Psychology
seabertsonRay Quock, professor, psychology, coauthored “Hyperbaric oxygen treatment suppresses withdrawal signs in morphine-dependent mice” in Brain Research.
Ray Quock, professor, psychology, coauthored “Hyperbaric oxygen treatment suppresses withdrawal signs in morphine-dependent mice” in Brain Research.
Rebecca Craft, professor, psychology, and CAS associate dean, coauthored “Sex differences in alcohol consumption and alterations in nucleus accumbens endocannabinoid mRNA in alcohol-dependent rats” in Neuroscience.
Alexander Fremier, associate professor, environment, coauthored “Linking groundwater-surface water exchange to food production and salmonid growth” in Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences.
Cigdem Capan, instructor, and Richard Dempsey, undergraduate, physics and astronomy, coauthored “Probing the Pu4+ magnetic moment in PuF4 with F19 NMR spectroscopy” in Physical Review B.
Kirk Peterson, professor, and David Feller, adjunct professor, chemistry, coauthored “The impact of larger basis sets and explicitly correlated coupled cluster theory on the Feller-Peterson-Dixon composite method,” in Annual Reports in Computational Chemistry.
Linda Russo, clinical associate professor, English, authored poems in four recent publications: South Dakota Review, Open Letters Monthly, La Vague Journal, and Datableed (UK).
Robert Quinlan and Marsha Quinlan, associate professors, anthropology, coauthored “Culture and psychological responses to environmental shocks: Cultural ecology of Sidama impulsivity and niche construction in southwest Ethiopia” in Current Anthropology.
Paul Verrell, associate professor, biological sciences, authored How to be a scholar: Smoothing the transition from high school to college…and beyond, published by Kendall Hunt.
Roger Whitson, assistant professor, English, authored Steampunk and Nineteenth-Century Digital Humanities: Literary Retrofuturisms, Media Archaeologies, Alternate Histories, to be published in December by Routledge. Whitson also authored “There is No William Blake: @autoblake’s Algorithmic Condition” in Essays in Romanticism, and co-edited a special issue of Romantic Circles Pedagogy Commons on “William Blake and Pedagogy.” He also presented “There is No William Blake: Twitterbots, Artificial Intelligences, and Posthuman Conditions” at the North American Society for the Study of Romanticism conference at University of California, Berkeley.
Tabitha Velasco, doctoral student, English, authored the short story “Departures” in the Festival of the Pacific Arts anthology Local Voices; and her article, “The Sapin Sapin Generation,” appeared in Humanities Diliman by the University of the Philippines-Diliman. Velasco also presented at the University of the Aegean and International Small Islands Studies Association’s “Islands of the World XIV Conference 2016: Niss(i)ology and Utopia—Back to the Roots of Island Studies” in Lesvos, Greece, where she was honored with the ISISA 2016 student scholarship.