CASL Faculty Research Events

2026 CASL Faculty Research Celebration

This year’s faculty research event spotlighted a dynamic symposium of presentations, where CASL faculty shared their work through 5-minute lightning talks, bringing the research happening across our disciplines to life in thoughtful, impactful, and engaging ways

Presenters:
  • Will Clarkson (Natural Sciences) - 5-minute lightning talk, Echo-mapping in low-mass X-ray binaries
  • Mike Dabkowski (Mathematics & Statistics) - 5-minute lightning talk, Bounding the Fourier Transform of Averaged Green's Functions
  • Francia Martinez (LCA) - 5-minute lightning talk, Title Undecided, “Double-Tap Imperialism: English, Identity, and Power in the Digital Spaces of Santiago de Chile.”
  • Matt Heinicke (Natural Sciences) - 5-minute lightning talk, A molecular timescale of reptile evolution in São Tomé and Príncipe
  • Vahe Sahakyan (Armenian Research Center) - 5-minute lightning talk, Impersonal Transnationalism - How Diasporic Third- and Later-Generations Engage Across Borders
  • John Chenoweth (Behavioral Sciences) - 5-minute lightning talk, Namé-Ziibi / The River Raisin
  • Gengxin Li (Mathematics & Statistics) - 5-minute lightning talk, CVEP: Counterfactual Visual Explanation Process
  • Wessam Elmeligi (LCA, Center for Arab American Studies) - 5-minute lightning talk, Dystopia in Arabic Speculative Fiction: A Poetics of Distress
  • John Abramyan (Natural Sciences) - 5-minute lightning talk, Tooth “Pseudogenes” in Vertebrates

2025 CASL Faculty Research Celebration

In 2025 our faculty research event was a symposium of combined works, where faculty members shared their contributions to our college, campus, and communities in multiple formats. These included 5 minute lightning talks, 2 minute elevator pitches, tables to house books, publications, and physical research artifacts, a wall of research posters, and the opportunity to share a photo/tweet for our slideshow.

Elevator Pitch & Lightning Talk Presenters

Poster, Book, & Tweet Presenters
  • Christos Constantinides
  • Besa Xhabija
  • Sophia Calzada-Orihuela
  • Jorge González del Pozo
  • P.F. Potvin
  • Adam Sekuler
  • Antonios Koumpias
  • Kristian Stewart
  • Nick Iannarino
  • Gabriella Scarlatta
  • Wessam Elmeligi

2024 CASL Faculty Research Celebration

In 2023 our faculty research event was a symposium of combined works. Faculty members were invited to participate in a celebration that highlighted their contributions to our college, campus, and communities in multiple formats. The CASL Faculty Research Celebration included 5 minute lightning talks, 2 minute elevator pitches, tables to house books, publications, and physical research artifacts, a wall of research posters, and the opportunity to share a photo/tweet for our slideshow. Over 30 faculty members participated, sharing their research in differing formats. 

Elevator Pitch & Lightning Talk Presenters

Poster Presenters
  • Jie Fan 
  • Sheila Smith
  • Bushra Hussain
  • Christos Constantinides
  • Shannon Li
  • Marilee Benore
  • Matthew Heinicke
  • Simona Marincean
  • Besa Xhabija
Book, Artifact, & Tweet Presenters
  • Pam Aronson
  • Georgina Hickey
  • Francine Banner
  • Kathleen Darcy
  • Nick Iannarino
  • Yunus Zeytuncu
  • Adam Sekuler
  • Wessam Elmeligi
  • Antonios Koumpias
  • Caitlin Finlayson

2022 Research Slam

Ten CASL faculty members presented their research at the eighth annual Faculty Research Slam on October 20, 2022.

Below you will find their research abstracts along with some of their presentation recordings.

Fall 2022 Slam Videos

2021 Faculty Research Slam

On October 28, the following faculty discussed their research in seven minute presentation formats. Videos of the talks are posted below.

  • Bill DeGenaro (Composition and Rhetoric): The Bad Speller: Error, Satire, and Ridicule 
  • Michelle Leonard (Psychology): Coupling with COVID
  • Elena Zhang (Neurobiology): The temporal and spatial correlation of amyloid-, tau pathology and ER stress in a pediatric traumatic brain injury model
  • Deborah Smith Pollard (English Literature and Humanities): All I See Is Your Booty and Cleavage: Sex and the Contemporary Gospel Song
  • Jorge Gonzalez del Pozo (Spanish): Spanish Food: The Quest for Identity in a Globalized World
  • Ulrich Kamp (Earth and Environment): The Shippee-Johnson Peruvian Expedition of 1931: Mapping Glacier Recession Through the Lens of Repeat Images
  • Jamie Wraight (History): Reconstructing Chelmno: An Exercise in Historical Representation and Recreation
  • Kriszta Sajber (Philosophy): Patient Autonomy and the Ethics of Vaccination 
  • Margaret Murray (Communication): Calm in the Store: Emily Oster's Parenting Newsletter during COVID-19 

 

Fall 2021 Slam Videos

2020 Faculty Research Slam

On October 30, the following faculty discussed their research in seven minute presentation formats. Some of the videos of their presentations are posted below

  • John Abramyan (biology): Genetic Analysis Reveals Early Tooth Loss in Toads 
  • Maya Barak (criminal justice): Rethinking Procedural Justice: Hypnobirthing and Immigration Court
  • Michael Dabkowski (mathematics): Nonlocal Equations: Understanding Coagulation and Fragmentation of Particle Clusters
  • Shelly Jarenski (English literature): "No Such Thing as a Black Cowboy”—Re-capturing Black Cowboy Culture and Black Eco-Critical Consciousness in Shelton Johnson’s Gloryland
  • Brian Dates (public administration and policy): The Effect of Transition to Telemental Health on Service Delivery in the Community Mental Health System in Response to SARS-Cov-II
  • Georgy Khabarovskiy (French): Ways of Traveling and Knowing in French Women’s Colonial Writings from the Interwar Period
  • Maureen Linker (philosophy): What we can learn from an 18th century British Philosopher about Ethical Leadership Today?: Hume on Natural Virtues
  • Zhong Xu Liu (psychology): Visual exploration facilitates memory formation: The involvement of the hippocampus
  • Kristin Poling (history): How City Walls Fell: Uncovering the Origins of a Modern Myth
  • Peter Oelkers (biology and biochemistry): Membranes, the Fabric of Life
  • Nadja Rottner (art history): Claes Oldenburg and the Beautiful Schlopp with a Cherry on Top
  • Tian An Wong (mathematics): Variations of a parallel search game

Fall 2020 Slam Videos