Faculty-Staff Achievements
Paul Benzon, associate professor of English, published an essay, "How to Hold a S矇ance with Any Book, or The Library Is a New Medium," in the catalog for , an exhibition of book-focused art curated by the artist duo Elmgreen and Dragset at the Kunsthalle Praha.
Kristofer Covey, assistant professor of environmental studies and sciences, presented to the . Covey discussed The Soil Inventory Project and the integration of low-cost field hardware; web and mobile applications; and large-scale modeling as a route to monitoring California's statewide targets for greenhouse gasses. AB 1757 directs the California Natural Resources Agency and the California Air Resources Board in establishing an expert advisory committee designed to inform state agencies on ways they can better implement climate action.
Steve Ives, associate professor of health and human physiological sciences, Justin DeBlauw, associate chair of health and human physiological sciences, and Lauren Greaves 23 published a research paper, "Limb, sex, but not acute dietary capsaicin, modulate the near-infrared spectroscopy-vascular occlusion test estimate of muscle metabolism," in . Kendall Zaleski '22, Alexs Matias 17, Abena Gyampo 23, Meaghan Lynch 19, Brian Lora 21, Tawn Tomasi 22, Emma Basso 19, Emma Finegan 19, Jack Schickler 19, and Oliver Blum '23 aided in the work, along with collaborators from the University of Verona.
Rebecca Johnson, professor and chair of psychology, published an empirical study, Processing difficulty while reading words with neighbors is not due to increased foveal load: Evidence from eye movements, in .
Brooke Paradise, associate dean of student affairs for inclusion and engagement, graduated from , Rensselaer County Regional Chamber of Commerce's award-winning professional development program. The program has an accomplished and diverse alumni network of nearly 500 graduates.
Alexandra Prince, assistant professor of religious studies, published a chapter, "'If you don't love children, you don't understand socialism': The Children of Peoples Temple," in .
Kieron Sargeant, assistant professor of dance, co-authored an , Antiracism and the Arts in Eighteenth-Century London: The Life and World of Ignatius Sancho (ca. 1729-1780), and helped to organize the at Hobart and William Smith College. Sargeant is currently part of a Central New York Humanities Corridor grant with professors from Hamilton College, the University of Rochester, and Hobart and William Smith College.
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