四虎影院 Magazine Faculty News


Scott Anderson (art) contributed an illustration to the October issue of Men鈥檚 Health for an article about the rising usage of pea-based protein. His illustration of the late designer Milton Glaser was selected for the American Illustration 40 annual book, the premiere juried competition of professional illustrators.

Martin Asher (economics and business) co-authored an article, 鈥淟osing the Forest for the Trees: On the Loss of Economic Efficiency and Equity in Federal Price-Fixing Class Actions,鈥 which will appear in the winter edition of Virginia Law & Business Review. It details how defense economists and counsel have used statistical sleight-of-hand to persuade some courts to reject motions for class certification in nationwide price-fixing cases, effectively ending the litigation and allowing the alleged conspirators to retain their cartel profits. The article presents a proper method for courts to use in conducting a rigorous analysis on the issue of class certification.

Katherine Bryant (political science) attended the International Studies Association-West Conference in Pasadena, California, where she presented 鈥淓xamining the Impact of Faith-Based Organizations in Development.鈥 She also chaired two panels and served as a discussant. With two co-authors, Bryant published 鈥淚ntegrating the Use of Statistical Software into Undergraduate Political Methodology Courses鈥 in PS: Political Science and Politics.

Kristi Lazar Cantrell (chemistry) and her collaborators published an article, 鈥淐atalytic Cross Talk between Key Peptide Fragments That Couple Alzheimer鈥檚 Disease with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis,鈥 in Journal of the American Chemical Society. Written in collaboration with research groups
at UCSB, the article includes work by 四虎影院 students Grace Schonfeld 鈥21 and Ellen Trapp 鈥21.

Stephen Contakes (chemistry) edited a popular book, 鈥30-Second Biochemistry,鈥 which seeks to explain 50 of the most important concepts in biochemistry to educated adults. It includes contributions by an international team featuring 四虎影院 professors Kristi Cantrell, Stephen Contakes and Steve Julio.

Lisa De Boer (art history) recorded an hour-long session with Peter Bouteneff, a theologian at Saint Vladimer鈥檚 Orthodox Theological Seminary, on her book, 鈥淰isual Arts in the Worshiping Church,鈥 for the podcast 鈥淟uminous: Conversations on Sacred Arts.鈥

Barbara DeVivo (economics and business) published an abstract of original research, 鈥淪ecret sauce in collaborative tumor boards: Team-based characteristics that optimize tumor board functionality,鈥 in the peer-reviewed journal for the American Society of Clinical Oncology. She also evaluated three manuscripts for the 81st Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management.

Daniel Gee (music) premiered his commissioned composition 鈥淎nnunciation at the Scrovegni Chapel,鈥 for oboe and marimba at the 2021 Lilly Fellows Program National Conference at the Church of St. Ignatius in Boston in honor of Mark Schwehn, founding director of the Lilly Fellows Program.

Adam Goodworth (kinesiology) published two articles in the Journal of Neurophysiology: 鈥淧ostural mechanisms in moderate-to-severe cerebral palsy鈥 relates to trunk postural control in children with severe cerebral palsy; and 鈥淭he role of vestibular cues in postural sway鈥 describes how vestibular thresholds relate to standing balance.

Brandon Haines (chemistry) co- authored an article published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society, 鈥淟ight Directs Monomer Coordination in Catalyst-Free Grignard Photopolymerization,鈥 with professors at Northwestern University.

Jonathan Hicks (theater) and Danielle Draper 鈥16 designed lights for 鈥淥H, THANK YOU!鈥 by Diana Small 鈥09 starring alums Heather Ostberg-Johnson 鈥11, Marie Ponce-DeLeon 鈥10 and Paige Tautz 鈥14 at the Community Arts Workshop managed by Casey Caldwell 鈥08. Hicks was elected treasurer for the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE) Local 442 to fill out his work as secretary-treasurer and a member of the board of trustees. His relationship with the Local strengthens both professional and educational opportunities for 四虎影院鈥檚 theatre arts and film programs as students gain experience working behind the scenes in the tri- county arts and entertainment industries.

Nathan Huff (art) presents a second solo exhibition with Sullivan Goss Gallery, 鈥淎lmost Here,鈥 which runs through December 27. The show features new paintings and sculptures that explore the thresholds between interior and exterior spaces.

David Hunter (mathematics) and Chisondi Warioba 鈥21 published an article, 鈥淪egregation Surfaces鈥 in the June 2021 issue of Mathematics Magazine. The paper develops new measurements and geometric techniques for analyzing segregation patterns applied to U.S. census data. The fourth edition of Hunter鈥檚 textbook, 鈥淓ssentials of Discrete Mathematics,鈥 features 60 new activities designed to facilitate inquiry-based learning.

Dan Jensen (engineering) co- authored a paper, 鈥淗ealth and Safety Innovations to Reduce the Spread of Contagious Disease,鈥 for the IEEE 2021 International Symposium on Technologies for Homeland Security (HST) in November 2021.

Heather Keaney (history) published a book, 鈥溾橴thman ibn 鈥楢ffan: Legend or Liability,鈥 as part of the 鈥淢akers of the Muslim World鈥 series with One World Academic. Fred Donner at the University of Chicago describes it as 鈥渁n outstanding introduction to Islam鈥檚 nagging sectarian divisions and political thought.鈥 The podcast 鈥淣ew Books Network鈥 interviewed her about the book.

Blake Victor Kent (sociology) has co- authored six publications: 鈥淩esource Loss and Suffering During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Moderating Effects of Positive Religious Coping in a Prospective Sample of U.S. Adults with Chronic Illness鈥 in Mental Health, Religion, & Culture; 鈥淎ttachment to God and Psychological Distress: Evidence of a Curvilinear Relationship鈥 in Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion; 鈥淭he Association between Religion, Spirituality, and Salivary Rhythms of Cortisol and DHEA in Postmenopausal Women鈥 in Comprehensive Psychoneuroendocrinology; 鈥淭he R|S Atlas: Accelerating Epidemiological Research on the Influence of Religion and Spirituality on Human Health鈥 in BMJ Open; 鈥淪tress and Spirituality in Relation to HPA Axis Gene Methylation among Black Women: Results from the BWHS and SSSH鈥 in Epigenomics; and 鈥淩|S Atlas: Identifying Existing Cohort Study Data Resources to Accelerate Epidemiological Research on the Influence of Religion and Spirituality
on Human Health,鈥 which involves the creation of a query tool that can be used to identify religion and spirituality variables in 20 major U. S. cohort studies.
Chandra Mallampalli (history) has been appointed Yang Visiting Scholar of World Christianity at Harvard Divinity School. He鈥檚 based in Boston this year, where he teaches two courses at Harvard and is completing his book 鈥淪outh Asia鈥檚 Christians: Between Hindu and Muslim.鈥

Mark Nelson (philosophy) presented a paper, 鈥淭he Argument from Evil and 鈥榣鈥橢sprit de l鈥橢scalier鈥 at the conference Dieu et la Morale at Aix-Marseille Universite虂 in October.

Caryn Reeder (religious studies) published an article, 鈥淢ary鈥檚 Sword: Women and War in the Gospel of Luke,鈥 in Catholic Biblical Quarterly. She contributed a chapter, 鈥淚nsiders and Outsiders: Community Violence in Deuteronomy,鈥 to the Cambridge Companion to the Hebrew Bible and Ethics.

Steve Rogers (psychology) and students in his neuropsychology lab made multiple presentations at the 2021 annual conventions of the International Neuropsychology Society and American Psychological Association. Their projects examined the impact of anxiety on the processing speed of those with Parkinson鈥檚 disease (PD), the role of disinhibition on cognition among those with frontotemporal dementia and the way punctuality predicts degree of attention among those with PD.

Amanda Sparkman (biology) led a Bat Night Out with a maxed out crowd on campus October 22 to detect bat echolocation signals and identify bat species.

Lesa Stern (communication studies) and Kyle Mayl 鈥21 presented their research paper, 鈥淎 Hopeful Intervention: Increasing Hope Through Discourse鈥 at the Carolina Communication Conference in September. This research demonstrates that hope theory increases agency in students.

The Lilly Network Exchange Program for 2022 selected Cynthia Toms (kinesiology) as one of the faculty participants, who share distinctive signature projects, institutes or curricula highlighting the Christian character of their institutions and learn from each other. Toms also received a grant from the American Immigration Council and the Christian Council for Colleges and Universities for her project 鈥淣eighbors at the Table: Food as Memory and Mutuality.鈥

David Vander Laan (philosophy) presented three papers: 鈥淐oherence in a Life of Everlasting Growth鈥 at the Midwest Regional Meeting of the Society of Christian Philosophers; 鈥淭here is No Highest Attainable Good鈥 at the Princeton/Rutgers Philosophy of Religion Incubator Conference; and 鈥淢ust Everlasting Progress Be Unsatisfying?鈥 at the 2021 Mountain/Pacific Division Meeting of the Society of Christian Philosophers.

Maryke van der Walt (mathematics) and her co-authors published a paper, 鈥淎 Function Approximation Approach to the Prediction of Blood Glucose Levels,鈥 in Frontiers in Applied Mathematics and Statistics in August 2021.

Sameer Yadav (religious studies) appeared on a panel on evangelicalism and race at the American Philosophical Association鈥檚 annual meeting and was featured in a podcast with Yale鈥檚 Center for Faith and Culture regarding his work on mysticism and social action. He was also selected for a summer colloquium funded by the Templeton Foundation, 鈥淪cience Engaged Theology,鈥 on causation and explanation in the philosophy of science to support his research on the nature of social causation involved in forming group identity and its implications for a doctrine of the church.