Jordi was born in Barcelona, Spain, in 1970. He studied Physics at the University of Barcelona (UB) and graduated in 1996. A brief period as editor of scientific textbooks for the Open University of Catalonia was followed by his PhD in Physics, from 1998 to 2003. Research was carried out at the ECM Department, Faculty of Physics, UB, and on experimental studies of interfacial instabilities in fluids. He next moved to Bayreuth, Germany, for a 2.5-year postdoc in biophysics in the group of Prof. Albrecht Ott. He studied the formation of the head-foot axis in the polyp Hydra, and combined physical modeling with experiments in developmental biology and genetics. By mid 2005 he started a second, 3.5-year postdoc in neuroscience in the group of Prof. Elisha Moses at the Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel, developing new experimental techniques to study connectivity in living neuronal networks.

From November 2008 to late 2013 Jordi was contracted as  Ramón-y-Cajal researcher at the University of Barcelona, Physics Faculty, to establish an experimental group in neuroscience. A permant position as Associate Professor was granted in November 2015.


PROFESSIONAL TRACK

2015
Present

Associate Professor, University of Barcelona

2013
2015

“Talented Researcher Program”, University of Barcelona

2009
2013

“Ramón y Cajal” researcher, University of Barcelona

2005
2008

Post-doc, Weizmann Institute of Science (Israel)

2003
2005

Post-doc, University of Bayreuth (Germany)

1998
2003

PhD thesis, Faculty of Physics, University of Barcelona


2019

Award “Ciutat de Barcelona” for the article A. Domenico et al., “Patiant-Specific iPSC-Derived Astrocytes Contribute to Non-Cell-Autonomous  Neurodegeneration in Parkinson’s Disease”, Stem Cell Reports 12, 1-17 (2019).

2011

Best Young Researcher, Atomium Culture, European Commission.

2003

Award for the Best Experimental Thesis in Physics at the University of Barcelona.