Matthew HuberDavid E. Ross Professor in the Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences Department at Purdue UniversityMatthew Huber is a professor in the Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences Department at Purdue University and the inaugural David E. Ross Director of the Institute for a Sustainable Future, Purdue’s transdisciplinary institute working on both fundamental and applied research in areas aligned with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. Huber’s scholarship has been internationally recognized for its far-reaching global conclusions on Earth’s habitability, resilience, and sustainability on long time horizons. His research areas include the physical processes generating tropical “thermostats,” the polar amplification of warming, and the environmental, economic, ecological and evolutionary implications of these processes. Over the past decade, Huber’ has shifted focus to emphasize more applied and solutions-oriented research to help society build a better future. Planning for future needs requires seeing energy, environment, economics, climate, health, politics and society as linked systems and considering risk, resiliency, and security in all of these areas concurrently.Marthie GroblerPrincipal Research Scientist, CSIRODr Marthie Grobler is a Principal Research Scientist in human-centred cybersecurity at CSIRO’s Data61 and is the Mission Lead of the Critical Infrastructure Protection and Resilience Mission. Grobler's research focus is on enhancing the usability of security solutions by considering human factors, with a strong interest in executive education, cybersecurity governance and critical infrastructure resilience and protection. Grobler spearheaded the establishment of the original human-centric security research team in CSIRO, which focuses on addressing the alignment and integration of human factors in the cyber domain to enhance security adoption and efficiency. Her research, management, and consulting experience span multiple continents, national and state government departments, and a variety of domains linked with the digital domain.Rossitza HomanManager, Resilience and Regulatory Effects Department, Sandia National LaboratoriesDr. Rossitza Homan is a distinguished leader at Sandia National Laboratories, where she oversees research, capability development, and the deployment of critical solutions for national security missions. As the head of the Risk and Resilience of Complex Systems department, Dr. Homan is dedicated to creating innovative, scientifically sound solutions that provide decision-makers across the national security enterprise with valuable insights, thereby enhancing the resilience of critical infrastructures in the physical, cyber, and information domains. Dr. Homan drives strategic initiatives, fosters partnerships, and manages large, multidisciplinary projects that support national security, global security, integrated deterrence, and complex systems resilience. She leads teams working with both U.S. government and non-government agencies, focusing on areas such as multi-modal intelligence, cyber-physical resilience, and artificial intelligence. Her collaborative efforts extend to U.S. Federally Funded R&D Centers, academia, and various domestic and international stakeholders.