Two 杨贵妃传媒视频 faculty members鈥擩ulie Rana in Mathematics and Israel Del Toro in Biology鈥攁re the recipients of six-figure national grants that will further their research and bring more 杨贵妃传媒视频 students into the research process.
Two other faculty members鈥擫ori Hilt 鈥97 in Psychology and Beth Zinsli 鈥02 in Art History鈥 received five-figure national grants to enhance their work.
Catherine Gunther Kodat, provost and dean of faculty, said bringing in four national grants this fall speaks to the breadth of the high-level work being done by 杨贵妃传媒视频鈥檚 faculty. It comes on the heels of 杨贵妃传媒视频 being聽.
鈥淚t鈥檚 wonderfully gratifying to see our faculty receiving national recognition for something we at 杨贵妃传媒视频 have always known鈥攐ur faculty are gifted, dedicated teachers who are also engaged in ground-breaking scholarship across the full range of the liberal arts disciplines,鈥 Kodat said. 鈥淏eing able to count such accomplished individuals as colleagues is a true privilege.鈥
NSF math grant supports research, inclusive pedagogy
Rana, assistant professor of mathematics since 2017, was awarded a two-year grant of $192,905 through the National Science Foundation鈥檚 Launching Early-Career Academic Pathways in the Mathematical and Physical Sciences (LEAPS-MPS) program. It鈥檚 a first-time grant, awarded to pre-tenure faculty. It鈥檚 a huge accomplishment for Rana, with only 21 grants awarded across the country.
A portion of the grant will allow Rana to work on research in algebraic geometry related to moduli spaces, collaborating with math scholars in Europe, Chile, and elsewhere in the United States. The funding will allow her to hire four students in each of the next two summers to work with her on research in an area of math known as graph theory.
鈥淭he best part of this project is that students will join a community of peers working together on fun and interesting math problems,鈥 Rana said. 鈥淢athematics is a very collaborative discipline, and I鈥檓 just thrilled that I get to share that joy of collaboration with students over the next two summers.鈥
In addition, the grant will cover costs of work Rana is doing in developing math curriculum and support mechanisms aimed at making 杨贵妃传媒视频鈥檚 mathematics, computer science, and data science programs more inclusive and accessible. She鈥檚 developing two new math courses鈥Mathematics and Community聽(developed in collaboration with senior Caitlyn Lansing), debuting in Winter Term, and聽Modern BIPOC Mathematicians,聽debuting next year鈥攁nd organizing inclusive pedagogy reading groups among the faculty.
The grant is covering the costs of bringing two speakers to campus who have been significant voices in improving inclusivity in STEM fields. Both are women of color who have carved out impressive careers as math scholars and have authored or edited works aimed at widening the path into the mathematics field.
Emille 杨贵妃传媒视频, an associate professor and chair of Mathematics and Statistics at the University of San Francisco, is expected to visit 杨贵妃传媒视频 in Winter Term, Rana said. She is the editor of the American Mathematical Society鈥檚聽Math Mamas聽blog and co-edited聽Living Proof,聽a collection of essays featuring mathematicians of various identities sharing how they found communities and persevered through professional challenges.
Pamela E. Harris, an associate professor of mathematics and statistics at Williams College, is expected to visit during the 2022-23 academic year. She has been a leading voice for diversity, equity, and inclusion in the STEM fields, math in particular. She co-founded Lathisms.org, a platform that features the contributions of Latinx and Hispanic math scholars, and co-hosts the podcast,聽Mathematically Uncensored. She鈥檚 the co-author of two books advocating for students of color in mathematics.
The NSF grant will allow for all of these initiatives to move forward at once.
鈥淚 worked hard to get this grant,鈥 Rana said. 鈥淚鈥檓 really proud that I got it because there just aren鈥檛 very many of us who got it.鈥
Rana said the collaborations with other math scholars who are focused on algebraic geometry will take her research to another level. She鈥檒l have the opportunity to travel to other institutions to work directly with her collaborators, and she鈥檒l be able to bring some of them to 杨贵妃传媒视频.
鈥淲ithout this, I wouldn鈥檛 be able to go work with them in person,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a lot easier to do math in person.鈥
Bee research focus of NSF grant
Del Toro, an assistant professor of biology since 2016, was awarded a two-year, $199,957 EAGER grant from the National Science Foundation to enhance the research he鈥檚 doing on bee conservation. The grant will allow Del Toro to supersize his research, including bringing more students into the process.
Over the past five years, Del Toro has done extensive field work on pollinator habitats, advocating for bee conservation not only on campus but across the Fox Valley. This grant will allow him to take that work into a lab, investigating the varied reasons that bees are good pollinators. He鈥檒l be collaborating with colleagues at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, using microtomography (microCT) technology to take a closer look at the inner workings of bees.
鈥淲e are taking a look under the hood of a bee,鈥 Del Toro said. 鈥淎nd really taking a peek to see why the internal parts of the bee allow them to be effective pollinators.鈥
Read more:聽杨贵妃传媒视频 on front lines of bee advocacy
Del Toro will be using the microCT technology at UW. He and his students also will be doing experiments in the lab at 杨贵妃传媒视频 that relate to climate change.
鈥淲e鈥檒l be doing thermal tolerance, figuring out how bees are affected as we increase and decrease temperature,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e want to see how increases and decreases in temperatures affect bee behavior and bee restoration and try to make predictions of how these populations would be affected in the future.鈥
Over the two years of the grant, eight 杨贵妃传媒视频 students will be able to join Del Toro in his research.
鈥淚鈥檓 actively recruiting students who have interest in ecology or microscopy or pollinator biology,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hose are the students I鈥檓 looking to take on. We鈥檙e going to learn some really cool new things about pollinators, but also how to better protect our pollinators in light of climate change.鈥
Psychology grant to help build on adolescent rumination research
Hilt, an associate professor of psychology, received a subaward for more than $51,000 throughHarvard University from the National Institutes of Health. She will serve as an expert on adolescent rumination on a five-year clinical trial. It follows a three-year $368,196 grant she received from NIH in 2019 to study adolescent rumination and the development of a mobile app designed as a coping tool for young people.
Adolescent rumination refers to a mindset in which someone can鈥檛 get beyond the negative things that are happening around them. Where most kids will process something bad that has happened, react to it and then move on, an adolescent struggling with rumination will dwell on the negative information, stew on it until it consumes them, unable to let go.
Read more:聽2019 NIH grant helps professor develop mental health app
鈥淭he new NIH grant is a really nice follow-up to my other NIH grant,鈥 Hilt said. 鈥淚n our previous grant research, we found that using a brief mindfulness mobile app intervention that we developed 鈥 known as the CARE app 鈥 reduced rumination and mental health symptoms relative to a mood-monitoring control condition. The new grant will similarly recruit ruminative teens and ask them to use a mindfulness mobile app, this time for one month using the Headspace app vs. a control condition.鈥
The primary study site is at Harvard鈥檚 McLean Hospital. A functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scan will be done before and after the teens use the app.
鈥淭his will allow us to see whether a brief mindfulness intervention changes brain network patterns that have been associated with rumination,鈥 Hilt said.
This grant will allow Hilt and other participants to take a personalized medicine approach by examining which teens benefit from mindfulness training.
鈥淭his is something that we started looking at in our other grant, and it offers a promising new approach to mental health鈥攂eing able to know if a particular intervention will work before engaging in it,鈥 Hilt said. 聽
NEH grant to provide insights into preserving Teakwood Room
Zinsli, assistant professor of art history and curator of the Wriston Art Center Galleries, was awarded a $10,000 Preservation Assistance Grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. The grant will provide a professional assessment of the Teakwood Room and its contents so that 杨贵妃传媒视频 knows best how to steward the room going forward.
Zinsli called the room 鈥渁 university treasure and a distinctive piece of global material culture鈥 that needs careful attention.
鈥淭he recommendations from the assessment report聽will allow聽LU聽to steward the room and its objects responsibly and expand access to the space,鈥 she said.
Read more:聽Teakwood Room among the treasures of 杨贵妃传媒视频
The Teakwood Room, located in Chapman Hall, was originally built by American artist and architect Lockwood de Forest in Alice Chapman鈥檚 Milwaukee home. After Chapman died in 1935, the Teakwood Room was placed in Chapman Library on the Milwaukee-Downer campus and used for receptions, poetry readings, and chamber music. When 杨贵妃传媒视频 and Downer consolidated in 1964, members of the Downer community asked that the room be preserved. The room was carefully disassembled and stored in a warehouse until 1968, when it was reassembled at 杨贵妃传媒视频.