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Topic

  • In ever-more digitalized world, we all need a ‘Handbook of Social Computing’

    This new handbook, co-edited by Francesca Grippa in Northeastern’s College of Professional Studies, responds “to the increasingly blurred boundaries between humans and technology,” according to the publisher’s webpage. Geared toward practitioners across disciplines, from computer scientists and social network analysts to sociologists, this volume “illustrates the diverse ways in which digital technologies can be used to analyze social behavior, recognize individual and group interaction patterns and improve daily life.”

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  • The hardest part of your job may be the people you work with (including you)

    Odds are that your job is most challenging when working with others — Loredana Padurean, associate teaching professor at Northeastern University, has written “The Job Is Easy, the People Are Not: 10 Smart Skills To Become Better People,” which collects 10 interviews “with professional managers and academic leaders” and 10 skills that Padurean believes could replace “soft” skills. This book provides “practical suggestions about how to develop your own smart skills,” according to the book’s webpage, and might help some readers “realize that you are also one of the people that makes the job harder than it should be!”

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  • ‘Belle da Costa Greene: Rediscovering the Black Woman Who Made the Morgan Library’

    Assistant professor of history Jessica Linker tells the story of Belle da Costa Greene, who was John Pierpont “Morgan’s personal librarian and, later, the library’s first director, [who] stewarded its transformation into a modern institution.”

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  • ‘Evaluating a Novel High-Density EEG Sensor Net Structure for Improving Inclusivity in Infants With Curly or Tightly Coiled Hair’

    “Electroencephalography (EEG) is an important tool in the field of developmental cognitive neuroscience for indexing neural activity. However, racial biases persist in EEG research that limit the utility of this tool. One bias comes from the structure of EEG nets/caps that do not facilitate equitable data collection across hair textures and types. Recent efforts have improved EEG net/cap design, but these solutions can be time-intensive, reduce sensor density, and are more difficult to implement in younger populations. The present study focused on testing EEG sensor net designs over infancy.” Find the paper and list of authors in Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience.

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  • Finding new possibilities by ‘Crossing Digital Fronteras’

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    “Crossing Digital Fronteras: Rehumanizing Latinx Education and Digital Humanities,” edited by Northeastern professors Isabel Martinez and the late Ángel David Nieves — with Irma Victoria Montelongo of the University of Texas and Nicholas Daniel Natividad of New Mexico State University — “centers critical Latinx Digital Humanities,” according to the publisher’s webpage. “This book definitively inserts Latinx Digital Humanities into broader conversations,” including pedagogy, social justice, and more, providing “students the liberatory learning they deserve.”

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  • Increasing participation with ‘Conversational Design’

    Michael Arnold Mages, assistant professor of art and design in the College of Arts, Media and Design, has published “Conversational Design: Improving Participation and Decision-Making in Public Organizations.” This new book helps public-facing organizations retain participation rates among their stakeholders and promises to “improve co-design and informed decision-making practices” by offering “practical tools and case studies to stimulate participation and foster better conversations.” Aimed at “both practitioners and scholars of design,” “Conversational Design” seeks to bridge the gap between policymakers, designers and “citizen voices.”

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  • Linker made Honorary Fellow of Massachusetts Historical Society

    Assistant professor of history Jessica Linker was elected an Honorary Fellow of the Massachusetts Historical Society, the oldest organization in the United States devoted to collecting materials for the study of American history.

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  • Lucas appointed to Board of Early Education and Care

    Professor of the Practice in public policy and economic justice Kimberly Lucas “has been appointed to the Board of Early Education and Care by Governor Maura Healey. Professor Lucas will serve as an expert in the evaluation and assessment of successful preschool education programs,” the College of Social Sciences and Humanities wrote.

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  • Hua Dong receives teaching innovation award

    Principal lecturer in Chinese and coordinator of the Chinese program Hua Dong has been selected as the recipient of this year’s New England Chinese Language Teachers Association Teaching Innovation Award.

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  • Barabási receives Gothenburg Lise Meitner Award for ‘groundbreaking’ network science research

    “At my core, I remain a physicist — trained, thinking and driven by the desire to advance the field of physics. Receiving the Gothenburg Lise Meitner Award holds special significance, as it is awarded by the physics community of Gothenburg and carries the name of the most remarkable woman physicist in history. I am deeply honored,” Barabási told Chalmers.

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  • ‘Effects of AI Feedback on Learning, the Skill Gap and Intellectual Diversity’

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    “Can human decision-makers learn from AI feedback? Using data on 52,000 decision-makers from a large online chess platform, we investigate how their AI use affects three interrelated long-term outcomes: Learning, skill gap, and diversity of decision strategies. … Access to AI feedback increases, rather than decreases, the skill gap between high- and low-skilled individuals.”

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  • ‘Where Is All the Deviance? Liminal Prescribing and the Social Networks Underlying the Prescription Drug Crisis’

    “The misuse of prescription drugs is a pressing public health crisis in the United States that is fueled by high-risk prescribing. We show that high-risk prescribing comprises two distinct practices: (1) routinely overprescribing to patients whose prescription-fill patterns are consistent with misuse or abuse, which conforms to the definition of deviance in sociology, and (2) routinely overprescribing to patients whose prescription-fill patterns are within possible bounds of medical use, which does not.”

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  • Zhang receives Responsible Research in Management award

    Assistant professor of management and organizational development Victoria Zhang has received the Responsible Research in Management Award from the Academy of Management for her paper “Where Is All the Deviance? Liminal Prescribing and the Social Networks Underlying the Prescription Drug Crisis.” “This annual award recognizes and celebrates recent research that benefits society by producing credible and useful knowledge,” the Academy of Management noted in their announcement.

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  • ‘Developing a Culture of Cybersecurity’

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    “In a prelude to the invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Russian hackers probed and attacked Ukrainian computer networks to find vulnerabilities and exfiltrate information that might be useful in future conflicts. … As we broadened our investigation beyond NotPetya to include other cyberattacks and hacking incidents, we were able to find a consistent pattern of cultural failures linked to misaligned incentives, a disconnect between top management and technical personnel, and a general lack of awareness and engagement of the existential threat posed by cyberattacks.”

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  • ‘Tracking COVID-19 Infections Using Survey Data on Rapid At-Home Tests’

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    “In this survey study conducted among 306,799 residents aged 18 years or older across 50 US states and the District of Columbia, the proportion of individuals reporting a positive COVID-19 infection in a longitudinal nonprobability survey closely tracked the institutionally reported proportions in the US. … This study suggests that nonprobability online surveys can serve as an effective complementary method to monitor infections during an emerging pandemic and provide an alternative for estimating infections in the absence of institutional testing when at-home tests are widely available.” Find the paper and full list of authors in JAMA Network Open.

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  • Lu receives distinguished communication scholarship

    Associate professor of communication studies in the College of Arts, Media and Design Amy Lu has received the Gerald M. Phillips Award for Distinguished Applied Communication Scholarship from the National Communication Association. “Dr. Lu’s scholarship explores the power of narratives in interactive communication technologies informed by an interdisciplinary and community-engaged approach,” the association states in its announcement. “This program of research has been supported by an impressive record of securing external grant funding and demonstrates great promise in shaping the future of health communication.”

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  • ‘Measuring Enlarged Mentality: Development and Validation of the Enlarged Mentality Scale’

    “Hannah Arendt’s concept of enlarged mentality (also referred to as representative thinking) has received much attention from theorists and philosophers, but it has not been a central concept in the empirical political communication literature. This article explicates the concept of enlarged mentality and argues for its relevance to political communication theory and research. … We offer suggestions on how the measure of enlarged mentality could be useful for different areas of political communication research.” Find the paper and full list of authors in the International Journal of Public Opinion Research.

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  • Vidrin meditates on partnering, power and care in dance

    In an essay for The Blackwood Gallery, assistant professor of theatre Ilya Vidrin meditates on “the invisible boundaries that separate” him and his dance partner. Vidrin considers that “the power dynamics of the dance floor can be fraught, and any miscommunication or misunderstanding can complicate those dynamics and cause harm,” while also leaving space for “possibility and hope,” he writes.

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  • Patent granted for engineered bacteria ‘secreting therapeutic proteins’

    “Engineered bacteria that secrete therapeutic polypeptides, pharmaceutical compositions comprising the bacteria, methods for producing recombinant polypeptides, and methods for using the bacteria for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes are provided,” the abstract reads.

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  • Taylor receives Harold Osher Award for research in sleep problems for children with autism

    “Taylor, an emerging researcher in the field of mental and behavioral health, was presented with the Harold Osher Award for Excellence in Clinical and Population Health at the annual Lambrew Research Retreat sponsored by the MaineHealth Research Institute on May 1st, 2024. One hundred and thirty abstracts were submitted for the award, and after a blind panel review, Taylor’s abstract, ‘Sleep Problems in Children with Autism at the Time of Psychiatric Hospitalization in Relation to Parental Stress and Self-Efficacy,’ was awarded first place in the category of clinical and population health research.”

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  • Wesley wins 2023 Fox International Case Writing Competition

    In a post on LinkedIn, David Wesley wrote that he was “honored to be the winner of the 2023 Fox International Case Writing Competition with the case study, ‘Anheuser-Busch and the Anti-Transgender Boycott of Bud Light.'” Wesley performed this research “to show how Bud Light, as the leading beer brand in America, had to deal with a crisis situation that resulted from its campaign with a transgender influencer, Dylan Mulvaney.” Wesley continued, “The case highlights the duty of care that businesses have to their stakeholders, especially in times of crisis.”

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  • ‘Evolve or Dissolve: Shaping Your Corporate Culture for a Remote Reality’

    As remote work has become more prevalent, distinguished professor Paula Caligiuri identifies a significant challenge now facing corporate cultures, and she provides five strategies to shape this culture: emphasize regular communication and visibility; foster connection and collaboration; reinforce and adapt company values; use myGiide to socialize employees; and recognize and reward cultural contributions.

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  • Zheng receives funding for ‘innovative’ hybrid fuel cells

    “Mechanical and industrial engineering associate professor Yi Zheng received a research grant of $208,957 to work on a three-year project, ‘Innovative Hybrid PEM Hydrogen Fuel Cell,’ from THETA LLC of Fall River, Massachusetts. This project will study the biomimetic hybrid hydrogen fuel cell as a practical alternative, addressing key barriers to widespread adoption. This involves developing non-platinum (Pt)-based gas diffusion layer/carbon electrodes, implementing enzymatic catalysts, and constructing a hybrid fuel cell to achieve high current and power densities by increasing the volumetric loading and conductivity of the hybrid biocatalyst.”

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  • Oakes named to ASME top 25 Watch List

    The “American Society of Mechanical Engineers recognized bioengineering associate professor Jessica Oakes on the Watch List of top 25 early career professionals. Her ASME magazine profile highlighted her work ‘What Happens When We Inhale Things?’ with applications from wildfire smoke to e-cigarettes.”

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  • Zhu receives ECS Toyota Young Investigator Fellowship for research on sustainable batteries

    “Mechanical and industrial engineering assistant professor Juner Zhu is one of only three individuals to receive an Electrochemical Society Toyota Young Investigator Fellowship this year. He will conduct research to assess the condition of batteries in electric vehicles using mechano-electrochemical techniques that will identify a battery’s physical changes to determine its overall health.”

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  • Horsley receives NSF grant toward ‘catalyzing the formation and success of small business’

    “Electrical and computer engineering professor and deputy director of the Institute for NanoSystems Innovation David Horsley, in collaboration with Innovation Impact International, was awarded a $299,898 NSF EAGER grant for ‘Catalyzing Deep Tech Innovation and Entrepreneurship via International Partnerships.’ This project has the potential to enhance the impact of NSF-sponsored research by catalyzing the formation and success of small business concerns founded by the NSF Small Business Innovation Research and Small Business Technology Transfer (SBIR and STTR) programs.”

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  • ‘Operando Raman Spectroscopy Reveals Degradation Byproducts From Ionomer Oxidation in Anion Exchange Membrane Water Electrolyzers’

    “This work showcases the discovery of degradation mechanisms for nonplatinum group metal catalyst (PGM free) based anion exchange membrane water electrolyzers (AEMWE) that utilize hydroxide ion conductive polymer ionomers and membranes in a zero gap configuration. An entirely unique and customized test cell was designed from the ground up for the purposes of obtaining Raman spectra during potentiostatic operation. These results represent some of the first operando Raman spectroscopy explorations into the breakdown products that are generated from high oxidative potential conditions with carbonate electrolytes.” Find the paper and full list of authors in Journal of the American Chemical Society.

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  • ‘Non-Volatile Magnon Transport in a Single Domain Multiferroic’

    “Antiferromagnets have attracted significant attention in the field of magnonics, as promising candidates for ultralow-energy carriers for information transfer for future computing. … In multiferroics such as BiFeO3 the coupling between antiferromagnetic and polar order imposes yet another boundary condition on spin transport. Thus, understanding the fundamentals of spin transport in such systems requires a single domain, a single crystal. We show that through Lanthanum (La) substitution, a single ferroelectric domain can be engineered with a stable, single-variant spin cycloid, controllable by an electric field.” Find the paper and full list of authors in Nature Communications.

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  • ‘Psychophysics of Neon Color Spreading: Chromatic and Temporal Factors Are not Limiting’

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    “Neon color spreading (NCS) is an illusory color phenomenon that provides a dramatic example of surface completion and filling-in. Numerous studies have varied both spatial and temporal aspects of the neon-generating stimulus to explore variations in the strength of the effect. Here, we take a novel, parametric, low-level psychophysical approach to studying NCS. … There is no evidence in this study that the processes underlying NCS are slower than the low-level processes of simple flicker detection. These results point to relatively fast mechanisms, not slow diffusion processes, as the substrate for NCS.” Find the paper and authors list in Vision…

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  • ‘Confinement of Excited States in Two-Dimensional, In-Plane, Quantum Heterostructures’

    “Two-dimensional (2D) semiconductors are promising candidates for optoelectronic application and quantum information processes due to their inherent out-of-plane 2D confinement. In addition, they offer the possibility of achieving low-dimensional in-plane exciton confinement, similar to zero-dimensional quantum dots, with intriguing optical and electronic properties via strain or composition engineering. … Here, we report the observation of lateral confinement of excitons in epitaxially grown in-plane MoSe2 quantum dots (~15-60 nm wide) inside a continuous matrix of WSe2 monolayer film via a sequential epitaxial growth process.” Find the paper and full list of authors in Nature Communications.

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