2022-2023 New Faculty
2022-2023 New Faculty Heading link
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Anthropology
Rodrigo Solinis-Casparius (University of Washington, PhD) is joining the Department of Anthropology this fall as an assistant professor. A 2020 Bridge to Faculty Postdoctoral Research Associate, Professor Solinis-Caspariusis an archaeologist with research interests in architecture, the politics and ethics of archaeology and the sciences, conservation, and cultural heritage. His work has been supported by grants from NASA, the National Science Foundation, National Geographic, UNESCO, and CONACYT (Mexican National Council of Science and Technology), among others. Professor Solinis-Casparius’s research appears in publications such as the Journal of Social Archaeology and Latin American Antiquity. In addition, he has presented invited talks at universities in Germany, Mexico, and throughout the U.S.
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Biological Sciences
Jarrad T. Hampton-Marcell (University of Illinois Chicago, PhD) joins the Department of Biological Sciences as an assistant professor this fall. A2020Bridge to Faculty Postdoctoral Research Associate in the LAS biological sciences department, Professor Hampton-Marcell also holds an appointment at Argonne National Laboratory. His research focuses on gut microbiomes, specifically, microbial ecosystems and their role in disease prevention and restoring health at both macro and micro scales. His research has been published in leading journals, such as Forensic Science International, Microbiome, Nature, and Science. In recognition of his scholarship, Professor Hampton-Marcell received the Argonne National Laboratory Pacesetter Award and is a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program Honorable Mention Awardee.Gabriela Nunes-Mir (Purdue University, PhD) is joining the Department of Biological Sciences as an assistant professor this fall. Her research interests are biological invasions, quantitative and macrosystems ecology, and conservation science. A 2021 Bridge to Faculty Postdoctoral Research Associate, Professor Nunes-Mir seeks to expand current understanding of the patterns and processes of biological invasions and their attendant ecological impact. Her research has been published in top journals, including Ecology, Journal of Forestry, and Pest Management Science; and she has collaborated with scientists and practitioners from USDA Forest Service research stations and the New Zealand Forest Research Institute of Research and presented at conferences, seminars, and symposia throughout the U.S.Angeles Salles (University of Buenos Aires, PhD) joins the Department of Biological Sciences this fall as an assistant professor. Professor Salles comes to UIC from Johns Hopkins University, where she recently completed a postdoctoral fellowship. Her research centers on bats as a key mammalian model to bridge the research on auditory communication and complex sound processing across taxa. Her research has garnered support from the Human Frontier Science Program and Doctoral Fellowship CONICET Argentina Fellows and awards from the International Society of Neuroethology(Young Investigator Award and Trainee Professional Development Award). Her research has been published in leading journals, including PNAS, Neuroscience, Behavioral Neuroscience, and Methods in Ecology and Evolution. -
Chemistry
Alison Ondrus (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, PhD) joins the Department of Chemistry as an assistant professor this fall. She comes to UIC from the California Institute of Technology where she held the position of research assistant professor in the Division of Chemistry & Chemical Engineering. Her research has been funded by the Research Corporation for Science Advancement and the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the Margaret E. Early Medical Research Trust, and the National Institutes of Health. Professor Ondrus is the recipient of numerous academic honors and awards, including the Roche Excellence in Chemistry Award (for research accomplishments in the field of organic chemistry) and the NIH F32 Ruth L. Kirschstein Postdoctoral Individual National Research Service Award. Her research has been published in Nature Chemical Biology, Synlett, and ACS Chemical Biology.
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Communication
Do Own (Donna) Kim (University of Southern California, PhD) comes to UIC from the Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism of the University of Southern California. This fall, she will join the Department of Communication as an assistant professor. Professor Kim’s research explores the nature of digital communication; and her research has been published in edited volumes, peer-reviewed conference proceedings, and peer-reviewed journals, including New Media & Society, Continuum: Journal of Media & Communication Studies, International Journal of Communication, and Mass Media and Society. Professor Kim has presented at conferences in the U.S., England, the Czech Republic, and South Korea. She is the recipient of fellowships and grants from Annenberg USC, the Korea Foundation for Advanced Studies, and the Korean Studies Institute. Additional awards include the Graduate Assistant Lectureship Award, Best Interdisciplinary Data Science Team award, and Annenberg Graduate Fellowship Research and Creative Project Award.
Mariah Wellman (University of Utah, PhD) joins the Department of Communication as an assistant professor this fall. Professor Wellman is a recent doctoral graduate of the University of Utah. She is the recipient of the Utah Center for Excellence in ELSI (Ethical, Legal, and Social Implications) Research Grant, Murray Graduate Student Research Grant, and Jay W. and Sharlene B. Glasmann Family Endowed Graduate Fellowships. Professor Wellman’s published work appears in peer-reviewed journals, including New Media & Society, Journal of Media Ethics, Rhetoric of Health & Medicine, and Social Media & Society. Her recent paper, “I’m just a friend who knows what they’re talking about”: How source credibility theory manifests within the wellness influencer industry on Instagram” was named Top Student Paper by the International Communication Association, Popular Media and Culture Division.
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Earth and Environmental Sciences
Akintomide Akinsanola (City University of Hong Kong, PhD) joins the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences this fall as an assistant professor. Professor Akinsanola also holds the position of Assistant Atmospheric Scientist at Argonne National Laboratory. His areas of research encompass monsoon systems, regional and Earth system modelling, extreme climate/weather events, and climate change resilience. Notable honors include Chow Yei Ching School of Graduate Studies Scholarships and Outstanding Academic Performance Award (City University of Hong Kong). Professor Akinsanola is the author of numerous articles, which appear in top-tier journals, including Atmospheric Research, Climate Dynamics, and Environmental Research Letters.
Kerry Callaghan (University of Minnesota, PhD) will join the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences in Spring 2023 as an assistant professor. Professor Callaghan recently completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University. Her research primarily focuses on the relationship between the water table, climate, sea level, and ice sheets at a regional to global scale, and she develops and uses computer models to study changes in the water table over time. Professor Callaghan is the recipient of numerous graduate student awards, including the Alvin Anderson Award and HE Wright Footsteps Award, as well as grants from the Geological Society of America and the American Geophysical Union. Her articles appear in peer-reviewed journals such as Earth Surface Dynamics and South African Journal of Geomatics.
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English
Esmeralda Arrizón Palomera (Cornell University, PhD) joins the Department of English this fall as an assistant professor. Professor Arrizón-Palomera comes to UIC from the University of Pennsylvania Wolf Humanities Center where she held the Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowship. Among her awards and honors are Cornell’s Gilford Essay Prize, which recognizes outstanding student writing, and the Ford Foundation Dissertation Fellowship. Professor Arrizón-Palomera has presented her research at universities, symposia, and national conferences. In addition, her work appears in Aztlán: A Journal of Chicano Studies, Latino Studies, and MELUS: Multi-ethnic Literature of the United States.
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French and Francophone Studies
Roselyne Gérazime (Emory University, PhD) joins the Department of French and Francophone Studies this fall as an assistant professor. A 2020 Bridge to Faculty Postdoctoral Research Associate in the Department of French and Francophone Studies, Professor Gérazime came to UIC from Brown University where she was the Ruth J. Simmons Post-Doctoral Research Associate at the Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice. Her research focuses on the expression of spiritual beliefs in Caribbean and American literature. Professor Gérazime’s articles have appeared in the Journal of Haitian Studies and the journal Chimères.
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Gender and Women's Studies
Manoucheka Celeste (University of Washington, PhD) joins the Gender and Women’s Studies program this fall as an associate professor. Prior to coming to UIC, Professor Celeste was associate professor of African American Studies and associate director and undergraduate coordinator for the Center for Gender, Sexualities, and Women’s Studies Research at the University Florida. In addition to journal articles, book chapters, and book reviews, Professor Celeste is the author of Race, Gender, and Citizenship in the African Diaspora: Travelling Blackness, which received the National Communication Association Diamond Anniversary Book Award. She has been an invited presenter at conferences and universities throughout the U.S., Canada, and the Caribbean.
Cindy Tekkobe (Arizona State University, PhD) joins the College this fall as an assistant professor, with a shared appointment in the Program in Gender and Women’s Studies and the Department of Communication. Prior to coming to UIC, Professor Tekkobe was an assistant professor of English at the University of Alabama. She has presented at numerous national and international conferences, panels, and invited talks. Professor Tekkobe’s research has been published in refereed journals, including Journal of Information, Communication & Society, and Media Res, as well as book and encyclopedia chapters.
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History
Lilia Fernández (University of California, San Diego, PhD) joins the Department of History this fall as a full professor. Professor Fernández comes to UIC from Rutgers University where she held the positions of Henry Rutgers Term Chair and Associate Professor in the Department of Latino and Caribbean Studies and the Department of History. Her publications include two books and numerous book chapters, journal articles, book reviews, and essays. A much sought-after scholar, Professor Fernández has presented at over 100 symposia, seminars, and conferences. Among her many honors are the Arts & Humanities Diversity Enhancement Award and Alumni Distinguished Teaching Award (The Ohio State University) and the Ford Foundation Diversity Postdoctoral Fellowship. Professor Fernández currently serves as series editor of “Historical Studies in Urban America, editorial board member of the Journal of Urban History, and advisory board member of the Latino Studies Journal and the Latinos and the Law Initiative of the American Bar Foundation.
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Latin American and Latino Studies
Soledad Álvarez Velasco (King’s College London, PhD) will join the Program in Latin American and Latin Studies and the Department of Anthropology as an assistant professor in Spring 2023. Professor Álvarez Velasco comes to UIC from the University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg Center for Ibero-American Studies where she holds the position of junior professor. Professor Álvarez Velasco is the author of Frontera Sur Chiapaneca: el muro humano de la violencia. Análisis de la normalización de la violencia hacia los migrantes indocumentaqdos en tránsito (Chiapas’ Southern Border: The Human Wall of Violence: An Analysis of Violence Normalization towards Undocumented Migrants in Transit), as well as numerous book chapters. Her research appears in peer-reviewed journals and most recently in Antipode: A Radical Journal of Geography and Anales de Antropologia.
Barbara Sostaita (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, PhD) joins the Program in Latin American Studies this fall as an assistant professor. She comes to UIC from Harvard University where she completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the Mahindra Center for the Humanities. Professor Sostaita’s research focuses on migration, sanctuary, and religion. She has presented papers at conferences in the U.S., France, and Spain; and her articles appear in peer-reviewed journals, such as Southern Cultures and American Religion, as well as in popular media, i.e., The Nation, Bitch, and Southerly Magazine. Her most recent work, a book chapter in Handbook of Material Religion, is forthcoming from Routledge. In recognition of her scholarship, Professor Sostaita received the Emerging Scholars in Political Theology Fellowship, Religion Reporting Excellence Award, and the American Dissertation Fellowship.
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Mathematics, Statistics, and Computer Science
Vishesh Jain (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, PhD) joins the Department of Mathematics, Statistics, and Computer Science this fall as an assistant professor, having recently completed the Stein Fellowship at Stanford University. Professor Jain’s areas of research are probability, combinatorics, and theoretical computer science. He is the author of numerous articles, which have been published in top-tier journals, including the Journal of the London Mathematical Society, Advances in Combinatorics, and Discrete Mathematics. In addition, he has given research seminar talks at leading universities, including Stanford, Columbia, the University of Chicago, Yale, and Princeton, among others. Among his honors and awards are the Simons-Berkeley Research Fellowship and Praecis Presidential Fellowship.
Osama Khalil (The Ohio State University, PhD) joins the Department of Mathematics, Statistics, and Computer Science in the fall as an assistant professor. He comes to UIC from the University of Utah where he held the position of Wylie Research Assistant Professor. Professor Khalil’s research interests are in the areas of homogeneous and Teichmüller dynamics. In recognition of his scholarship, he received the Outstanding Postdoc Award (University of Utah) and The Ohio State Graduate School Presidential Fellowship. His research is supported by the National Science Foundation and has been published in the Journal of the European Mathematical Society, Discrete and Continuous Dynamical Systems Series A. and Geometric and Functional Analysis.
Nicole Looper (Northwestern University, PhD) joins the Department of Mathematics, Statistics, and Computer Science in fall as an assistant professor. Prior to her appointment at UIC, Professor Looper was the NSF Postdoctoral Fellow and Triedman Tamarkin Assistant Professor at Brown University. She has been an invited presenter at conferences and seminars in Canada, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, and the U.S. Professor Looper’s most recent articles appear in Inventiones Mathematicae, Mathematische Annalen, and Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society. In recognition of her scholarship, she received the Endowed Junior Chair, NSF Postdoctoral Research Fellowship (Cambridge University), and the Association for Women in Mathematics Dissertation Prize.
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Philosophy
Annette Martín (New York University, PhD) joins the Department of Philosophy this fall as an assistant professor. A 2020 Bridge to Faculty Postdoctoral Research Associate in the philosophy department, Professor Martín works in the areas of epistemology, social and political philosophy, and the philosophy of race and gender. She has presented her research at numerous professional conferences, as well as workshops and forums; and her most recent article appears in the prestigious The Philosophical Quarterly. Professor Martín currently serves as a referee for several top-tier journals, including Nous and Philosophy and Phenomenological Research. Among her honors and awards are the Ford Foundation Dissertation Fellowship and New York University President’s Service Award.
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Political Science
Juan Albarracín Dierolf (University of Notre Dame, PhD) joins the Department of Political Science this fall as an assistant professor. Prior to coming to UIC, he was a visiting assistant professor at the University of Notre Dame Keough School of Global Affairs. Professor Dierolf’s scholarly work has appeared in journals, such as Regional & Federal Studies, Revita de Ciencia Política, and the Journal of Peace Research. In addition, he is the author of numerous book chapters, as well as papers presented at conferences and seminars in the U.S. and Brazil. His research has been supported by grants from the Colombian-German Institute for Peace and the Uruguayan Agency for Research and Innovation.
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Psychology
Loretta Hsueh (Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, PhD) joins the Department of Psychology this fall as an assistant professor. Before joining UIC, Professor Hsueh was the T32 Diabetes Translational Research Postdoctoral Fellow at Kaiser Permanente Northern California Division of Research. Her research focuses on identifying and addressing mechanisms leading to the disproportionate burden of chronic disease among immigrants and people of color, with a focus on type 2 diabetes. Professor Hsueh’s research is supported by grants from Kaiser Permanent Northern California Division of Research and the National Institutes of Health; and her articles appear in leading research journals, including the American Journal of Preventative Medicine, Journal of Clinical Psychology, JAMA Internal Medicine, and Journal of Behavioral Medicine. In addition to presenting at numerous conferences and symposium, Professor Hsueh has been the invited speaker at seminars and panels at Indiana University School of Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, and the American Psychological Association.
Alexandra Keinath (University of Pennsylvania, PhD) will join the Department of Psychology in Spring 2023 as an assistant professor. She currently holds the prestigious Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship at McGill University. Professor Keinath’s areas of research interest are cognitive neuroscience, the hippocampus, entorhinal cortex, and neural computation. Her articles have been published in Hippocampus, Nature Communications, and Current Biology, among other highly regarded journals.
Sohad Murrar (University of Wisconsin-Madison, PhD) joins the Department of Psychology this fall as an assistant professor. She comes to UIC from Governors State University where she held an assistant professorship. Professor Murrar researches intergroup relations and social interventions, with a focus on developing and testing social interventions that seek to reduce prejudice and create inclusive environments. Her research has been supported by grants from the World Bank Global Partnership for Social Accountability and the European Association of Social Psychology. She currently serves as an expert scholar for the Institute for Social Policy and Understanding and a research scientist working collaboratively with the Medical College of Wisconsin and the Initiative on Islam and Medicine. Professor Murrar’s articles have been published in leading journals, including the Journal of Women’s Health, Nature Human Behavior, and Current Directors in Psychological Science; and she has presented her research at national and international conferences.
Michael Pasek (The Pennsylvania State University, PhD) joins the Department of Psychology this fall as an assistant professor. Prior to coming to UIC, he held a postdoctoral fellowship at the New School for Social Research, as well as concurrent research fellowships at Beyond Conflict and ARTIS International. His research focuses on intergroup relations, particularly the ways that religion—as both a group membership and system of beliefs—affects moral decision-making, social attitudes, and behaviors in intergroup contexts. Professor Pasek’s research is currently supported by grants from the National Science Foundation and has been published in the Nature Human Behaviour and the Journal of Experimental Psychology, as well as other peer-reviewed journals and the popular press. In recognition of his scholarship, Professor Pasek has received numerous awards from the Research Society on Alcoholism, was selected First-Round Finalist for the Frank Prize for Research in Public Interest Communications, and chosen Next Generation Honoree, the American Jewish Historical Society.
Dennis Sparta (University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, PhD) joins the Department of Psychology this fall as an assistant professor. Prior to coming to UIC, he held the position of assistant professor at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. Professor Sparta’s research has been consistently funded by grants from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism; and his articles appear in leading journals, including the Journal of Neuroscience, Nature, and Neuropharmacology. Professor Sparta is the recipient of numerous awards from the Research Society on Alcoholism and has been an invited speaker at national and international conferences.
New Executive Officers Heading link
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New Executive Officers
Economics
Darren Lubotsky received his PhD from the University of California at Berkeley. In fall, Professor Lubotsky begins his appointment as acting head of the Department of Economics, where he teaches labor economics, microeconomics, and econometrics. Professor Lubotsky is also a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research and external research fellow at the Center for Research and Analysis of Migration, University College London. His fields of interest are labor economics, public finance, health care, and applied econometrics.
Professor Lubotsky is the author of numerous articles published in peer-review journals, including the Journal of Human Capital, Journal of Economic Perspectives, and Journal of Health Economics, as well as book chapters, and book reviews. His research has been supported by grants from the National Bureau of Economic Research Retirement and Disability Research Center, Center for Municipal Finance (University of Chicago), and the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.
Professor Lubotsky has a long and distinguished record of service to the college and campus: membership on the LAS Committee on Social Science Research, numerous departmental committees, and various committees of the Institute of Government and Public Affairs. In addition to his role as departmental director of graduate studies, Professor Lubotsky was principal dissertation advisor to over 30 students and dissertation committee member for over 40 students. His service to the profession is no less impressive. He currently serves as associate editor of the Journal of Labor Economics and Economics Bulletin and co-editor of Economic Inquiry.
Among Professor Lubotsky’s awards and honors are the Kenneth Arrow Award for best paper in health economics (International Health Economics Association, 2002) and numerous teaching awards.
English
Peter Coviello received his PhD from Cornell University. He currently holds the position of professor in the Department of English and in the fall will begin his appointment as department head. Professor Coviellos’s research areas are 19th-century American literature, critical theory, and gender and sexuality studies.
A prolific scholar, Professor Coviello is the author of six books, including Vineland Reread, a New York Time’s News and Noteworthy pick; Tomorrow’s Parties: Sex and the Untimely in Nineteenth-Century America, finalist for the Lambda Literary Award in LGBT Studies and honorable mention for the Alan Bray Memorial Book prize; and Long Players: A Love Story in Eighteen Songs, selected one of ARTFORUM’s Ten Best Books of 2018. His most recent book, Is There God After Prince?: Love in a Time of Last Things (University of Chicago Press) is expected in 2023. Professor Coviello is also co-editor of three books and author of numerous book chapters, peer-reviewed journal articles, essays, and book reviews.
Among his many accolades are finalist for the John Whitmer Historical Association Best Book Prize; Heller Visiting Fellow, University of Colorado; Member, Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, School of Social Science; and Hurst Family Visiting Professorship, Washington University at St. Louis. In addition, Professor Coviello has been an invited keynote speaker or presenter at over sixty international and U.S. conferences, seminars, and symposia.
Professor Coviello’s extensive service to the profession includes membership on the editorial boards of History of the Present and American Literature; manuscript reader for university presses, including University of Chicago, Duke University, Harvard University, Oxford University, and Stanford University; and submissions reader for top-tier journals, including American Literary History, American Quarterly, Journal of the American Academy of Religion, Modern Language Studies, and PMLA.
French and Francophone Studies
Yann Robert received his PhD in French Literature from Princeton University and currently hold the position of associate professor. In the fall, he begins his appointment as head of the Department of French and Francophone Studies. Professor Robert’s research examines the interaction between theater, justice, and politics in Enlightenment and Revolutionary France.
In recognition of his scholarship, Professor Robert received UIC’s Rising Star Award in the Humanities, Arts, Design and Architecture; the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Fellowship at the Newberry Library, and the Institute for the Humanities Faculty Fellowship. A prolific scholar, he is the author of Dramatic Justice: Trial by Theater in the Age of the French Revolution and co-editor of Lava, Jean-Louis, L’Ami des louis, as well as book chapters, book reviews, and articles in Nouvelles Études Francophone, Early Modern French Studies, and Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, among other journals. In addition, he has presented his research at numerous conferences, symposia, and workshops in the U.S. and abroad.
Founder and supervisor of the UIC French Club, Professor Robert has served the department and School in various roles: director of undergraduate studies; member of the School of Literatures, Cultural Studies, and Linguistics executive committee; and primary advisor for the MA exam for numerous students. His service to the university includes LAS Elections Committee member, faculty fellow of the Honors College, and UIC Faculty Senator. Professor Robert holds leading roles in professional organizations, including president of the Society for Eighteen-Century French Studies; executive secretary of the Modern Language Association Forum for Eighteen-Century French Studies; and editorial board member of Projet Patrimoine dramatique du XVIIIe siècle, an international group of scholars, committed to the publication of critical editions of eighteen-century plays (co-sponsored by the Université Sorbonne Paris-IV and the University of Durham).
Mathematics, Statistic, and Computer Science
Julius Ross received his PhD in Mathematics from Imperial College, London. He currently holds the position of associate professor of pure mathematics in the Department of Mathematics, Statistics, and Computer Science and begins his appointment as department head in fall. Prior to joining UIC, Professor Ross was the EPSRC Fellow at the University of Cambridge. Professor Ross’s areas of research encompass complex analysis, pluripotential theory, complex geometry, and Hodge-Riemann bilinear relations.
Professor Ross’ research has been generously funded by grants from the National Science Foundation, and his articles have been published in Pure and Applied Mathematics Quarterly, Journal of Convex Analysis, and Mathematics Research Letters, among other journals. He has presented at conferences and seminars in the United Kingdom, Germany, Italy, Korea, France, and U.S.
Professor Ross’s record of service is reflective of his deep commitment to the department, college, and university. He is director of graduate studies, the co-organizer of the Zoom Algebraic Geometry Seminar; founder and organizer of the joint Notre Dame, Northwestern, UIC Complex Geometry Seminar; and lead organizer for Graduate Research Opportunities for Women (GROW) Workshop at UIC. He is a member of the LAS Elections Committee and is a former member of the University Faculty Senate. His service to the field and profession includes memberships on the editorial advisory board of the London Mathematical Society, AMS-Simons Travel Grants Committee, and Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council Peer Review College (United Kingdom).
Psychology
Jamie Roitman received her PhD in neurobiology and behavior from the University of Washington and currently hold the position of associate professor in the Department of Psychology. Professor Roitman begins her appointment as department head this fall. She is a scholar and teacher of neuroscience, with a research focus on the role of prefrontal cortex in executive control of goal-directed decisions.
Professor Roitman is widely published, with articles in leading journals, including European Journal of Neuroscience, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Physiology and Behavior, and Science. A much sought-after presenter, Professor Roitman has been an invited participant in seminars, professional meetings, and workshops throughout the U.S. and abroad. In support of her research, she has received numerous grants from the National Institutes of Health, as well as grant support from the National Center for Responsible Gaming and the Brain Research Foundation.
Professor Roitman’s record of service includes director of graduate studies and membership on the psychology department promotion and tenure committee and LAS Elections Committee. She is also an ad-hoc reviewer for Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Journal of Neuroscience, and PLoS Biology, among other journals, as well as Oxford University Press.
Bridge to the Faculty Postdoctoral Scholar Heading link
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Bridges to the Faculty Postdoctoral Scholars
Biological Sciences
Ignacio Escalante Meza
Earth and Environmental Sciences
David Hernández UribePsychology
Mayra Guerrero