Meet our Educators
Professor Dr. Konstantin Korotkov, Ph.D.
Deputy Director of Saint-Petersburg Federal Research Institute of Physical Culture.
Professor of Computer Science and Biophysics at Saint-Petersburg Federal University of Informational Technologies, Mechanics and Optics.
Professor of Research at Saint Petersburg Academy of Physical Culture.
President of the International Union for Medical and Applied Bioelectrography.
Consultant for Aveda Co (USA).
Member of the Editorial Board: Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, Journal of Science of Healing Outcomes.
Prof. Korotkov has published over 200 papers in leading journals on physics and biology, and he holds 17 patents on biophysics inventions. Prof. Korotkov has led a research career for over 30 years, combining rigorous scientific methods with an insatiable curiosity about things of the spirit and the soul with deep respect for all life. He is also a scholar in philosophy and a serious mountaineer with 25 years of experience. He has given lectures, seminars and training sessions in 43 countries, presenting papers and workshops at more than 100 national and international conferences.
Konstantin is the author of 9 books.
Prof. Korotkov was elected President of the IUMAB in 2001 by the world’s most prominent researchers. He was re-elected in 2005 and 2010. Konstantin is a Member of the Federal University Scientific Board on new medical technologies, the Scientific Board of the European Society of Predictive Medicine (France), and the Editorial Board of the Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine (USA).
Prof. Kototkov’s scientific line, Electrophotonics, is based on the Gas Discharge Visualization technique (GDV) and is a breakthrough beyond Kirlian photography for direct, real-time viewing of the human energy fields. This new technology allows one to capture (by a special camera) the physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual energy emanating to and from an individual, plants, liquids, powders, and inanimate objects and translate this into a computerised model. More than 150 papers have been published on GDV in different countries.