2023

Charles DeLorey
Charles DeLorey has joined the The Luxuriant Flowing Hair Club for Scientists™ (LFHCfS). He says:
I am a PhD student in mechanical engineering at Boston University, having completed my Master’s at Imperial College London (2021) and my BS in CS at Tufts University (2020).
Charles DeLorey, MRes., LFHCfS
PhD student in Mechanical Engineering
Boston University
Boston, Massachusetts, USA
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Jan Philipp Röer
Jan Philipp Röer has joined the The Luxuriant Flowing Hair Club for Scientists™ (LFHCfS). He says:
Hair plays a very important role in my research, specifically the hair cells of the inner ear. I’m interested in what makes a sound attract our attention and the mechanisms we have in place to prevent irrelevant sound from doing so.
Jan Philipp Röer, LFHCfS
Professor of Experimental Psychology
Witten/Herdecke University
Witten, Germany
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Sinuhé Perea-Puente
Sinuhé Perea-Puente has joined the The Luxuriant Flowing Hair Club for Scientists™ (LFHCfS). He says:
I’m a predoctoral student in Photonics and Nanotechnology at King’s College London, literally trying to see (with light) what is hidden. I like to solve problems, but since I rarely find any solution, preferring to learn and ask. I Graduated in Physics and in Mathematics at University of Oviedo (Spain) where I was also Computational Assistant at Faculty of Chemistry, and awarded as best national young researcher by CEULAJ & ICMAT (CSIC). My current research focuses on near-field and topological photonics in (lossy) systems and geology, light nano-routing, skyrmions, algebraic number theory (odd perfect numbers conjecture because, remember, even primes are odd), and freshman Economics.
Sinuhé Perea-Puente, LFHCfS
PhD Student — Novel Nanophotonic Phenomena
King’s College London
London, UK
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2024
Angelica Ørregaard Lindholm
Angelica Ørregaard Lindholm has joined the The Luxuriant Flowing Hair Club for Scientists™ (LFHCfS). She says:
I am a PhD candidate in forensic toxicology at the University of Copenhagen, where I am studying the effects of nitrous oxide on the ability to drive and how to detect intake of nitrous oxide in blood samples. My dear colleagues who work with drugs in hair are always alternating between trying to convince me to donate my luxuriant locks for blank hair matrix and lamenting the momentous task it would be to align it for segmentation as per their protocol.
Angelica Lindholm, LFHCfS
PhD candidate
Institute of Forensic Medicine, University of Copenhagen (UCPH)
Copenhagen, Denmark
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