Meet the team
People in the Edinburgh CAMARADES research group.
Professor Emily SenaUniversity of Edinburgh profile Emily is specialised in the validity of preclinical research and has a background in pharmacology and neuroscience. Her interests are in the use of meta-research approaches to drive improvements in the validity, transparency and reproducibility of primary research using laboratory models of human diseases. Her work has informed laboratory practice guidelines, editorial policy and clinical trials design. Emily is the inaugural Editor-in-Chief of BMJ Open Science, a member of the University of Edinburgh Animal Welfare Ethical Review Board (AWERB), and convenor of CAMARADES. She tweets as @profEmilySena. |
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Professor Malcolm MacleodUniversity of Edinburgh profile With David Howells, he founded CAMARADES in 2005. In post-doctoral work, he combined his experience of bench research and clinical trials in the application of systematic review methodology to findings from in vivo research. While this began in an attempt to identify the most promising drugs for clinical trials, it has since grown to include consideration of risks of bias in animal research, and how these might be minimised by key stakeholders including journals, funders, institutions, and, most importantly, by scientists themselves. Malcolm is increasingly concerned that we should base our decisions, as far as possible, on rigorous evidence that our proposed strategy will have the desired effect, rather than relying on expert opinion. He is a member of the UK Reproducibility Network (@ukrepro) Steering Group, and tweets at @Maclomaclee |
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Dr Gillian CurrieGillian is specialised in systematic review and meta-analysis of preclinical studies. She uses these techniques to drive improvements in preclinical research, by providing empirical evidence to inform the refinement of experimental design and by investigating the impact of risks of bias on reported outcomes. She is contributing towards implementing new technologies, such as machine learning and text mining, to facilitate the systematic review process so that preclinical studies can inform clinical research. She provides helpdesk support for SyRF users and guidance for those starting systematic reviews. |
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Emma WilsonEmma is a PhD student with a background in neuroscience. Her PhD is focused on developing meta-research frameworks for in vivo neurodevelopmental disorder research. She is supervised by Dr Emily Sena and Professor Peter Kind. She is passionate about open research practices and science communication. |
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Dr Kaitlyn HairUniversity of Edinburgh profile Kaitlyn is a postdoctoral researcher with a background in Neuroscience and Psychology. She is interested in curating and evaluating the evidence from preclinical animal models of neurological diseases to inform future research and improve methodological rigour and reporting quality. She has also developed automated tools for evidence synthesis to accelerate and expand the scope of the "living" systematic review process. She is on twitter @KaitlynHair_ |
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Dr Charis WongCharis is a PhD student, neurology registrar and clinical trial fellow with the Anne Rowling Clinic. She is interested in neurodegenerative diseases, in particular, developing methodologies to systematically identify, evaluate and report evidence to improve drug selection for clinical trials. She tweets at @DrCharisWong. |
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Dr Olena MaksymOlena is a research assistant. She graduated from Ivano-Frankivsk National Medical University in Ukraine. She is working on systematic reviews in preclinical studies and on SyRF design.
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