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Guest Lecture: Evelina Akimova

17 December 2025
1023
2
Guest Lecture: Evelina Akimova

This seminar offers a rigorous examination of the intricate relationship between endogenous chronotypes (internal circadian rhythms), sleep regulation, and broader societal structures. The presentation will analyze how the misalignment between individual biological timing and fixed social schedules—a phenomenon often termed "social jetlag"—profoundly influences human health, productivity, and social equity.

Dr. Evelina T. Akimova, a distinguished scholar from Purdue University, will present cutting-edge, multidisciplinary evidence derived from statistical genetics, objective accelerometer data, and large-scale demographic surveys. Her analysis will specifically address the causal pathways and mechanisms through which chronobiological factors contribute to:

Health and Social Inequalities: Investigating how timing preferences intersect with socioeconomic disparities.

Mental Health Outcomes: Detailing the links between sleep disturbances, chronotype variation, and mental wellbeing.

Career Trajectories and Biodemography: Exploring the influence of biological rhythms on life course outcomes.

Drawing upon unique expertise in causal inference and computational social science, Dr. Akimova's research provides a unique synthesis of molecular genetics and sociological inquiry, positioning her as an emergent leader in social science genomics. This event is essential for researchers and practitioners interested in the biodemographic determinants of human capital and the optimization of societal scheduling frameworks.

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