5 trainers found

Location: Canberra, ACT  or Adelaide, South Australia  or Christchurch  or GitHub 


Arindam Basu

Associate Professor of Epidemiology and Health Sciences specialising in Environmental Health and OneHealth/Planetary health, and Gene-Environmental Interactions

Location: Christchurch

Basu Arindam arindam.basu@canterbury.ac.nz Christchurch Associate Professor of Epidemiology and Health Sciences specialising in Environmental Health and OneHealth/Planetary health, and Gene-Environmental Interactions ["English"] https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2326-2292
Fred Fung

Frederick is a training officer at National Computational Infrastructure (NCI), where he delivers training sessions for Gadi users to facilitate their high-impact research and innovation. He has a research background in numerical linear algebra and scientific software development for large-scale...

Location: Canberra, ACT

Fung Fred frederick.fung@anu.edu.au Canberra, ACT Frederick is a training officer at National Computational Infrastructure (NCI), where he delivers training sessions for Gadi users to facilitate their high-impact research and innovation. He has a research background in numerical linear algebra and scientific software development for large-scale simulations. He has a particular interest in the topics of resilience design for numerical algorithms and is passionate about building better scientific software. ["English"]
Nathan Watson-haigh

Nathan has almost 20 years experience in the field of bioinformatics with expertise in genomics, transcriptomics, system biology, phylogenetics, bioinformatics training, Linux systems administration, pipeline development, high-performance and cloud computing. Nathan has been developing and...

Location: Adelaide, South Australia

Watson-haigh Nathan nathan.watson-haigh@sahmri.com Adelaide, South Australia Nathan has almost 20 years experience in the field of bioinformatics with expertise in genomics, transcriptomics, system biology, phylogenetics, bioinformatics training, Linux systems administration, pipeline development, high-performance and cloud computing. Nathan has been developing and delivering hands-on bioinformatics training for about 10 years. ["English"] https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7935-6151
Sara King

Dr Sara King is the Training and Engagement Lead for AARNet. She is focused on outreach within the research sector, developing communities of interest around training, outreach and skills development in eResearch. She is currently working on creating reusable guidance information for Jupyter...

Location: Adelaide, South Australia

King Sara sara.king@aarnet.edu.au Adelaide, South Australia Dr Sara King is the Training and Engagement Lead for AARNet. She is focused on outreach within the research sector, developing communities of interest around training, outreach and skills development in eResearch. She is currently working on creating reusable guidance information for Jupyter Notebooks and other AARNet services to be adapted for Carpentry training workshops. She is passionate about helping others develop the infrastructure and digital literacies required for working in a data-driven world, translating technology so it is accessible to everyone. ["English", "Italian", "Spanish; Castilian"] https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3199-5592
Tim Langlois

Stereo imagery is widely used by research institutions and management bodies around the world as a cost-effective and non-destructive method to research and monitor fish and habitats (Whitmarsh, Fairweather and Huveneers, 2017). Stereo-video can provide accurate and precise size and range...

Location: GitHub

Langlois Tim tim.langlois@uwa.edu.au GitHub Stereo imagery is widely used by research institutions and management bodies around the world as a cost-effective and non-destructive method to research and monitor fish and habitats (Whitmarsh, Fairweather and Huveneers, 2017). Stereo-video can provide accurate and precise size and range measurements and can be used to study spatial and temporal patterns in fish assemblages (McLean et al., 2016), habitat composition and complexity (Collins et al., 2017), behaviour (Goetze et al., 2017), responses to anthropogenic pressures (Bosch et al., 2022) and the recovery and growth of benthic fauna (Langlois et al. 2020). It is important that users of stereo-video collect, annotate, quality control and store their data in a consistent manner, to ensure data produced is of the highest quality possible and to enable large scale collaborations. Here we collate existing best practices and propose new tools to equip ecologists to ensure that all aspects of the stereo-video workflow are performed in a consistent way. ["English", "French"] https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6404-4000