Dima Chen | Ecology | Research Excellence Award

Prof. Dr. Dima Chen | Ecology | Research Excellence Award

Professor at Inner Mongolia University, China

Prof. Dr. Dima Chen is a highly cited environmental and ecosystem scientist whose influential body of work spans plant diversity, soil ecology, biogeochemistry, and global change biology, contributing substantially to the understanding of how biodiversity, nutrient enrichment, and climate-related processes regulate terrestrial ecosystem functioning. With 100 published documents and an h-index of 37, supported by 5,858 citations from 4,899 citing documents, her research has produced landmark findings, including evidence that plant diversity significantly enhances productivity and soil carbon storage, as demonstrated in her widely cited PNAS article from 2018. She has advanced global understanding of microbial necromass dynamics, plant nutrient stoichiometry, and ecosystem productivity through high-impact publications in Nature Communications, PNAS, Ecology Letters, Functional Ecology, Soil Biology and Biochemistry, Geoderma, and Landscape Ecology. Her work has elucidated how nitrogen enrichment, soil acidification, and long-term nutrient inputs shape belowground communities, microbial stability, carbon cycling, and ecosystem resilience. She has revealed critical mechanisms showing that acidification-induced declines in plant diversity are mediated by below-ground community shifts, and demonstrated that soil acidification plays a stronger role than nitrogen availability in regulating soil respiration under long-term N enrichment. Her contributions also include uncovering the drivers of fungal functional group diversity on ecosystem stability, the long-term effects of continuous cropping on soil health, and the differential responses of soil bacteria to N and P additions. Through extensive collaborations, she has explored grazing legacy effects, precipitation gradients, and interactions between plants, microbes, and soil processes across diverse grassland ecosystems. Collectively, her research offers foundational insights into ecosystem stability, nutrient cycling, and soil biodiversity under global change pressures, establishing her as a leading authority in terrestrial biogeochemistry and ecological sustainability.

Profiles: Scopus | Orcid Google Scholar

Featured Publications

Xu, F., Li, J., Wu, L., Zhu, B., Chen, D., & Bai, Y. (2025). Grazing legacy mediates the diverse responses of grassland multidimensional stability to resource enrichment. Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment, 365, 109313. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2024.109313

Zhou, X., Liu, S., Wang, B., Wu, L., Wu, Y., Zhang, H., & Chen, D. (2025). Forest conversion-induced soil biota homogenization destabilizes ecosystem functions. Communications Earth & Environment, 6, Article 2909. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-025-02909-7

Huang, J., Wang, S., Wu, Y., Lu, X., Bai, Y., Wang, B., & Chen, D. (2025). Monoculture-experiment evidence that plant species identity regulates soil biota attributes and soil functions. CATENA, 245, 109309. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.catena.2025.109309

Yu, J., Wu, L., Wu, Y., Wang, B., Chen, H., Bai, Y., & Chen, D. (2025). Nitrogen and phosphorus enrichment differentially affect grassland ecosystem functioning via multitrophic pathways. Journal of Ecology, 113, 70105. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2745.70105

Wang, B., Meng, Y., Deng, S., Zhou, X., Wang, S., Wu, Y., Wu, L., Bai, Y., & Chen, D. (2025). Biodiversity of soil biota and plants stabilises ecosystem multifunctionality with increasing number of global change factors. Journal of Ecology, 113, 70054. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2745.70054

Lu, X., Chen, D., Xing, W., Li, Y., Chen, X., Lou, N., Ding, J., & Bai, Y. (2025). Contrasting impacts of nitrogen enrichment on soil nematode diversity in natural and managed ecosystems. Journal of Applied Ecology, 62, 70072. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.70072

Mi, J., Wang, F., Shi, J., Wang, Q., Pang, H., Yu, J., Chen, D., & Bai, Y. (2025). Contrasting trends in plant diversity and soil carbon mineralization under precipitation‐driven vegetation and soil carbon dynamics in the Mongolian Plateau. Ecology and Evolution, 15, e71806. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.71806

Zhang, H., Wang, B., Wu, Y., Wu, L., Yue, L., Bai, Y., & Chen, D. (2025). Plants and soil biota co‐regulate stability of ecosystem multifunctionality under multiple environmental changes. Ecology, 106(2), e4534. https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.4534

Mine Hamamcioglu Turan | Architectural Conservation | Best Researcher Award 

Prof. Mine Hamamcioglu Turan | Architectural Conservation | Best Researcher Award 

Prof. Mine Hamamcioglu Turan | Izmir Institute of Technology | Turkey

Prof. Mine Hamamcıoglu Turan is a distinguished Professor of Architecture at the Department of Conservation and Restoration of Cultural Heritage, Izmir Institute of Technology (IZTECH), where she has served since 1996 and currently holds the position of Department Chair. She earned her Ph.D. in Architecture from IZTECH in 2000, following her M.S. from Middle East Technical University and a B.Arch. from Dokuz Eylul University. With over three decades of academic, research, and professional experience, Prof. Turan has established herself as a leading scholar in architectural restoration, heritage conservation, seismic risk assessment, photogrammetry, and cultural landscape preservation. She has supervised more than 25 master’s theses and 7 doctoral dissertations, contributing significantly to Turkey’s next generation of conservation scientists. Her academic portfolio includes over 60 publications in peer-reviewed journals, conference proceedings, and technical reports, many indexed in Scopus and Web of Science, reflecting her international research impact. Prof. Turan has coordinated or contributed to more than 15 national and international research projects, including collaborations supported by TÜBİTAK, Horizon Europe, and the U.S. National Science Foundation, focusing on resilient heritage, disaster risk management, and sustainable conservation technologies. Her notable projects address seismic vulnerability in historical structures, documentation of cultural heritage using 3D photogrammetry, and the integration of archaeological assets into modern urban contexts. A recipient of several awards, including the IZTECH Publication Excellence Award (2020), the Best Oral Presentation Award (2021), and the CAH Best Paper Award (2025), she has also been recognized for her leadership in EU-funded heritage initiatives such as the Horizon2020 UIDB Above Threshold Project (2023). Prof. Turan actively serves on expert panels and committees, including the Gubbio Awards Recommendation Committee (Europe Area 9) and the HORIZON-MSCA-2025-PF Expert Panel, shaping policy and research agendas for cultural heritage preservation. Her research has been widely cited, earning her an h-index of 12 and over 500 citations on Google Scholar, underscoring her scholarly influence in architecture and conservation science. Through her leadership, mentorship, and international collaboration, Prof. Turan continues to advance resilient, data-driven, and culturally sensitive approaches to protecting architectural heritage.

Featured Publications

Demir, H. A., & Hamamcıoğlu Turan, M. (2025). Interventions in historic urban sites after earthquake disasters. Architecture, 5(4), 96.

Hamamcıoğlu Turan, M., Aktaş, E., & Toköz, Ö. D. (2024). Art and construction related qualities of 14th–15th century monuments in a rural landscape on the western coast of Türkiye. Frontiers of Architectural Research, 13, Article 100813.

Turan, M., & Etlacakus, A. (2024). A historic cultural landscape of a castle town in the Western Anatolia: Honaz, Denizli, Turkey. In Heritages Past Present, Built and Social (AMPS Proceeding Series, June 27–30, 2023).

Etlacakuş, A., & Turan, M. H. (2023). Evolution of a medieval castle town and its landscape in the southwestern Anatolia. Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites, 25(1), 1–16.

Demir, H. A., Hamamcıoğlu Turan, M., Yücetürk, K., & Aktaş, E. (2023). Structural performance of authentic architectural heritage designs: A masonry monument in Western Anatolia. Frontiers of Architectural Research, 12, Article 100707.

Demir, H. A., Yücetürk, K., Aktaş, E., & Hamamcıoğlu Turan, M. (2023). The challenges and advantages of macro modeling in ANSYS software for seismic vulnerability assessment of historic masonry structures. In Proceedings of COMPDYN 2023 (ISSN 2623-3347).

Etlacakuş, A., & Hamamcıoğlu Turan, M. (2023, April 17). Characteristics of housing in Darkale rural settlement, Soma, Manisa. Periodica Polytechnica Architecture, 54(1), 1–12.

Çalışkan, M., & Hamamcıoğlu Turan, M. (2022, November 15). Integration of archaeological heritage in metropolitan city centres with urban life: Agora of Smyrna. Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites, 24(6), 1–18.

Gençer, F., & Hamamcıoğlu Turan, M. (2022, October). Hellenistic masonry techniques in southern and western Anatolia. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, 45, 103642.