Dr. Kalina Christoff Hadjiilieva

Professor of Psychology, University of British Columbia

Dr. Christoff Hadjiilieva is a cognitive neuroscientist whose research lab investigates the full spectrum of human thought, from spontaneous mind-wandering and daydreaming to goal-directed reasoning, creativity, introspection, meditation, and their neural bases. Using fMRI, behavioural methods, and theoretical modelling, they develop influential accounts of how large-scale brain networks, including the default, salience, and frontoparietal control systems, interact to shape cognition. Their work on spontaneous thought, boredom, dreams, and psychedelics is widely cited, and they have published extensively in leading journals. Dr. Christoff Hadjiilieva has served as Interim Director of the Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Studies and received major distinctions, including the PWIAS Distinguished Scholar in Residence Award and funding from the Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research.

Previous lecture

CLIMATE CHANGE AND CLIMATE POLICY: A CANADIAN FOREST ECOLOGIST’S PERSPECTIVE

Joint lecture with UBC Emeritus College | Dr. Catherine Potvin is a distinguished tropical forest ecologist whose research advances understanding of carbon dynamics, biodiversity, and community-based climate solutions. With decades of fieldwork in Panama and Latin America, her work has shaped international climate policy, including through her service as a UN climate change negotiator for Panama.

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THE CRISIS OF CANADIAN DEMOCRACY

Andrew Coyne is a leading Canadian journalist, author, and political commentator, currently a columnist for The Globe and Mail and a weekly panellist on CBC’s At Issue. He previously served as national editor of the National Post, editor of The Walrus, and columnist for Maclean’s and Southam News. His writing has appeared in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, National Review, Saturday Night, and other major publications.