雅伎著

Faculty & Staff Accomplishments

We are excited to share recent accomplishments from faculty and staff members at our campuses around the world.

Accomplishments are listed by date of achievement in reverse chronological order, with the most recent first.

Jonathan Goldman

College of Arts and Sciences

Jonathan Ezra Goldman, Ph.D., professor of English, Department of Humanities, published an article, "," in an online magazine, Mondoweiss: News and Opinion about Palestine, Israel, and the United States, on September 13, 2025. Though classified as an opinion piece, the article uses Goldman's archival work to offer an historical account of anti-Zionism in 1920s NYC, situating Zohran Mamdani within this intersectional tradition.

Randy Stout

College of Osteopathic Medicine

Randy Stout, Ph.D., associate professor of biomedical sciences and director of the 雅伎著 Imaging Center, together with Amanda Charest, imaging specialist in the College of Osteopathic Medicine, authored a paper, "," which was published on September 4, 2025, in the academic journal, JCI Insight. The researchers studied how brain development is modified and impaired by lack of thyroid hormone.

Niharika Nath

College of Arts and Sciences

Niharika Nath, Ph.D., professor of biological and chemical sciences, co-authored an academic article, "," in the September 2025 issue of IEEE Transactions on Artificial Intelligence. This review surveys automatic computerized methods for diagnosing pre-cancerous cervical cell abnormalities based on microscopic imaging modalities and provides a novel taxonomy of the surveyed techniques and approaches used.

Sebastien Marion

Library

Edward Guiliano, Ph.D., president emeritus and professor of English in the Department of Humanities, and Sebastien Marion, M.L.I.S., M.B.A., librarian III, virtual services, have published a scholarly article in Dickens Studies Annual, titled, "." The article was published on September 1, 2025.

Randy Stout

College of Osteopathic Medicine

Randy Stout, Ph.D., associate professor of biomedical sciences and director of the 雅伎著 Imaging Center, presented "Illuminating the Dark Forest in Our Head: Neuroscience and AI " to a group of 70 high school students from New York and New Jersey along with an audience of researchers from around the world as part of the annual "ASN High School Day" event at the held August 1922, 2025, at the Javits Center in Manhattan. At the same event, Stout presented a research poster on gap junctions intercellular endocytosis as a source of extracellular vesicles in the brain; Amanda Charest, imaging specialist in the College of Osteopathic Medicine, presented a poster on new methods of analyzing highly multiplexed spatial multiomics and super-resolution STED data from brain tissue.

Vladimir Grubisic

College of Osteopathic Medicine

Vladimir Grubisic, Ph.D., assistant professor of biomedical sciences in the College of Osteopathic Medicine, participated in the panel at the ISN-ASN 2025 Meeting on August 19, 2025. He spoke on "Enteric glia as friends and foes of the intestinal epithelial functions," pointing out some of the complex roles of enteric glia in the intestinal epithelial barrier function following acute inflammation.

Jonathan Goldman

College of Arts and Sciences

Jonathan Ezra Goldman, Ph.D., professor of English, Department of Humanities, published an essay in "," a collection of selected papers presented at the 2022 International James Joyce Symposium in Dublin, Ireland. The collection was published online on August 18, 2025, and in paperback by Brill on September 4, 2025. Goldman's contribution, "Including Frances Steloff," analyses Steloffs influence on Joyces reception in the United States and internationally, and argues that her work emphasized the collective, and often gendered, enterprise of creating a literary legacy.

Robert Alexander

College of Arts and Sciences

Robert G. Alexander, Ph.D., assistant professor of psychology and counseling, has been awarded an NIH Support for Research Excellence (SuRE) R16 grant as principal investigator. The project, , was awarded on August 12, 2025, and it will investigate how radiologists interpret complex medical images when aided by artificial intelligence, using eye-tracking data to optimize how visual cues are delivered. In parallel, the grant supports the Human Factors And Neuroscience Labs student-centered training model as a pipeline for student success.

Colleen Kirk

School of Management

Colleen P. Kirk, D.P.S., professor of marketing, published an article, entitled "," in Journal of Consumer Behaviour, an A-level marketing journal, on August 12, 2025. People in the sharing economy are often rated for their behavior, and those ratings now appear on other platforms. For example, an Uber rating can appear on a dating app. Across four experiments, the researchers find that hiding such a rating can make someone seem less trustworthy or appealing. These results suggest that sharing economy ratings influence reputations beyond their original platforms and that keeping them private can backfire.

Colleen Kirk

School of Management

Colleen P. Kirk, D.P.S., professor of marketing, published an article entitled "," in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology on August 7, 2025. This journal is a top-quality journal in business and one of the top journals in social psychology. In this research, Kirk and her coauthors show that invitees often choose to say maybe instead of no to social invitations because they mistakenly believe its what inviters prefer, when in fact, inviters feel more disrespected by indecision than by direct rejection.

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