About me

I conduct multi- and inter-disciplinary health-related research, concentrating on how well and how much people move, and how that movement changes throughout the lifespan - including physical activity in children; movement profiles of high-performance athletes; and how movement changes as we age and with neurodegenerative conditions such as dementia or Parkinson’s.


My research shows that discrete digital signatures of movement (especially walking), measured either in a laboratory or during daily life, can provide useful clinical markers to aid earlier and more accurate diagnosis of age-related diseases, predict deleterious health outcomes such as falls, track disease progression, guide personalised medicine and measure response to treatment. As part of this work, I examine neural, cognitive and visual mechanisms of movement to better inform interventions and more appropriate clinical and performance outcomes.

Link

Brook Galna's Google Scholar Account

Organisational Affiliations

Centre for Healthy Ageing, Murdoch University

Associate Professor, School of Allied Health, Murdoch University

Honorary/Emeritus, University of Newcastle upon Tyne (United Kingdom)

Education

Biomechanics of Obstacle Crossing in Parkinson's
Doctor of Philosophy, University of Melbourne (Australia, Melbourne)
Statistics
Graduate Certificate, University of Sheffield (United Kingdom, Sheffield)
Psychology / Philosophy and the History of Ideas
Bachelor of Arts (BA), Deakin University (Australia, Burwood)
Exercise Science (Hons) / Exercise Behaviour
Bachelor of Applied Science (BAppSci) , Deakin University (Australia, Burwood)