Categories
Faculty Awards Willa Dean Lowery Grant

Willa Dean Lowery Awards 2021

We congratulate our winners of the 2021 Willa Dean Lowery Fund to Support Research in the Natural Sciences:

Kristine Dye, Assistant Professor of Biology

Elucidate the Mechanisms of Cellular Transformation and Tumorigenesis by MCPyVST Necessary for the Development of MCC

Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) is a rare but aggressive skin cancer with a mortality rate three times greater than melanoma. In 2008, it was discovered that MCC is caused by the integration of the Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCPyV) genome into the host genome, and subsequent constitutive expression of viral oncoproteins, such as the small tumor antigen (ST). Previous research of mine has shown that MCPyV ST binds to the cellular protein AMOT, a regulator of the cell cycle. The goal of this current project with senior research students is to elucidate the mechanisms by which MCPyV ST perturbs the functions of AMOT resulting in tumorigenesis. Such experiments will provide the MCC field with influential advancements necessary for the design of novel, efficacious, therapeutics to treat MCC. Of importance, the most influential health care workers have an appreciation and the ability to conceptualize basic research that contributes to our current understanding of disease and individualized, efficacious treatment options. Therefore, the engagement of senior research students in an authentic virology and cancer research project will provide these students with the comprehensive training, confidence, and experience that will undoubtedly influence their future careers in health care and progress my development as a teacher-scholar at Stetson University.

Holley Lynch, Assistant Professor of Physics

Tracking Cellular Motion During Early Embryo Development

The proper assembly of new tissues and organs throughout development depends on large-scale tissue motions. Current approaches to understand the mechanics of these developmental processes in many species are limited to analysis of fixed samples or almost non-existent. In this project, we will establish protocols for live cell imaging in Ambystoma mexicanum embryonic tissue explants and Vanessa cardui butterfly embryos. These time-lapse image sequences will be used to determine the cellular coordination within developing tissues and to investigate the extent cellular behaviors are conserved across species. This will further my development as a teacher-scholar at Stetson University by enhancing my research program. In addition, protocols established in this project will be used to expose Biophysics (PHYS 251) students to fluorescent microscopy and its use in interdisciplinary research. The proposed image processing workstation will advance computationally intense tasks, like deconvolution from long term and live imaging experiments using the inverted fluorescent microscope acquired from the National Science Foundation Major Research Instrumentation grant ($266,091, 2019), on which I am a principal investigator.

Categories
Faculty Awards Willa Dean Lowery Grant

Willa Dean Lowery Awards 2020

We congratulate our winner of the 2020 Willa Dean Lowery Fund to Support Research in the Natural Sciences:

Jean Smith, Assistant Professor of Biology

Uncovering Novel Mutations in Cell Fusion Genes Using Error Prone Polymerase Chain Reaction

Cell fusion is essential for the development of eukaryotic organisms. Sperm-egg fusion occurs during fertilization, muscle cells fuse to form muscle fibers, and placental cells fuse for proper implantation during pregnancy. Fusion has also recently been implicated in cancer development and progression. Unfortunately, relatively little is known about the molecular mechanisms and regulation of cell fusion. Studying this process in budding yeast allows for identification of genes involved in fusion. Importantly, many genes and proteins are conserved from yeast to humans, which has allowed the identification of yeast fusion proteins that have subsequently been shown to be important in muscle fusion. Here, I propose a screen to uncover novel mutations in a known regulator of fusion in yeast. This project requires mutations to be made using polymerase chain reaction, which requires a thermocycler. We do not have a thermocycler capable of the long reactions required to make these mutants. Not only is this equipment required for the current proposal, it is also essential for most molecular biology research. Therefore, acquisition of a thermocycler would have a great impact on my growth as a teacher-scholar and allow me to conduct exciting projects with senior research students as well as inquiry-based labs.

Categories
Faculty Awards Willa Dean Lowery Grant

Willa Dean Lowery Awards 2020

We congratulate our winners of the 2020 Willa Dean Lowery Fund to Support Research in the Natural Sciences:

Heather Evans Anderson , Assistant Professor of Health Sciences

CRISPR gene editing in Ciona intestinalis

Gene editing via CRISPR has garnered global attention due to the recent actions of a Chinese scientist who used it to genetically modify a set of twin girls.  This egregious act brought the world’s attention to the powerful technology.  I see great potential to use CRISPR as an educational tool.  Previously I successfully used CRISPR in a semester long project conducted by undergraduates in a Cell Biology course (1).  Here I intend to harness the power of CRISPR technology to genetically modify an invertebrate organism (Ciona intestinalis) to investigate the regulatory mechanisms of heart development.  This proposal describes a set of specific research aims that will be conducted by undergraduate students at Stetson through an advanced genetics course in collaboration with Dr. Lynn Kee as well as several spin off senior research projects.  The proposed project will bring cutting edge technology in an innovative application to Stetson.  Funding provided by the Willa D Lowery grant would support several student projects that would lead to presentations at national level meetings and high impact peer reviewed publications. 

Categories
Faculty Awards Summer Grants

2019 Summer Grants for Faculty Research & Creative Inquiry

The Office of the Provost and Academic Affairs is pleased to congratulate our Stetson teacher-scholar faculty on the submission of proposals for innovative scholarship, research and creative inquiry. The following Summer Grants Program projects were recommended by the Professional Development Committee to the Provost for their outstanding potential and dedication to Stetson’s mission of teaching, research, and artistic development:

Fazal Abbas, Mathematical Modeling of Blood Flow in Human Artery thorough Bifurcation

Isabel Botero, When non-family firms use a family language as part of their brand: Exploring the family business brand effect

Teresa Carmody, Archive: A Novel-Essay

John Carrick, The Stetson Unicorn List

Su Young Choi, Gifting Food/Money as Movement Media

Rachel Core, “Tuberculosis Patients’ Experiences in Shanghai before and after Socialist Health Reform”

Roslyn Crowder, How Does the Plant-based Compound Genistein Kill Lung Cancer Cells?

Joel Davis, Shakespeare’s Muse of Fire: The life and works of Sir Philip Sidney

Michael Eskenazi, Intentional and Incidental Word Learning: The Importance of Context

Sarah Garcia, tDCS for the Treatment of Anxiety in Young Adults

Sharmaine Jackson, The Unmaking of a Gangbanger

Christopher Jimenez, Pinpointing ‘Global’ Discourse through Large-scale Computational Analysis of Global Anglophone Literature

Asal Johnson, Social Epidemiology of Bladder Cancer in Florida, 2000-2014

Lynn Kee, Shaping the iridescent green structural color of marine bacteria biofilms

Sean Kennard, CD Recording published by Delos: Sonatas for Cello and Piano by Samuel Barber and Sergei Rachmaninoff

Eric Kurlander, Shanghai as East Asian “Solution” to the Nazi “Jewish Question”

John Lychner, Achieving “Flow” in Musical Experiences— Employing the concepts and approaches of Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi in Music Rehearsals and Performances

Karen Merritt, Recording project: Songs of Occitania

Daniel Plante, ShakeDown: A New Ultra Efficient Distributed Denial of Service Attack

Yohann Ripert, “Transatlantic Diplomacy Between Senegal and the United States: 1960-81”

Kelly Smith, Laboratories of Bureaucracy: How Bureaucrats Learn Across States

Charles Underriner, Moving

Categories
Faculty Awards Willa Dean Lowery Grant

Willa Dean Lowery Awards 2019

We congratulate our winners of the 2019 Willa Dean Lowery Fund to Support Research in the Natural Sciences:

Heather Evans Anderson

Heather Evans Anderson, Assistant Professor of the Department of Health Sciences

Categories
Faculty Awards Summer Grants

2018 Summer Grants for Faculty Research & Creative Inquiry

The Office of the Provost and Academic Affairs is pleased to congratulate our Stetson teacher-scholar faculty on the submission of proposals for innovative scholarship, research and creative inquiry. The following Summer Grants Program projects were recommended by the Professional Development Committee to the Provost for their outstanding potential and dedication to Stetson’s mission of teaching, research, and artistic development:

Robert Askew, The Impact of Rehabilitation Therapy on Post-Stroke Recovery

Carol Azab, Positive Frontline Employees in Service Recovery – Does it Matter?

Teresa Carmody, Archive: A Novel-Essay

Dengke Chen, A Comparative Study and Virtual Representation of Construction Technique and Traditional Carpentry of Dong and Han’s Wooden Architecture

Su Young Choi, Gifting Food/Money as Movement Media: Expanding a Practice Approach to Alternative Media Studies

Rachel Core, Tuberculosis Patients’ Experiences in Shanghai Before and After Socialist Health Reform

Randall Croom, Its’ Written All Over Your Face: Facial Hair and Competence Related Perceptions

Heather Evans-Anderson, A Co-Culture Model System to Examine Endothelial-Cardiomyocyte Interactions

Mayhill Fowler, Theater on the Frontlines of Socialism: Researching Soviet Military Theater in Ukraine

Deborah Goldring, Proactive Re-Branding and the Influence of Marketing Intermediaries

Kelly Hall, The Effects of Implicit Goal Strivings, Task Characteristics, and Mentoring on Meaningful Work

Chris Jimenez, Pinpointing “Global’ Discourse through Large-Scale Computational Analysis of Global Anglophone Literature

Asal Johnson, Racial Segregation and Lung Cancer Outcomes by Patient Characteristics in Florida

Lynn Kee, Shaping the Iridescent Green Structural Color of Marine Bacterial Biofilms

Sean Kennard, CD Recording of 20th Century American Piano Music

Eric Kurlander, Before the Final Solution: A Global History of the Nazi “Jewish Question”

Danielle Lindner, Psychometric Evaluation of the Self-Objectification Beliefs and Behaviors Scale in College Men

John Lychner, Developments in Education, Specifically Music Education, for Students from Migrant Families

Karen Merritt, A Phonetic Study: Preparing Performance Aids for Songs in the Languedoc Dialect

Stuart Michelson, Perceived versus Actual Investor Sophistication: A Behavioral Study

Emily Mieras, “The Gold-Panner, the Textile Worker, and the Piney Woods Hoteliers: History, Memory, and the Creation of Tourist and Business Destinations in Georgia and South Carolina

Khushbu Mishra, Gender and Willingness to Pay for Insured Loans: Empirical Evidence from Ghana

Mary Pollock, Gerald Durrell and the Little Ones of God (Chapters 3 & 4)

Leila Roach, Exploration and Expansion of Mental Health Services in Bhutan

Benjamin Tanner, Sediment Archive of Seagrass Dynamics in Mosquito and Indian River Lagoons

Chaz Underriner, Mimesis, Murakami, and Multimedia Art: Parallel Worlds in Performance

Kirsten Work, How Do Fish Assemblages Differ in North Temperate, South Subtropical, and Arid West Spring Habitats?

John York, Understanding the Binding of Zinc, Mercury, and Cadmium to Sulfur-Containing Compounds: Implications for Human Health and Disease

Daniil Zavlunov, The Afterlife Of Tselostnyä-Analiz (Holistic Analysis): Topic Theory in Soviet Musicology

Categories
Faculty Awards Willa Dean Lowery Grant

Willa Dean Lowery Awards 2018

We congratulate our winner of the 2018 Willa Dean Lowery Fund to Support Research in the Natural Sciences:

Lynn Kee, Assistant Professor of Biology

Gene Editing of Microorganisms Tradigrades and Caenorhabditis elegans

Categories
Grady Ballenger Series

Epistemologies of Ignorance in Law

Dr. Lonn Lanza Kaduce

Professor of Criminology and Law, University of Florida

Lonn Lanza Kaduce is Dr. Lonn Lanza-Kaduce is Professor of Criminology and Law at the University of Florida, holding both a Ph.D in Sociology and a JD.  His general interest area is in law and society with more specialized areas including Social Learning Theory, Substance Abuse Behavior, Deliquency and Deviant Behavior.  He has published extensively on juvenile and college-age crime and on court justice.  In 2016 he was Veritas Forum Lecturer on the Practice of Justice.  He is the recipient of mentoring and teaching awards.

Categories
Faculty Awards Summer Grants

2017 Summer Grants for Faculty Research & Creative Inquiry

The Office of the Provost and Academic Affairs is pleased to congratulate our Stetson teacher-scholar faculty on the submission of proposals for innovative scholarship, research and creative inquiry. The following Summer Grants Program projects were recommended by the Professional Development Committee to the Provost for their outstanding potential and dedication to Stetson’s mission of teaching, research, and artistic development:

Carol Azab, “So you have an accent, you must be…” – The Influence of Customers’ Accent on Service Provider Service Recovery

Cynthia Bennington, Pollinator dynamics in a human-modified landscape: a multi-year study

Pamela Cappas-Toro, Critical Approaches to Teaching Spanish and Lantin(a/o) American Studies in Prison

Dengke Chen, Preserving Miao Cultural Heritage: A Virtual Reconstruction and Retrofit of a typical Diao Jiao House

Randall Croom, Beggars Can’t Be Choosers: Effects of Mutual Attraction on Organizational and Individual Employment Choice and Other Organizational Outcomes

Roslyn Crowder, How Does the Plan-base Compound Genistein Kill Lung Cancer Cells?

Joel Davis, A Working Critical Text of the 1593 Arcadia

Michael Eskenazi, Intentional and Incidental Work Learning: The Importance of Context

Terence Farrell, The Effect of Supplemental Feeding on Pregnant Pigmy Rattlesnakes (Sistrurus miliarius)

Thomas Farrell, The Canterbury Tales Project, Phase II: Link 2, the Reeve’s Tale, Link 3, the Cook’s Tale

Song Gao, Evaluating Impact of Ship Emissions on Air Quality in Central Florida

Laura Gunn, Biostatistical Projects in Public Health Studies

Kelly Hall, Developing Leaders via Reflection: The Role of Feedback Format and Feedback Reactions

Melinda Hall, The Ethical Implications of Risk Communication in Public Health Contexts

Sharmaine Jackson, The Unmaking of a Gangbanger: The role of krump dancing in breaking cycles of violence

Grace Kaletski, The Value of Knowledge Practices in Student Learning: A Comparative Analysis of Faculty Perspectives on the Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education

Holley Lynch, Mechanics of Collective Cell Migration across Systems

Stuart Michelson, Assessment of Financial Planning for University Faculty

Nicole Mottier, Blood 0n the Borderlands: A History of Ciudad Juárez Organized Crime, 1920s-2010s

Mary Ellen Oslick, Developing an instrument to accurately capture in-service and preservice teacher knowledge of children’s literature

Melissa Parks, Field Trip and Literature Guide

Joshua Rust and Steven Smallpage, Political Trust and the Fate of Liberalism

Sven Smith, An Organizational Analysis of Our State Courts

Peter Smucker, Expanding CUP-Space: Combinatorial Extensions of the Complement Union Property

Benjamin Tanner, Paleoenvironmental Record of Isolated Wetlands in the Ocala National Forest

John Tichenor, Benefit Corporations: A New Way of Doing Good Business?

Nancy Vosburg, Murder in Minorca: Detecting an Unusual Hybrid Series in Spanish Crime Fiction

Jamison Walker, Heldentenor training project in Germany and Austria

John York, Understanding the Binding of Gold Compounds to Sulfur: Applications to Pharmaceuticals and Pollution Reduction

Categories
Faculty Awards Willa Dean Lowery Grant

Willa Dean Lowery Awards 2017

We congratulate our winners of the 2017 Willa Dean Lowery Fund to Support Research in the Natural Sciences:

Ben Tanner & Jason Evans, Associate Professors of Environmental Science

Determination of Past Shifts of the Salt Marsh/Mangrove Ecotone

Roslyn Crowder

Roslyn Crowder, Associate Professor of Biology

Examination of Genistein-induced Oxidative Stress and Apoptosis in
Lung Cancer Cells