmental Health
Criteria Task Groups. Dr Saunders is Chairman
of the ICNIRP Standing Committee on Biology and
has been a member of the ICNIRP Commission since
October 2006.
e-mail: Richard Saunders |
 | |
 |
Karl Schulmeister received his MSc in physics
in 1992 from the Vienna University of Technology
and his PhD in biophysics in 2001. Since 1994
he is head of the „Laser and Optical Radiation
Safety“ group at the Seibersdorf Laboratories, Austria. His team
has developed a probabilistic risk analysis model
for space based lasers, as well as computer and
ex-vivo models for laser induced ocular damage.
He is co-author of the book „Laser Safety“.
He also serves as lecturer for Non-ionizing Radiation
Protection at the University of Technology in
Graz. Dr. Schulmeister is head of the Austrian
delegation to IEC TC 76 (Laser), where he is also
the technical secretary of Working Group 1 on
radiation safety standards. Since 2002 he serves
as Associate Director of Division 6 “Photobiology”
of CIE, the International Commission on Illumination.
He has been serving on ICNIRP SCIV since July
2003 and on the Commission since 2008.
e-mail: Karl Schulmeister |
 | |
 |
Per Söderberg is a Professor
of Ophthalmology. He is now working at the University
Hospital in Uppsala, Sweden in the Department
of Ophthalmology, Neuroscience and is a visiting
professor at Dept. of Biomedical Engineering,
University of Miami, Florida, USA, College of
Optometry, University of Houston, Texas, USA,
and Dept. of Ophthalmology, Dalian Medical University,
Dalian, China. His main research interests are
effects of optical radiation in the eye with an
emphasis on ultraviolet radiation, infrared radiation,
cataract measurement, and anterior segment surgery.
His work includes exploration of the pathophysiological
mechanism for UVR induced cataract, development
of a new model for determination of UVR and infrared
toxicity in the eye, determination of the influence
of variables such as age, gender, pigmentation,
exposure time and fractionation of exposure, on
UVR induced cataract and effects of chronic daily
exposures to UVR on the lens. Dr. Söderberg
is an ICNIRP commission member since 2002.
e-mail: Per Soderberg |
 | |
 |
Bruce E. Stuck is the Director
of the U.S. Army Medical Research Detachment of
the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, where
he has programmatic responsibilities for laser
and microwave biological effects research program.
He has 32 years experience in laser hazards research
experience and is the author/co-author of numerous
papers on ocular and cutaneous effects of laser
and radio frequency radiation. His primary interests
are in the biological effects of visible and infrared
laser radiation on the retina and cornea and the
assessment of laser-induced eye injuries and their
treatment. He is the Chair of the Biological Effects
and Medical Surveillance Technical Subcommittee
of the American National Standards Institute’s
(ANSI) Z136 Standard for the Safe Use of Lasers.
He is a member of the Association for Research
in Vision and Ophthalmology, the Laser Institute
of America, the Biomedical Optical Society of
the SPIE and the editorial board of the Journal
of Laser Applications. He has served on ICNIRP
SC IV since 1999 and on the Commission since 2004.
e-mail: Bruce Stuck |
 | |
 |
Anthony Swerdlow was educated
in medicine at the universities of Cambridge and
Oxford. After junior posts in clinical medicine,
epidemiology and public health in the Oxford region
and London, he worked in epidemiology at the University
of Glasgow and at the Office of Population Censuses
and Surveys before moving to the London School
of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine in 1987. He has
been Professor of Epidemiology at the Institute
of Cancer Research since July 2000. His research
is in chronic disease epidemiology, mainly on
cancer. His research interests have for many years
included non-ionising radiation and he is currently
Chair of the Health Protection Agency Advisory
Group on Non-ionising Radiation. Dr. Swerdlow
has been a member of ICNIRP since May 2000.
e-mail: Anthony Swerdlow |
 | |
 |
Paolo Vecchia graduated in Physics
at the University of Rome in 1969. Since 1973,
he has been serving at the National Institute
of Health (ISS) in Rome, where he is actually Research
Director in the Department of Technology and Health.
He has been working in the field of Non Ionizing
Radiation (NIR), performing both basic research
and control activity aimed at the protection of
workers and of the general public. Responsibilities
of Paolo Vecchia include advice to health and
environmental authorities on any health problem
related to NIR. In the field of basic research,
he has been involved mainly in studies on possible
effects of electromagnetic fields on the immune
system as well as in theoretical dosimetry. He
is also collaborating to epidemiological studies
relative to both low- and high-frequency fields.
He has organized and directed courses on different
topics related to NIR at the Advanced School for
Radiation Protection in, Italy. He has also been
lecturer at several national and international
schools, and Professor of "Fundamentals of
Protection against Non Ionizing Radiation”
at the University of Pisa and at the post-graduate
school of Health Physics of the University "Tor
Vergata" in Rome. Paolo Vecchia has participated
in a number of national and international commissions
and expert groups. Past President of the Italian
Radiation Protection Association (AIRP), and of
the European Bioelectromagnetics Association (EBEA),
he is presently Chairman of the International
Commission on Non Ionizing Radiation Protection
(ICNIRP), and Member of the International Advisory
Committee of the International EMF Project of
the World Health Organization.
e-mail: Paolo Vecchia |
 | |
 |
Bernard Veyret belongs to the
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
as “Directeur de Recherche” (senior
scientist) at the “Laboratoire de l’Intégration
du Matériau au Sytème”, within
the College of Chemistry and Physics at the University
of Bordeaux, France. Trained as an engineer in
Physics and Chemistry at ESPCI in Paris, he joined
the CNRS in 1979, did research on the physical
chemistry of the troposphere. Since 1984, Bernard
Veyret has turned towards the new field of bioelectromagnetics.
He is now head of the Bioelectromagnetics Laboratory
of the ‘École Pratique des Hautes
Études’. His research team in Bordeaux
is composed of about 15 scientists, biologists
and physicists. He was one of the founding members
of the European Bioelectromagnetics Association
(EBEA) in 1989. He spent a sabbatical year at
the University of Rome “La Sapienza”
during the school year 2005-2006. Bernard Veyret
has authored 80 papers in peer-reviewed journals
and co-authored several national and international
expert-group reports on EMF and health. He has
been an ICNIRP member since May 2000. He has served
on ICNIRP SCII as an interim Chairman from 2002-2004.
e-mail: Bernard Veyret |
 | |
Scientific Secretary |
 |
Gunde Ziegelberger holds a PhD
in Biology. After a career as senior research
assistant at the Max-Planck-Institute, she joined
the Federal Office for Radiation Protection (Bundesamt
für Strahlenschutz) in 2002, where she is working
in the group "Non-Ionizing Radiation".
Since 2004 she has served on the ICNIRP Board
as Scientific Secretary. As per the ICNIRP Statutes,
she is member of the Executive Board but has no
voting right in the ICNIRP Commission.
e-mail: Gunde Ziegelberger
|
 | |
Chairman Emeritus |
 |
Michael Repacholi was Coordinator
of the World Health Organization's Radiation and
Environmental Health Unit in Geneva until his
retirement in June 2006. In this role he managed
the International EMF Project and the INTERSUN
Project, which focuses on the health risks associated
with exposure to EMF and UV, respectively. He
is the author or co-author of over 200 scientific
publications and was a participant in ten WHO
task groups on various NIR. Dr. Repacholi is Fellow
and Past President of the Australian Radiation
Protection Society, and Fellow and Past President
of the Australian College of Physical Sciences
and Engineering in Medicine. He was a founding
member of INIRC/IRPA and became the first ICNIRP
Chairman at its inception in 1992. In May 1996
he was honoured for his work by being elected
Chairman Emeritus of ICNIRP. In this office he
has the status of an observer at ICNIRP meetings
with no voting rights.
e-mail: Michael Repacholi
|
|
|
|
|