Professor Marcel WM Post, PhD
Marcel Post studied psychology and graduated in 1985. He has been a Special (research) Professor in Spinal Cord Injury Rehabilitation at the University of Groningen since 2014 and leader of the Spinal Cord Injury Research Program at the Center of Excellence for Rehabilitation Medicine since 2005. His research interests include participation, quality of life, psychological factors, self-management and empowerment, and instrument development in these areas. He is author or co-author of 300+ articles in peer-reviewed journals and co-editor of the Dutch Handbook of Rehabilitation Psychology (2014). He contributed to the Dutch Clinical Practice Guideline on Spinal Cord Injury Rehabilitation (2017) and wrote on outcome measurement in the ISCoS Textbook. Professor Post serves as Section Editor of Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, and is on the Executive Board of the International SCI Data Sets project. He is a member of the Scientific Committee of the Netherlands Society for Rehabilitation Medicine.
http://research.umcutrechthersencentrum.nl/whos-who/bio/marcel-post/
Professor Masa Nakamura, MD, PhD
Masaya Nakamura has been a Professor and Chair at the Department of Orthopedic Surgery at Keio University in Tokyo, Japan since 2015. He graduated from Keio University in 1987 and received a PhD in 1995 from Keio University. He specializes in spine and spinal cord surgery as well as neuroscience, especially stem cell biology and regenerative medicine for spinal cord injury. His current research focuses on clinical trials of cell therapy for people with spinal cord injury using iPS cells. He received the First award of the Japanese Society for Regenerative Medicine and 51th Baelz prize in 2014.
http://www.keio-ortho.jp
Dr Sonja de Groot, PhD
Sonja de Groot studied Human Movement Sciences and graduated in 1997. She attained her PhD from the Faculty of Human Movement Sciences of the VU University in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. Since 2004, she has worked as a senior researcher at the Reade, Center for Rehabilitation and Rheumatology in Amsterdam. In 2009 she was appointed Assistant Professor at the Center of Human Movement Sciences at the University of Groningen. Dr De Groot was the coordinator of the Dutch multi-center research program titled: 'Restoration of mobility in SCI rehabilitation' and 'ALLRISC' (see: www.nvdg.org/scionn). She is the secretary of the research committee of the Dutch Flemish Spinal Cord Society (DuFScoS). Dr De Groot's current research interests include the study of spinal cord injury rehabilitation, exercise physiology, wheelchair propulsion and configuration, and adapted sports. She has published more than 100 articles in peer-reviewed journals.
Watch a short video from Sonja de Groot here.
http://www.rug.nl/staff/sonja.de.groot/research
Dr Marcel Dijkers, PhD
Marcel Dijkers studied sociology at the Catholic University of Nijmegen, the Netherlands, and at Wayne State University (WSU) in Detroit, obtaining the Ph.D. in 1978. He was director of Research at the Rehabilitation Institute of Michigan from 1981 to 1999, while holding the rank of Assistant, later Associate, Professor of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (PM&R) at WSU. He joined the faculty of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, in 1999, and became Research Professor. He rejoined the WSU faculty in 2015 as Professor of PM&R. Dr. Dijkers’ rehabilitation research interests have been very broad, as evidenced by his more than 160 published papers and chapters, and over 250 conference presentations. Two areas of focus have been research methodology and spinal cord injury (SCI). He has researched the social and functional consequences of SCI, the delivery of health services for individuals with these conditions, as well as the determinants of community integration, quality of life and other outcomes. Research methodology interests have been the measurement of functioning and quality of life, treatment integrity in rehabilitation research, the classification and quantification of rehabilitative treatments, and systematic reviewing/meta-analysis for evidence-based practice. Dr. Dijkers has been the president of the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine, the world’s premier rehabilitation research organization, and is an editor and active peer reviewer for a number of rehabilitation journals.