Biological Sciences
seabertsonJon Mallatt, associate professor, biological sciences, coauthored “The ancient origins of consciousness: How the brain created experience” in MIT Press.
Jon Mallatt, associate professor, biological sciences, coauthored “The ancient origins of consciousness: How the brain created experience” in MIT Press.
Christopher Barry, associate professor, psychology, coauthored “Anxiety symptoms and coping motives: Examining a potential path to substance use-related problems in adolescents with psychopathic traits” in Substance Use & Misuse.
Stephen Henderson, associate professor, environment, and Nikolay Strigul, assistant professor, mathematics and statistics, coauthored “Efficient three-dimensional reconstruction of aquatic vegetation geometry: Estimating morphological parameters influencing hydrodynamic drag” in Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Sciences.
Dirk Schulze-Makuch, professor, environment, coauthored “The cosmic zoo: The near inevitability of the evolution of complex, macroscopic life” in Life.
Philip Marston, professor, and Daniel Plotnick, postdoctoral research candidate, physics and astronomy, coauthored “High frequency imaging and elastic effects for a solid cylinder with axis oblique relative to a nearby horizontal surface” in Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.
Ming Xian, professor, chemistry, coauthored “A single fluorescent probe to visualize hydrogen sulfide and hydrogen polysulfides with different fluorescence signals,” in Angewandte Chemie.
Erin Thornton, assistant professor, anthropology, coauthored “Testing osteometric and morphological methods for turkey species determination in Maya faunal assemblages” in Journal of Archaeological Science.
Andrew Storfer, professor, biological sciences, coauthored “Rapid evolutionary response to a transmissible cancer in Tasmanian devils” in Nature Communications.
Rebecca Goodrich, clinical assistant professor, English, won the Dead Bison Editor’s Prize in nonfiction for her essay “Guns I Know,” which appears in Arcadia Magazine.
Michael Delahoyde, clinical professor, English, led a Shakespeare symposium in Ashland, Ore., focused on The Winter’s Tale, Twelfth Night and his recent research in Italy. Delahoyde also received a Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship to support his archival research in northern Italy in summer 2017.