Stefano Pierini is a full professor of Oceanography, Meteorology and Climatology at the Parthenope University of Naples. He received his Laurea in Physics -Magna Cum Laude- at the La Sapienza University of Rome and carried out his post-Laurea research activity at the same university and at the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics of the University of Cambridge (UK). He then benefited from several research scholarships and projects that allowed him to visit the University of Florida, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Hamburg University, Utrecht University, SINTEF (Norway), CNRS (Grenoble) and the Institut Henry Poincaré (Paris). Pierini has held university professorships since 1984 at the Naval University Institute of Naples, University of L’Aquila and Parthenope University of Naples. Pierini is the author of 85 publications in the main scientific journals in his field (a third of which are single-author papers, in 12 other articles he is the lead author). Pierini coordinated five projects of the European Commission and was also the coordinator of research units of several other European and national projects. His current research interests focus on the application of nonlinear dynamical systems theory to some relevant aspects of climate physics, such as the characterization of the link between astronomical forcing and glacial terminations and the intrinsic variability of the Kuroshio Extension, Gulf Stream and Antarctic Circumpolar Current. The adopted methodologies include the numerical resolution of the PDEs of fluid dynamics and of the ODEs of low-dimensional spectral models, as well as laboratory experiments with rotating platforms. Other research interests include coastal ocean modeling of the Tyrrhenian Sea, various aspects of the large-scale wind-driven ocean circulation, Rossby waves, nonlinear long gravity waves and nonlinear stability analysis of geophysical flows.