Curriculum corto. Professor of Procedural Law (since 1998) and holder of the Grand Cross of San Raimundo de Peñafort. Since February 2016 she is the 1st Spanish-speaking jurist, at the proposal of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation,in the 'AKADEMIANET' network of the best and most influential scientists worldwide. With Google scholar: h-index 28; i10-index 59 and 3866 citations. https://isni.org/isni/0000000079727317-. ORCID: 0000-0002-2140-5838. https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Silvia-Barona-Vilar. With six six-year research periods and six five-year teaching periods. Honorary doctorate from five universities: Gabriel René Moreno of Santa Cruz de la Sierra (2006), University of Örebro (Sweden) in 2017, Inca Garcilaso (Peru) 2018, Autónoma de Chile (2021) and Norbert Wiener, Peru (2021); honorary professor of the Faculty of Law of Ourense, honorary member of the Cuban Society of Procedural Law. She is a Permanent Member of the National Codification Commission (Section 5, Procedural Law). She is a member of the Interinstitutional Commission for the reform of the LECRIM 2021-22. In 2009-2010 she was a member of the Committee of eight experts, appointed by the Ministry of Justice, for the elaboration of the principles for the reform of the Law of Judicial Plant and Demarcation. With scientific training in Germany (with DAAD, Max-Planck, Alexander von Humboldt scholarships), she completed her thesis at the Max-Planck (Freiburg) and is currently President of the spanish Alexander von Humboldt. Sole author of 21 books; 27 books as editor of collective work; with about 700 chapters and scientific articles in national and international journals, forewords, one translation. With 19 research projects (mostly PI). She leads the MedarbUV research group, linked to an international network of national and foreign ADR researchers, and is also President of the Court of Arbitration and Mediation of the Chamber of Commerce of Valencia. She has supervised 20 doctoral theses and is currently working on six more. Her lines of research include both Civil Justice and Criminal Justice matters. Among the former, in addition to being the pioneer in ADR-ODR analysis in Spain, with practical projection linked to mediation and arbitration institutions, she has also worked on issues such as the prior hearing or precautionary measures and more recently the influence of globalization, digitization in Civil Justice as well as algorithms and AI. In Criminal Justice, she has worked in depth on criminal mediation and Restorative Justice, as well as the Exits of the Process including consensuses and pacts, Globalization, efficiency and influence in the criminal process, artificial intelligence, securitization of law and feminist jurisprudence. Her monographs on ADR and on the History of Criminal Procedure and those on Algorithmization of Justice, Algorithmic Justice and Neurolaw, as well as Polyhedral Justice, without forgetting those on ADR, among which are 'meditations on mediation' or 'psychoanalysis of arbitration'. With lectures and courses in most of the Spanish and Latin American Universities (more than 400), as well as in Europe and Asia, she maintains close ties with professional associations, chambers of commerce, Judiciary, national and foreign, with participation in training courses and preparation of reports. She has designed innovative pilot projects of ADR (emergency precautionary arbitration at Feria Valencia and contentious-administrative mediation). She is a member of the advisory board and scientific committees of various national and international journals, as well as an evaluator of evaluation and accreditation bodies for teaching staff and projects. She is the Director of the Tirant lo Blanch Arbitration Collection..