Dr Georgios Angelis received his bachelor’s degree in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the National Technical University of Athens, Greece in 2007. He completed his Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering at the University of Manchester, UK in 2011 working in the field of spatiotemporal (4D) Positron Emission Tomography image reconstruction and parameter estimation for applications in neuroscience. In 2012 he moved to Australia to pursue a postdoctoral position within the internationally recognised Imaging Physics group, based at the University of Sydney’s Brain and Mind Centre, which has pioneered the use of motion tracking and correction for quantitative imaging of conscious and freely moving rodents. He worked on challenging technical problems, such as the accurate modelling of animal motion within the imaging system, the complex photon attenuation field of a freely moving animal and the mathematical modelling of transient changes in neurotransmitter levels induced by cognitive tasks or pharmacological interventions. Before joining the Australian National Imaging Facility in 2020, he worked for 2 years as a senior research scientist at the Northern Sydney Cancer Centre, Royal North Shore Hospital, developing methods for real-time tumour tracking for motion adaptive radiotherapy. His current research interests include PET/SPECT image reconstruction and optimisation algorithms, pharmacokinetic modelling of physiological processes, machine learning and statistical analysis of multi-dimensional imaging data.
Neurodesk’s innovative ability to help researchers process and analyse massive neuroimaging datasets was recognised late last month at the 2025 National iAwards, presented in Adelaide. Neurodesk is
07 October 2025
Last week, a new Cima.X 3T MRI instrument was unveiled at NIF’s University of Sydney Node (Clinical Research Facility). Its powerful gradient technology allows for more detailed imaging that is fast
17 September 2025
Researchers have used one of the two 7T MRI instruments in Australia at the University of Melbourne’s Melbourne Brain Centre Imaging Unit (MBCIU) – supported by NIF and the Brain and Mind Cen
12 September 2025
Research at the facility is improving patient outcomes by setting new standards for ultra-low dose imaging, which could shape radiation safety guidelines for pregnancy, paediatric and oncology imaging
18 June 2025
Elette Engels PhD, Helen B. Forrester PhD, Verdiana Trappetti PhD, Kellie Mouchemore PhD, Mitzi Klein VMD, Alice H. Sprung, Kirsty Brunt, Micah J. Barnes PhD, Matthew Cameron PhD, Vincent de Rover BSc, Bettina de Breuyn Dietler BSc, Anatoly B. Rosenfeld PhD, Michael L.F. Lerch PhD, Robin L. Anderson PhD, Olga A. Martin PhD, Valentin G. Djonov MD
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Vera Weisbecker, Nicole Fisher, Wojtek Goscinski, Peter Kench, Scott Keogh, Jane Melville, Diana Patalwala, Thomas Peachey, Michael Rampe, Nik Tatarnic.
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