
Keynote Speaker

Jori K. Leszczynski is the Assistant Vice Chancellor for Animal Resources, Attending Veterinarian, and Professor of Pathology at the University of Colorado Denver | Anschutz, and a Diplomate of the American College of Laboratory Animal Medicine. She earned her bachelor’s and veterinary degrees from The Ohio State University and completed her laboratory animal medicine residency at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Dr. Leszczynski has led programs at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation, National Jewish Health, and the University of Colorado Boulder. Her career has emphasized program compliance, personnel and budget management, and clinical oversight. She has served extensively in professional organizations and is currently President of AALAS.
Speakers

I am an ARC Future Fellow and Senior Lecturer in marine biology and evolution at UQ’s School of the Environment, where, together with A/Prof Karen Cheney, I have been co-leading the Marine Sensory Ecology Group since 2023. My main interests lie in the forces, from molecule to environment, which shape biodiversity. Focusing on the evolution of visual systems in fishes and cephalopods, I am trying to understand how other animals perceive the world, how this contributes to the formation of colours and patterns and how this can lead to species diversity. In recent years, the focus has shifted to anthropogenic disturbances and to how plasticity and flexibility in sensory systems may enable animals to adapt to the rapid changes they face.
I received a PhD in Zoology, Summa Cum Laude, in 2014 from the University of Basel, Switzerland, studying the molecular and behavioural functions of colourful signals in coral reef fishes. After completing my remaining Swiss National Service duties, I moved to Australia in 2015 to start a short-term postdoctoral appointment at UQ’s School of Biology. Upon winning prestigious postdoctoral Fellowships from the Swiss National Science Foundation and UQ, I transferred to the Queensland Brain Institute in early 2016, where I developed my leadership skills under the supervision of Emr. Professor Justin Marshall. In 2020, I received an ARC DECRA Fellowship, which enabled me to start my junior group under the mentorship of Emr. Prof. Marshall and A/Prof Karen Cheney.

A/Prof Nathalie Dehorter is a research group leader at the Queensland Brain Institute at The University of Queensland. Her research focuses on how brain cells communicate and form networks during development, and how these processes go wrong in diseases of the brain. Using advanced molecular, genetic, and electrical recording techniques, her team studies how changes in brain signalling contribute to neurological and psychiatric disorders, including Parkinson’s disease. By uncovering the biological mechanisms that drive disease, she aims to improve understanding of Parkinson’s disease and support the development of more effective treatments.