Grants in Aid of Research go to 24 faculty members, from B to Z

Associate Prof. Scott Ashmann of the Research Council also announced Wednesday that the Spring 2014 Grants in Aid of Research program has awarded a total of $21,454 to fund projects submitted by two dozen UW-Green Bay faculty members involving data and/or materials collection for research, exhibition, or performance projects. (The lengthy list here provides a representative sample of the range of scholarly interests among some of the University’s professors.

Spring 2014 recipients are:
Gaurav Bansal, assistant professor, Business Administration — Insider Data Breach and CEO Apology (or Denial): Does CEO Gender Impact Trust Restoration?
Caroline Boswell, assistant professor, Humanistic Studies and History — Folger Institute’s Weekend Seminar on “Rogues, Gypsies and Outsiders: Early Modern People on the Margins,” May 22-23, 2014, at the Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington D.C.
Kate Burns, associate professor, Human Development and Psychology — Midwestern Psychological Association presentation
Bryan Carr, assistant professor, Communication — I Can Be Whatever I Want To Be (If The Programmers Will Let Me): Rhetorical Borders of Identity in Video Games
David Coury, professor, Humanistic Studies and Modern Languages (German) — conference of the International Society for the Study of European Ideas
Kristy Deetz, professor, Art, and Art and Design — Heated Exchange/SECAC (Southeastern College Art Conference)
Carol Emmons, professor, Art, and Art and Design — installation and exhibit Cosmogony 2.0
Yunsun Huh, assistant professor, Democracy and Justice Studies — “The Impact of Gender Inequality on the Labor Supply of Women and Men” and “The Labor Supply of Tied Movers”
Kevin Kain, lecturer, Humanistic Studies and History — The “Sacred Waters” of the “Holy Lake” (Sviato Ozera/Lake Valdai): A wellspring of hierotopic activities in the reign of Aleksei Mikhailovich
John Katers, professor, Natural and Applied Sciences — EPA’s TRI University Challenge (Toxic Release Inventory)
Jennifer Lanter, associate professor, Human Development — Language Learning Lab
Minkyu Lee, assistant professor, Art, and Art and Design — Two Exhibitions with the NCECA (National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts) Conference in Milwaukee
Pao Lor, associate professor, Education — Hmong Charter Schools
John Luczaj, associate professor, Geoscience and NAS — Anomalous Water Chemistry in the Deep Confined Aquifer in Northeastern Wisconsin
E. Nicole Meyer, professor of French and Humanistic Studies — Technological Innovations and their Communication Through Invited Conference Papers
Deirdre Radosevich, assistant professor, Human Development and Psychology — Perfectionism and Anger
Sawa Senzaki, assistant professor, Human Development and Psychology — Transmission of culturally unique perspectives across generations
Heidi Sherman, associate professor, Humanistic Studies and History — Hedging on Archaeological Heckles: A comparison of medieval heckles from Novgorod, Latvia, and York
Christine Smith, associate professor, Human Development and Women’s and Gender Studies — Cognitive Flexibility, Attitudes, and Personality
Alison Staudinger, assistant professor, Democracy and Justice Studies — “Are Corporate Persons Gendered?  Feminist Jurisprudence and the history of Corporate Personhood”
Alison Stehlik, assistant professor, Art and Design, Art — Silk Screening to Develop Sculptural Prints and Paintings
Patricia Terry, professor, Natural and Applied Sciences — Sustainable Agriculture: Comparing Native American 3 Sisters garden to conventional monocropping
Julie Wondergem, associate professor, Natural and Applied Sciences — Research in Organic Synthesis
Michael Zorn, associate professor, Natural and Applied Sciences — In Situ Chemical Sensors

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