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2011-12 academic year
Introducing new members of the faculty
To help introduce new members of the university's faculty to the Cornell community, the Cornell Chronicle is publishing brief new-faculty profiles through May.

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| Barrett |
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| Boudry |
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| Burrow |
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| Campello |
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| Caruth |
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| Cerra |
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| Choi |
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| Chong |
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| Choudhury |
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| Clark |
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| Cohn |
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| Davis |
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| Daziano |
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| Desjardins |
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| Erber |
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| Fan |
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| Fitzpatrick |
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| Fleming |
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| Frakes |
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| Friedman |
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| Fuchs |
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| Garces |
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| Hicks |
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| Hodzic |
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| Hyman |
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| Jackson |
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| Kawate |
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| Khatchadourian |
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| Kohler |
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| Lammerding |
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| Lawrence |
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| Levine |
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| Lewis |
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| Li |
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| Lim |
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| Lucks |
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| Lunine |
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| Mansfield |
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| Manville |
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| Matteson |
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| Mendle |
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| Merkley |
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| Minca |
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| North |
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| O'Donnell |
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| Park |
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| Pepiot |
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| Pham |
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| Piekut |
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| Poczter |
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| Prowse |
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| Ramberg |
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| Riddell |
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| Roby |
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| Roeder |
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| Rudd |
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| Sabin |
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| Sanyal |
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| Sider |
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| Siegel |
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| Adam Smith |
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| Matthew Smith |
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| Starr |
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| Tenney |
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| Thoemmes |
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| Tilsen |
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| Wegkamp |
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| Woodward |
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| Yu |
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| Ziebarth |
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Caitlin Barrett, assistant professor, classics
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Classical archaeology; cultural, religious and trade connections between Greco-Roman Egypt and the rest of the ancient Mediterranean; Egyptology and Egyptian language; religious syncretism and popular religion in antiquity.
Previous positions: Mellon postdoctoral teaching fellow, classical studies, University of Pennsylvania, 2010-11; consulting scholar, University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, 2010-11; Mellon postdoctoral research scholar, history, Columbia University, 2009-10.
Academic background: A.B., anthropology (archaeology), Harvard University, 2003; M.Phil., anthropology (archaeology), Yale University, 2006; Ph.D., anthropology (archaeology), Yale University, 2009.
Last book read: "Freedom" by Jonathan Franzen.
In her own time: Poetry, singing/listening to Irish folk songs, running, reading, visiting museums.
Wally Boudry, assistant professor, real estate
College: Hotel Administration
Academic focus: Real estate and general finance.
Previous positions: Visiting assistant professor, Stern School of Business, New York University, 2009-11; adjunct assistant professor, Kenan-Flagler Business School, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, 2006-09.
Academic background: B.Econ, University of Queensland, Australia, 1999; B.Com, University of Queensland, Australia, 2000; M.Phil, finance, Stern School of Business, New York University; 2005; Ph.D., finance, Stern School of Business, New York University, 2006.
Last book read: "I Spy Extreme Challenger" with my 4-year-old daughter or "The Top 100 Wallabies" by Peter Jenkins.
In his own time: "Playing golf (I frequently get to see the less manicured parts of golf courses) and spending time with my family."
Adam Boyko, assistant professor, biomedical sciences
College: Veterinary Medicine
Academic focus: Canine genomics, including the genetic basis of canine disease and morphology, and understanding the domestication and evolutionary
history of dogs.
Previous positions: Research associate, genetics, Stanford University School of Medicine, 2009-11; postdoctoral researcher, biological statistics and computational biology, Cornell, 2005-09.
Academic background: B.S. computer science, University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana, 1999; B.S. ecology, ethology and evolution, University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana, 1999; M.S. computer science, Purdue University, 2004; Ph.D., biology, Purdue University, 2005.
Last book read: "The Last Days of the Incas" by Kim MacQuarrie
In his own time: Spending time with the family, playing acoustic guitar, backyard astronomy, vegetable gardening.
Florentina Bunea, professor of statistical science
College: Computing and Information Science
Academic focus: Machine learning theory and mathematical statistics; theoretical analysis of computationally efficient methods for dimension reduction, model selection and averaging (aggregation) in a variety of high dimensional semiparametric and nonparametric models; inference in high dimensional matrix models and low rank matrix completion; new methodology for the analysis of data arising from neuroscience mental health studies.
Previous positions: Assistant/associate professor, Florida State University, statistics, 2000-11; research/teaching assistant, University of Washington, statistics, 1995-2000.
Academic background: M.S., mathematics, University of Bucharest, Romania, 1991; Ph. D., satistics, University of Washington, Seattle, 2000.
Last book read: "An Instance of the Fingerpost" by Iain Pears.
In her own time: Playing with her son Alin and her dog Rocky and going to the movies.
Anthony Burrow, assistant professor, human development
College: Human Ecology
Academic focus: The influence of racial identity on psychosocial adjustment, purpose in life among youth.
Previous positions: Assistant professor, psychology, Loyola University of Chicago, 2007-11; postdoctoral research fellow, Multicultural Research Institute, University of Notre Dame, 2005-07.
Academic background: B.A., psychology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1998; M.S., developmental psychology, Florida International University, 2002; Ph.D., developmental psychology, Florida International University, 2005.
Last book read: "The Stranger" by Albert Camus.
In his own time: "Spending time with my family, watching movies, sightseeing."
Murillo Campello, professor of finance; Lewis H. Durland Professor of Management
College: Johnson School
Academic focus: Corporate financial management, financial crises, financial markets and credit market imperfections.
Previous position: Alan and Joyce Baltz Professor of Finance, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2009-11; corporate finance research associate, National Bureau of Economic Research, 2010-11.
Academic background: B.A., economics, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 1991; M.Sc., business administration, Pontifical Catholic University, Brazil, 1994; Ph.D., finance, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2000.
Last book read: "The Kite Runner" by Khaled Hosseini.
In his own time: "Enjoy my free time with my two sons, Arthur and Thomas, and my wife, Maria. Love traveling to different countries."
Cathy Caruth, Frank H. T. Rhodes Professor of Humane Letters, English and comparative literature
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: British and German Romanticism, literary theory, the literature and theory of trauma, psychoanalysis.
Previous positions: Samuel Candler Dobbs Professor of Comparative Literature and English, Emory University, 1995-2011; associate professor of English, Yale University, 1992-94; assistant professor of English, Yale University, 1986-92.
Academic background: B.A., comparative literature, Princeton University, 1977; Ph.D., comparative literature, Yale University, 1988.
Last book read: "De l'Esprit" by Jacques Derrida.
In her own time: "When is that?"
Joshua F. Cerra, assistant professor, landscape architecture
College: Agriculture and Life Sciences
Academic focus: Studio and seminar instruction bridging urban ecological science and sustainable design practice. Interdisciplinary research interests include urban ecological systems, urban ecological design and sustainable development planning.
Previous positions: Environmental designer/senior ecologist, Herrera Inc., Portland, Ore., 2007-11; adjunct professor, architecture, University of Oregon, Portland, 2011; environmental designer/project ecologist, David Evans and Associates, Portland, 2003-07; restoration designer, Habitats Inc., Eugene, Ore., 2002-03; habitat modeling research assistant, Minnesota Department of Natural Resources Metro Region, St. Paul, Minn., 2001-02; resource planning research assistant, Center for Rural Design, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn., 1999-2001; wildlife biological/plant biological technician, U.S. Bureau of Land Management, Medford, Ore., 1996-99.
Academic background: B.A., biology, Vassar College, 1993; M.L.A., landscape architecture, University of Minnesota, 2003.
Last book read: "The Wind Masters" by Pete Dunne.
In his own time: Birding, hiking, mountain biking.
Ellie Choi, assistant professor, Asian studies
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Korean intellectual and cultural history, Seoul City, Diamond Mountains, Japanese collaboration, Korean literature.
Previous positions: Visiting assistant professor, Asian and Middle Eastern languages and literatures, Dartmouth College, 2011; visiting assistant professor, East Asian studies, Smith College, 2010-11.
Academic background: B.A./ B.M., English literature and piano performance, Northwestern University, 1995; M.A., Korean studies, University of California-Los Angeles, 2000; Ph.D., Korean studies, Harvard University, 2009.
Last book read: "Game of Thrones" by George R. R. Martin.
In her own time: "I like to cook and go to flea markets. I love to garden."
Howard Chong, assistant professor, applied sustainable economics
College: Hotel Administration
Academic focus: Environmental and energy economics; behavioral economics; industrial organization.
Academic background: B.S., electrical engineering, computer science and material science engineering, University of California-Berkeley, 2002; Ph.D., agricultural and resource economics, 2011.
Last book read: "Kitchen Confidential: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly" by Anthony Bourdain.
In his own time: "Cooking and eating, dance, hiking and outdoor adventure sports."
Tanzeem Choudhury, associate professor, information science
College: Computing and Information Science
Academic focus: Creating systems that can reason about human activities, interactions and social networks; using mobile sensors in everyday real-world environments.
Previous positions: Assistant professor of computer science, Dartmouth College, 2008-11; researcher, Intel Research, Seattle, 2003-08.
Academic background: B.S., electrical engineering, University of Rochester, 1997; M.S., 1997, Ph.D. 2004, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Media Lab.
Last book read: "Bossy Pants" by Tina Fey.
In her own time: "Cook, travel, eat."
Damon Clark, assistant professor, policy analysis and management
College: Human Ecology
Academic focus: Economics of education, labor economics, public economics.
Previous positions: Visiting assistant professor, economics, Princeton University, 2009-11; assistant professor, economics, University of Florida, 2005-11.
Academic background: B.A., economics, Newcastle University, 1994; M.Phil., economics, Nuffield College, University of Oxford, 1997; D.Phil., economics, Nuffield College, University of Oxford, 2002.
Last book read: "The Odyssey" by Simon Armitage.
In his own time: "I enjoy playing soccer, watching soccer (and most other sports), reading, traveling and spending time with my family in England, when I get a chance."
Elisha Cohn, assistant professor, English
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Victorian novels and poetry.
Previous positions: University of California-Los Angeles Ahmanson-Getty postdoctoral fellow 2010-11.
Academic background: B.A., English literature, University of California-Berkeley, 2002; M.St., (Master of Studies), 20th-century British literature, Oxford University, 2004; Ph.D., English literature, Johns Hopkins University, 2010.
Last book read: "Summer Will Show" by Sylvia Townsend Warner.
In her own time: Complex cooking projects, hiking, analogue photography.
Andrew Davis, assistant professor of operations management
College: Johnson School
Academic focus: Behavioral and experimental studies in operations management, specifically investigations relating to sourcing/procurement and contracting in supply chains.
Previous positions: Teaching assistant, Smeal College of Business, Pennsylvania State University, 2005-11; senior operations analyst, C&S Wholesale Grocers, Keene, N.H., 2006-07; economic development program specialist, Camoin Associates, Saratoga Springs, N.Y., 2003-04.
Academic background: B.A., mathematical economics, Colgate University, 2003; MBA, supply chain management, 2006, and Ph.D., business administration, 2011, both at the Smeal College of Business, Pennsylvania State University.
Last book read: "Predictably Irrational" by Dan Ariely.
In his own time: Tennis, cycling, fishing and piano.
Ricardo Daziano, assistant professor, civil and environmental engineering
College: Engineering
Academic focus: Microeconometric choice models for forecasting consumers' response to environmentally friendly technologies with a focus on low-emission vehicles, estimating willingness to pay for renewable energy, and modeling the adoption of sustainable behavior.
Previous positions: Research assistant, Université Laval, 2008-10; research assistant, Universidad de Chile, 2000-04.
Academic background: B.Sc, industrial engineering, Universidad de Chile, 1999; M.Sc, transportation engineering, Universidad de Chile, 2001; Ph.D., economics, Université Laval, Canada, 2010.
Last book read: "How We Decide" by Jonah Lehrer.
In his own time: Oil painting, languages, ancient Mediterranean art and culture, and baroque opera. "I am passionate about Italian cuisine and am a devoted home cook."
Olivier Desjardins, assistant professor, Sibley School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
College: Engineering
Academic focus: Large-scale computational modeling of turbulent multiphase reacting flows.
Previous positions: Assistant professor, mechanical engineering , University of Colorad, Boulder, 2008-11; postdoctoral fellow, Stanford University, 2008.
Academic background: M.S., aerospace engineering, Supaero, Toulouse, France, 2004; M.S., mechanical engineering, Stanford University, 2004; Ph.D., mechanical engineering, Stanford University, 2008.
Last book read: "Darwin's Dangerous Idea" by Daniel C. Dennett.
In his own time: "Spending time with my wife and daughter, hiking, reading."
Pedro Erber, assistant professor, Romance studies
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Literature, cultural studies, critical theory, visual arts, political thought.
Previous positions: Assistant professor of Brazilian studies and comparative literature, Rutgers University, 2009-2011.
Academic background: B.A., philosophy U.F.R.J., Brazil, 1998; M.A., philosophy, P.U.C. - Rio de Janeiro, 2000; Ph.D., East Asian studies, Cornell, 2009.
Last book read: "Benedicte Ve o Mar" by Laura Erber.
In his own time: Dancing salsa.
Jintu Fan, professor and chair, fiber science and apparel design
College: Human Ecology
Academic focus: Interaction between the human body, clothing and environment, and on that basis, the development of apparel with enhanced comfort and aesthetic appeal.
Previous positions: Associate head and professor, Institute of Textiles and Clothing, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, 2005-11; associate professor, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, 2001-05; assistant professor, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, 1996-2001.
Academic background: B.S., textile engineering, China Textile University, 1985; Ph.D., clothing science, The University of Leeds, 1989; D.Sc., clothing science, The University of Leeds, 2011.
Last book read: "Spent: Sex, Evolution, and Consumer Behavior" by Geoffrey Miller.
In his own time: "Husband and father of two daughters; playing various sports including tennis, hiking, snooker, golf and swimming."
Maria Fitzpatrick, assistant professor, policy analysis and management
College: Human Ecology
Academic focus: Economics of education, labor economics, public economics.
Previous position: Searle Freedom Trust postdoctoral fellow, Institute for Economic Policy Research, Stanford University, 2008-11.
Academic background: B.A., 2000; M.A., 2004; Ph.D., 2008, all at University of Virginia at Chapel Hill.
Last book read: "The Elegance of the Hedgehog" by Muriel Barbery.
In her own time: "Hiking, cooking, eating and generally anything where I am outdoors and/or with my dog."
Paul Fleming, professor, German studies
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Eighteenth to 20th-century German literature, with an emphasis on classicism, romanticism and realism; aesthetic theory, hermeneutics, critical theory, theories of the comic.
Previous positions: Associate professor, German, New York University, 2007-11; assistant professor, German, New York University, 2001-07.
Academic background: B.A., comparative literature, Brown University, 1991; M.A., German, 1997; Ph.D., German, 2001, Johns Hopkins University.
Last book read: "The Green Henry" by Gottfried Keller.
In his own time: Cycling and watching soccer.
Michael Frakes, assistant professor
College: Law School
Academic focus: Empirical research in health law and law and economics, with a particular interest in understanding how certain legal and financial incentives affect the decisions of physicians and other health care providers.
Previous positions: Lecturer on law and academic fellow, Harvard Law School's Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law Policy, Biotechnology and Bioethics, 2009-11; aging and health economics fellow, National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007-09; associate, mergers and acquisitions group of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP, 2005-07.
Academic background: B.S., economics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), 2001; J.D., Harvard Law School, 2005; Ph.D., economics, MIT, 2009.
Last book read: "The Lincoln Lawyer" by Michael Connelly.
In his own time: Spending time with son, Jack; daughter, Sydney; and wife, Jennifer; skiing; watching movies.
Eli Friedman, assistant professor, international and comparative labor
College: ILR School Academic focus: Labor, work, China, social movements, unions, globalization.
Academic background: B.A. Asian studies, Bard College, 2002; M.A. sociology, University of California-Berkeley, 2007; Ph.D., sociology, University of California-Berkeley, 2011.
Last book read: "Multitude: War and Democracy in the Age of Empire," by Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri.
In his own time: Listening to music, making sourdough bread, watching baseball, traveling.
Gregory Fuchs, assistant professor, applied and engineering physics
College: Engineering
Academic focus: Nanoscale magnetism and magnetic materials probed optically and electrically. Uses spin dynamics and quantum control of spin to make precision measurements and develop quantum technology.
Previous positions: Postdoctoral associate, University of California-Santa Barbara, 2007-11. High school physics and chemistry teacher, Cottage Grove, Minn, 1997-2001.
Academic background: B.S., physics and chemistry education, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1996; M.S., 2003 and Ph.D., 2007, both in applied physics, Cornell University.
Last book read: "Ysabel" by Guy Gavriel Kay.
In his own time: "Spending time with my wife, Nancy Fuchs, and our daughter, Anna."
Chris Garces, assistant professor, anthropology
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Catholic humanitarianism; Latin American politics and religion; race, charity and sovereignty.
Previous positions: Mellon postdoctoral fellow, anthropology, Cornell, 2009-11; visiting assistant professor, anthropology, Sarah Lawrence College, 2006-2009.
Academic background: B.A., sociology and anthropology, University of California-Santa Barbara, 1996; M.A., anthropology, George Washington University, 1999; Ph.D., anthropology, Princeton University, 2009.
Last book read: "The Black Jacobins" by C.L.R. James.
In his own time: Hiking, biking, reading, finding and sharing honeys from around the world.
Andrew Hicks, assistant professor, music and medieval studies
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Intellectual history of musical theory and thought (especially ancient and medieval); late-ancient and medieval Pythagoreanism and Platonism; medieval Latin philology and manuscript studies; medieval Persian literature.
Academic background: B.Mus., piano and classics, Truman State University, 2001; M.A., musicology, Eastman School of Music, University of Rochester, 2003; M.A., medieval studies, University of Toronto, 2005; Ph.D., medieval studies, University of Toronto, 2011.
Last book read: "Inherent Vice" by Thomas Pynchon.
In his own time: "Playing piano, reading, cooking, exploring farmer's markets with my wife."
Saida Hodzic, assistant professor, anthropology and feminist, gender and sexuality studies
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Cultures and logics of NGOs and women's rights activism, and their convergences with global health, sovereignty and neoliberalism; unexpected social change and the contingencies of governmental power.
Previous positions: Louise Lamphere Visiting Assistant Professor in Gender Studies, Brown University, 2010-11; assistant professor, women and gender Studies, George Mason University, 2007-11.
Academic background: B.A. equivalent, University of Cologne, Germany, 1998; M.A., sociocultural anthropology, English philology, Spanish philology, University of Cologne, Germany, 2002; Ph.D., joint program in medical anthropology, University of California-San Francisco and University of California-Berkeley, 2006.
Last book read: "The Wrong Blood" by Manuel de Lope.
In her own time: Travel.
Louis Hyman, assistant professor, labor relations, law and history
College: ILR School
Academic focus: U.S. history, especially the history of American capitalism.
Previous positions: Associate, McKinsey and Co., 2009-10; fellow,
American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 2008-09; lecturer, Harvard University, 2007-08.
Academic background: B.A., history and mathematics, Columbia University, 1999; Ph.D., history, Harvard University, 2007.
Last book read: "American Property," by Stuart Banner.
In his own time: Running, vegetarian cooking, pre-code (the era between the introduction of sound in films in the late 1920s and the enforcement of censorship guidelines in 1934) Hollywood movies.
Steve Jackson, assistant professor, computing and information science
College: Computing and Information Science
Academic focus: Information technology policy (especially telecommunications, research and innovation policy); social/cultural/historical analyses of information and information technology; computation and new technological development in the sciences (especially ecology and the earth sciences); simulation modeling, governance and environmental conflict (especially water modeling and politics in the American Southwest); IT and international development.
Previous positions: Assistant professor, School of Information, University of Michigan, 2005-11; fellow, National Center for Digital Government at the Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, 2004-05.
Academic background: B.A., English and creative writing, Concordia University, Canada,1994; M.A., political economy, Carleton University, Canada, 1998; Ph.D., communication and science studies, University of California-San Diego, 2005.
Last book read: "The Baroque Trilogy" by Neal Stephenson.
In his own time: "Hiking, biking, kayaking, music, zoo-keeping (we have WAY too many animals)."
Toshimitsu Kawate, assistant professor, molecular medicine
College: Veterinary Medicine
Academic focus: Architecture and mechanisms of membrane proteins involved in cell-cell communication.
Previous positions: Postdoctoral fellow, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, 2009-11.
Academic background: B.S., biology, Osaka University, 1998; Ph.D., biochemistry and biophysics, Columbia University, 2005.
Last book read: "The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat" by Oliver Sacks.
In his own time: Mostly watching but sometimes playing ice hockey, football and basketball.
Lori Khatchadourian, assistant professor, Near Eastern studies
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Archaeology of empire, social and archaeological theory, Eurasia and the South Caucasus, Achaemenid Persian Empire, ancient Near East, Soviet and post-Soviet studies.
Previous positions: Hirsch postdoctoral fellow in archaeology, Cornell, 2010-11; program officer, National Democratic Institute for International Affairs, 1999-2002.
Academic background: B.A., classics and international government, Georgetown University, 1997; M.Sc., government and Russian and post-Soviet studies, London School of Economics, 1998; Ph.D., classical archaeology, University of Michigan, 2008.
Last book read: "The Captive and the Gift: Cultural Histories of Sovereignty in Russia and the Caucasus" by Bruce Grant.
In her own time: "Spending time with my family, jogging."
Julilly Kohler-Hausmann, assistant professor, history
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Modern U.S. history, specializing in law, politics, and social and criminal policy.
Previous positions: Doctoral fellow, Heyman Center for the Humanities, Columbia University, 2010-11.
Academic background: B.A., Soviet history, Bard College, 1997; Ph.D., U.S. history, University of Illinois, 2010.
Last book read: "Good Night Moon" by Margaret Wise Brown.
In her own time: "Traveling, following politics and exploring our new community with my husband and son."
Jan Lammerding, assistant professor, cell and molecular biology and biomedical engineering
College: Engineering
Academic focus: Cellular biomechanics and mechanotransduction signaling; improving our understanding of the disease mechanisms underlying muscular dystrophies, cardiomyopathies, premature aging and cancer.
Previous positions: Assistant professor/associate biophysicist, Harvard Medical School/Brigham and Women's Hospital, Department of Medicine, 2008-11;
Lecturer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Biological Engineering, 2008-10; instructor, Harvard Medical School/Brigham and Women's Hospital, Department of Medicine, 2005-08; postdoctoral fellow, Harvard Medical School/Brigham and Women's Hospital, Department of Medicine, 2004-05.
Academic background: B.S., biomechanical engineering and computational modeling, Dartmouth College, 1997;
Diplom Ingenieur, mechanical and biomedical engineering, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany, 1999; Ph.D., bioengineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2004.
Last book read: "Kokoro" by Natsume Soseki.
In his own time: "I like to relax and unwind playing volleyball (beach and indoors), basketball, golf, scuba diving and traveling."
Ben Lawrence, assistant professor, food and beverage management
College: Hotel Administration
Academic focus: Primary research interest involves channels of distribution with a focus on relationships within the context of franchising.
Academic background: B.S., hotel administration, Cornell, 1997; MBA, marketing and finance, Texas A&M University, 2001; Ph.D., marketing, Boston University, 2011.
Last book read: "Charismatic Capitalism: Direct Selling Organizations in America," by Nicole Woolsey Biggart.
In his own time: "Exploring with my kids, John and Rowan, and cooking with my family and friends."
Adam Seth Levine, assistant professor, government
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Political behavior, public policy and empirical methodology.
Previous positions: Research fellow, Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions, Vanderbilt University, 2010-11.
Academic background: B.A., independent major program, Cornell, 2003; M.A., applied economics, University of Michigan, 2010; Ph.D., political science, University of Michigan, 2010.
Last book read: "Hard Landing: The Epic Contest for Power and Profits that Plunged the Airlines into Chaos" by Thomas Petzinger Jr.
In his own time: "Foremost among my hobbies is commercial aviation. I enjoy reading about and trying to understand how the industry works and the strategy of its decision-makers. I also enjoy flying."
Tasha Lewis, assistant professor, fiber science and apparel design
College: Human Ecology
Academic focus: Technology and innovation in the apparel industry, including 3-D body scanning and mass customization; sustainability and fashion.
Previous positions: Assistant professor, School of Fashion, Ryerson University, 2009-2011.
Academic background: B.A., Spanish, Ohio State University, 1995; M.S., consumer and textile science, Ohio State University, 2000; Ph.D., apparel design, Cornell, 2009.
Last book read: "The Help" by Kathryn Stockett.
In her own time: "Wii Fit, archiving my personal clothing collection, and freelance ice cream tasting.
Shanjun Li, assistant professor, environmental economics, energy economics and sustainable enterprise, Charles H. Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management
College: Agriculture and Life Sciences
Academic focus: Environmental and energy economics, industrial organization, econometrics, applied microeconomics.
Previous positions: Fellow, Resources for the Future, Washington, D.C., 2009-11; assistant professor of economics, State University of New York at Stony Brook, 2007-09.
Academic background: B.A., international economics, Nankai University, Tianjin, China, 1998; M.S., agricultural economics, Michigan State University, 2002; Ph.D., economics, Duke University, 2007.
Last book read: "Finders Keepers? How the Law of Capture Shaped the World Oil Industry" by Terence Daintith.
In his own time: "Spending time with my children, entertaining friends, playing table tennis and volleyball if I can."
Claire S.H. Lim, assistant professor, economics
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Political economy, law and economics; the influence of institutional variation across state governments on incentives of public officials and economic policy outcomes.
Previous positions: Assistant professor, Graduate School of Business, Stanford University, 2008-11.
Academic background: B.A., economics and political science, Seoul National University, South Korea, 2002; Ph.D., economics, University of Pennsylvania, 2008.
Julius B. Lucks, assistant professor, chemical and biomolecular engineering
College: Engineering
Academic focus: Bottom-up design and construction of sophisticated genetic systems with predictable function; particularly how RNA molecules can be engineered to construct genetic networks in cells, and how next-generation DNA sequencing can be used as an engineering tool to understand RNA folding and RNA engineering.
Academic background: B.S., chemistry, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, 2001; M. Phil, theoretical chemistry, Cambridge University, 2002; Ph.D., chemical physics, Harvard University, 2007.
Previous positions: Miller fellow, University of California-Berkeley, 2008-11.
Last book read: "Spiral" by Paul McEuen.
In his own time: "Enjoying family, bee keeping, gardening, culinary endeavors."
Jonathan I. Lunine, David C. Duncan Professor in the Physical Sciences, astronomy
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Planetary science and theoretical astrophysics, including formation and evolution of planets, extrasolar planets, chemical/physical processes on moons and planets.
Previous positions: Professor of physics, University of Rome, Tor Vergata, 2009-11 (on leave from University of Arizona); professor of planetary science and physics, University of Arizona, 2001-09; 1995-2001; associate professor of planetary science, 1990-95; assistant professor of planetary science, University of Arizona, 1986-90.
Academic background: B.S., physics and astronomy, University of Rochester, 1980; M.S., planetary science, California Institute of Technology, 1983; Ph.D., planetary science, California Institute of Technology, 1985.
Last book read: "Il Caratatteraccio: Come (non) si diventa Italiani" by Vittorio Zucconi.
In his own time: "My work is my passion, but I also enjoy hiking, mountain biking, skiing and reading."
Richard Mansfield, assistant professor, economics
College: ILR School
Academic focus: Labor economics and the economics of education.
Academic background: B.A., economics, Harvard University, 2005; Ph.D., economics, Yale University, 2011.
Last book read: "Guns, Germs, and Steel," by Jared Diamond.
Michael Manville, assistant professor of urban infrastructure systems, transportation planning and physical design, Department of City and Regional Planning
College: Architecture, Art and Planning
Academic focus: Land use regulation, transportation, public finance, economic development.
Previous position: Postdoctoral scholar, Lewis Center for Regional Policy Studies/Institute for Transportation Studies, University of California, Los Angeles, 2009-11.
Academic background: B.A., history, College of the Holy Cross, 1996; M.A., 2003, and Ph.D., 2009, urban planning, University of California, Los Angeles.
Last book read: "In Defense of Flogging" by Peter Moskos.
In his own time: Hiking, cycling, reading, photography.
David S. Matteson, assistant professor, statistics
College: ILR School and Computing and Information Science
Academic focus: Financial time series analysis, spatio-temporal modeling, machine learning and dimension reduction.
Previous positions: Visiting assistant professor, Cornell, School of Operations Research and Information Engineering, 2008-11; researcher fellow, Statistical and Applied Mathematical Sciences Institute, Durham, N.C., Program on Space-Time Analysis for Environmental Mapping, Epidemiology and Climate Change, 2009-10.
Academic background: B.S., business, Curtis L. Carlson School of Management, University of Minnesota, 2003; Ph.D., statistics, University of Chicago, 2008.
Last book read: "The Great Gatsby" by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
In his own time: Board games, hiking, intramural sports, reading about finance and politics.
Jane Mendle, assistant professor, human development
College: Human Ecology
Academic focus: Adolescent psychopathology and risk-taking, psychological changes over the course of puberty.
Previous positions: Assistant professor, psychology, University of Oregon, 2008-11; predoctoral clinical psychology internship, Weill Cornell Medical College, 2007-08.
Academic background: B.A., psychology, Amherst College, 1998; M.A., clinical psychology, University of Virginia, 2004; Ph.D., clinical psychology, University of Virginia, 2008.
Last book read: "Woman in White" by Wilkie Collins. ("I loved it when I was younger and it held up pretty well on re-reading: Victorian England, vanishing invalids, rolling mists, and - best of all - a villain named Sir Percival Glyde.)
In her own time: "I'm first and foremost a reader - everything from mysteries to more high-faluting classics to nonfiction (generally history). I take dance two to three times a week, am a die-hard (and frequently anguished) Mets fan and have an inordinate fondness for county fairs.
Andreea Minca, assistant professor, financial engineering
College: Engineering
Academic focus: Mathematical modeling of systemic risk, distress propagation in financial networks, credit risk, random graphs.
Academic background: B.S. and M.S., engineering, Ecole Polytechnique, 2007; DEA Probability and Finance (equivalent to master's degree), Ecole Polytechnique, 2008; Ph.D., applied mathematics, Paris VI University, 2011.
Last book read: "The Unbearable Lightness of Being" by Milan Kundera.
In her own time: Amateur theater, painting, traveling, enjoying time with friends.
Kenneth Merkley, assistant professor of accounting
College: Johnson School
Academic focus: The role of accounting information in capital markets, financial reporting, corporate disclosure.
Previous position: Research assistant, University of Michigan, 2006-11.
Academic background: B.S. and M.S., both in accounting, Marriott School of Management, Brigham Young University, 2006; Ph.D., accounting, Ross School of Business, University of Michigan, 2011.
Last book read: "The Arthurian Omen" by G.G. Vandagriff.
In his own time: "Spending time with my wife and three children, playing guitar and college sports."
Jill North, associate professor, philosophy
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Philosophy of physics.
Previous positions: Assistant professor, philosophy, Yale University, 2006-11; postdoctoral fellow, philosophy, New York University, 2004-06.
Academic background: BA, physics and philosophy, Yale, 1997; Ph.D., philosophy, Rutgers, 2004.
Last book read: "The Eustace Diamonds" by Anthony Trollope.
In her own time: "These days, all my free time goes to taking care of my new baby, Polly; she's seven months old. Otherwise reading fiction, drawing, jogging."
Caroline O'Donnell, assistant professor, design; Richard Meier Assistant Professor of Architecture
College: Architecture, Art and Planning
Academic focus: Site-specific design, where site includes energy.
Previous positions: Visiting critic, Cornell; instructor adjunct, Cooper Union; and project leader, Eisenman Architects, N.Y., all 2006-08. Designer, KCAP, Rotterdam, 2000-04.
Academic background: B.Arch, Manchester School of Architecture, United Kingdon, 2000; M.Arch., Princeton University, 2006.
Last book read: "Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions," Edwin A. Abbott
In her own time: "Boxing and cooking (but not at the same time)."
Huiju Park, assistant professor, fiber science and apparel design
College: Human Ecology
Academic focus: Smart clothing, functional apparel, sportswear design, mobility and thermal comfort of clothing.
Previous positions: Research associate, Institute for Protective Apparel Research and Technology, Oklahoma State University, 2007-11; instructor, Department of Design, Housing and Merchandising, Oklahoma State University, 2010-11.
Academic background: B.S., clothing and textiles, Yonsei University, South Korea, 1997; M.S., clothing and textiles, Yonsei University, 2002; Ph.D., design, housing and merchandising, Oklahoma State University, 2011.
Last book read: "Mother Teresa: A Simple Path," compiled by Lucinda Vardey.
In his own time: Going to museums, walking and hiking.
Perrine Pepiot, assistant professor, Sibley School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
College: Engineering
Academic focus: Biomass to biofuels conversion processes, modeling of complex fuel chemistry.
Previous positions: Staff scientist, National Bioenergy Center, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, Colo., 2008-11; postdoctoral fellow, Stanford University, 2008.
Academic background: M.S., mechanical engineering, Stanford University, 2004; M.S., aeronautics and astronautics, Supaero, Toulouse, France, 2004; Ph.D., mechanical engineering, Stanford University, 2008.
Last book read: "In Defense of Food" by Michael Pollan.
In her own time: "Spending time with my daughter, hiking, playing music.
Minh-Ha T. Pham, assistant professor, history of art and visual studies and Asian-American studies
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Race, gender and fashion's social media technologies, practices and ideologies.
Previous positions: Research fellow at the Beatrice Bain Center for Critical Feminism, University of California-Berkeley, 2010; visiting scholar, social and cultural analysis, New York University, 2009-10; assistant professor/faculty fellow, Asian American studies, New York University, 2006-09.
Academic background: B.A., English, University of California-Santa Barbara, 1995; Ph.D., comparative ethnic studies with a designated emphasis in film and visual studies, University of California-Berkeley, 2007.
Last book read: "Our Biometric Future: Facial Recognition Technology and the Culture of Surveillance" by Kelly Gates.
In her own time: "I'm in Brooklyn spending as much time with my family and friends as possible, having brunch, eating pizza (the way it was meant to taste and be eaten), and visiting a sample sale or two."
Benjamin Piekut, assistant professor, music
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Experimental musics after 1950; improvisation.
Previous positions: Lecturer in music, University of Southampton, United Kingdom, 2008-11.
Academic background: B.A., music and philosophy, Hampshire College, 1998; M.A., composition, Mills College, 2001; Ph.D., historical musicology, Columbia University, 2008.
Last book read: "The Lighthouse" by P.D. James.
In his own time: "Oh, assistant professors are always working. For example, I have been working very hard with my wife to develop the perfect homemade pizza."
Sharon Poczter, assistant professor of managerial economics, Charles H. Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management
College: Agriculture and Life Sciences
Academic focus: Financial economics, development economics and political economics; specifically the effects of government financial policy on growth in emerging markets.
Previous positions: Research assistant, University of California Haas School of Business, 2007-11; research associate, Harvard Business School, 2004-05.
Academic background: B.S., applied economics and management, Cornell; Ph.D., business and public policy, University of California-Berkeley, 2011.
Last book read: "Ayn Rand and the World She Made" by Anne Conover Heller.
In her own time: Teaching kickboxing, running, traveling.
Victoria Prowse, assistant professor, economics
College: ILR School
Academic focus: Labor economics and experimental economics, including evaluation of tax and transfer programs, retirement, pensions, behavioral economics and learning.
Previous positions: University lecturer, fellow and tutor, economics, University of Oxford, United Kingdom, 2007-11; junior research fellow, University of Oxford, United Kingdom, 2006-07; research affiliate, Institute for the Study of Labor, Bonn, Germany, 2005-08.
Academic background: B.A., economics and management, 2002; M.Phil., economics, 2004; D.Phil., economics, 2007, all from University of Oxford.
Last book read: "The Bottom Billion: Why the Poorest Countries are Failing and What Can Be Done About It" by Paul Collier.
In her own time: Traveling and hiking.
Lucinda Ramberg, assistant professor, anthropology
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Medical anthropology; religion and secularism; feminist, queer and postcolonial theory; South Asia.
Previous positions: Assistant professor, gender and women's studies, University of Kentucky, 2007-11; visiting assistant professor, Women's Studies in Religion Program, Harvard Divinity School, 2009-10; postdoctoral fellow, feminist, gender, sexuality studies, Cornell, 2006-07.
Academic background: A.B., English literature, Bryn Mawr College, 1984; M.A., theology, Union Theological Seminary, 1989; Ph.D., medical anthropology, University of California-Berkeley, 2006.
Last book read: "Sea of Poppies" by Amitav Ghosh.
In her own time: "I practice chi gung, do yoga, cook and garden."
Chris Riddell, associate professor, labor relations, law and history
College: ILR School
Academic focus: Collective bargaining, labor policy, compensation and organizational studies.
Previous positions: Assistant professor, School of Policy Studies, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada, 2005-11.
Academic background: B.A., economics, University of British Columbia; M.A., economics, McMaster University, 1997; industrial relations, University of Toronto, Ph.D., 2005.
Last book read: "How the Scots Invented the Modern World: The True Story of How Western Europe's Poorest Nation Created Our World and Everything in It" by Arthur Herman.
In his own time: "Cooking, running, and working with my daughter on her hockey skills."
Courtney Roby, assistant professor of classics
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Greek and Roman science and technology, Latin literature.
Previous positions: Geballe fellow, Stanford Humanities Center, 2010-11.
Academic background: B.S., electrical engineering, and B.A., mathematics, University of Colorado at Boulder, 2002; M.S., electrical engineering, University of Colorado, 2003; M.A., classics, University of Colorado, 2005; Ph.D., classics, Stanford University, 2011.
Last book read: "The Making of the Atomic Bomb" by Richard Rhodes.
In her own time: "I love cooking, especially Mexican food, and bread making; I am an unskilled (but steadily improving) mandolin player and an enthusiastic (if slightly rusty) fiddler; and I have been enjoying getting to know the roads and trails around my new home in Ithaca."
Adrienne Roeder, assistant professor, plant biology
College: Agriculture and Life Sciences
Academic focus: Plant cell and developmental biology, and using imaging and computational biology to understand how plant cells divide and grow to form leaves and other plant organs.
Previous positions: Postdoctoral scholar, California Institute of Technology, 2005-11.
Academic background: B.S. Stanford University, biology with minor in mathematical and computational science, 1999; Ph.D., biology, University of California, San Diego, 2005.
Last book read: "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks" by Rebecca Skloot.
In her own time: Hiking, baking, reading and traveling.
Brian Rudd, assistant professor, microbiology and immunology
College: Veterinary Medicine
Academic focus: Developmental-related changes in the immune system
and their consequences on the host response to infection and vaccination.
Previous positions: Postdoctoral research fellow at University of Arizona, 2008-11, and at Oregon Health and Science University, 2006-08.
Academic background: B.S., James Madison University, 1998; M.P.H., University of Michigan, 2001; Ph.D., University of Michigan, 2006.
Last book read: "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks" by Rebecca Skloot.
In his own time: Kayaking, hiking and enjoying music.
Jenny Sabin, assistant professor, design and emerging technologies
College: Architecture, Art and Planning
Academic focus: The contextual, material and formal intersections between architecture, computation and science with a specific focus on advanced material systems, digital technologies and fabrication.
Previous positions: Principal, Jenny Sabin LLC, Philadelphia, 2005-present; lecturer, University of Pennsylvania School of Design, 2005-11.
Academic background: B.A., interdisciplinary visual art, University of Washington, 1998; B.F.A., ceramics, University of Washington, 1998; M.Arch, University of Pennsylvania, 2005.
Last book read: "Digital Culture in Architecture" by Antoine Picon.
In his own time: Directs an experimental design studio in Philadelphia; enjoys running, hiking, cooking and traveling.
Paromita Sanyal, assistant professor, sociology
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Economic sociology, gender, deliberative democracy and decentralized governance.
Previous positions: Assistant professor of sociology, Wesleyan University, 2008-11.
Academic background: B.A. sociology, Presidency College (Calcutta University), 1997; M.A., sociology, Jawaharlal Nehru University, 1999; Ph.D., sociology, Harvard University, 2008.
Last book read: "Death in the Andes" by Mario Vargas Llosa .
In her own time: Reading literary fiction, listening to Hindustani classical music, world cinema.
Ted Sider, Frederick J. Whiton Professor of Philosophy
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Metaphysics, philosophy of language, philosophical logic.
Previous positions: Professor of philosophy, New York University, 2007-11; associate professor, professor of philosophy, Rutgers University, 2002-07; associate professor of philosophy, Syracuse University, 1998-2002; associate professor, assistant professor of philosophy, University of Rochester, 1992-98.
Academic background: B.S., mathematics, physics, philosophy, Gordon College, 1988;
Ph.D., philosophy, University of Massachusetts, 1993.
Last book read: "Beautiful & Pointless: A Guide to Modern Poetry" by David Orr.
Elke Siegel, assistant professor, German studies
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Twentienth-century and contemporary German literature; psychoanalysis, philosophy, feminism; friendship in philosophy and literature. Current project: the literary diary.
Previous positions: Assistant professor, German, New York University, 2007-11; assistant professor, Germanic languages and literature, Yale University, 2005-07; postdoctoral associate, German, New York University, 2003-05.
Academic background: M.A., German literature, journalism and history, University of Hamburg, 1999; Ph.D., German literature, Johns Hopkins University, 2003.
Last book read: "Wellen (Waves)" by Eduard von Keyserling.
In her own time: Reading, theater, watching soccer.
Adam T. Smith, professor, anthropology
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Archaeology, ancient Eurasia and the Near East, political theory, material culture and landscape.
Previous positions: Professor of anthropology, University of Chicago, 2011; associate professor of anthropology, University of Chicago, 2005-10; assistant professor of anthropology, University of Chicago, 2000-05; assistant professor, departments of anthropology and Near East studies, University of Michigan, 1997-99.
Academic background: B.A., anthropology and political science, Brown University, 1990; M.Phil., social and political science faculty, Cambridge University, 1991; M.A., anthropology, University of Arizona, 1993; Ph.D., anthropology, University of Arizona, 1996.
Last book read: "Life" by Keith Richards.
In his own time: "Lori and I play with our son and our dog, as we aspire to also do athletics and make music."
Matthew Wilson Smith, associate professor, comparative literature
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Modern theater history and theory, relations between theater and early film, digital media.
Previous positions: Associate professor, English, Boston University, 2009-11; assistant professor, English, Boston University, 2002-09; visiting assistant professor, English and comparative literature, Columbia University, 2004-05; instructor, American Studies Department, Johannes Gutenberg University, Germany, 2000-01.
Academic background: B.A., history, Brown University, 1993; M.A., religion, University of Chicago, 1995; Ph.D., English and comparative literature, Columbia University, 2002.
Last book read: "The Innocents Abroad" by Mark Twain.
In his own time: "I play banjo, read history books and chop vegetables."
William Starr, assistant professor, philosophy
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Philosophy of language, philosophical logic, philosophy of mind and cognitive science.
Previous positions: Bersoff assistant professor/faculty fellow, New York University, 2010-11; research assistant, Rutgers University, 2007-08.
Academic background: B.A., philosophy and mathematics/computer science, Amherst College, 2005; Graduate Certificate, cognitive science, Rutgers University, 2010; Ph.D., philosophy, Rutgers University, 2010.
Last book read: "The Information" by James Gleick.
In his own time: Cycling, hiking, music, traveling, cooking, browsing the Internet.
Jonathan Tenney, assistant professor, Near Eastern studies
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Assyriology and ancient Near Eastern languages; forced labor and comparative slavery; historical demography; quantitative analysis of cuneiform records; intellectualization of ethnic and geographic labels in Babylonia.
Previous positions: Postdoctoral fellow, Københavns Universitet (University of Copenhagen), Denmark; 2010-11; visiting assistant professor of history, Loyola University, 2009-10.
Academic background: B.A., anthropology, and B.A., history, Edinboro University of Pennsylvania, 1997; M.A., 2002, and Ph.D., 2009, Near Eastern languages and civilizations, University of Chicago.
Last book read: "Feersum Endjinn" by Iain M. Banks.
In his own time: "I race my bicycle."
Felix Thoemmes, assistant professor, human development
College: Human Ecology
Academic focus: Quantitative methods in social sciences.
Previous positions: Visiting professor, College of Education, Center for Empirical Educational Research and Educational Psychology, University of Tübingen, Germany, 2010-12; visiting professor, psychology, University of Jena, Germany, 2010; assistant professor, College of Education and Human Development, Research, Measurement and Statistics, Texas A&M University, 2009-10.
Academic background: Pre-diploma, psychology, University of Koblenz-Landau, Germany, 2002; M.A., experimental psychology, Indiana State University, 2005; Ph.D., quantitative psychology, Arizona State University, 2009.
Last book read: "Black Swan" by Nassim Taleb.
In his own time: "I take care of my recently born baby boy."
Sam Tilsen, assistant professor, linguistics
College: Arts and Sciences
Academic focus: Phonetics, planning and production of speech, speech rhythm, hierarchical linguistic structure, neural dynamics of speech planning, dynamical systems modeling of linguistic patterns.
Previous positions: Postdoctoral fellow, University of Southern California, 2009-11.
Academic background: B.A., English, linguistics, Northwestern University, 2001; M.A., linguistics, University of California-Berkeley, 2005; Ph.D., linguistics, University of California-Berkeley, 2009.
Last book read: "George's Secret Key to the Universe" by Stephen and Lucy Hawking.
In his own time: "I enjoy being with my family."
Marten Wegkamp, professor of mathematics and statistical science
College: Computing and Information Science
Academic focus: Classification, copula modeling, learning theory, empirical process theory, matrix estimation and completion, model selection and aggregation, nonparametric estimation.
Previous positions: Associate professor/professor of statistics, Florida State University, 2003-2011; assistant/associate professor of statistics, Yale University, 1997-2003.
Academic background: M.S, 1992, Ph.D., 1996, Mathematics, Leiden University, the Netherlands.
Last book read: "Lotte Weeda" by Maarten 't Hart.
In his own time: Music, photography, hiking.
Joshua Woodard, assistant professor, agricultural finance and management, Charles H. Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management
College: Agriculture and Life Sciences
Academic focus: Primary research interests are in the area of agricultural finance and risk management, with special emphases on empirical applications in crop insurance, spatial data analysis, dependence structure modeling, weather risk, credit risk and commodities.
Previous positions: Assistant professor, managerial economics, Texas A&M University, 2009-11; postdoctoral research associate, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2008-09.
Academic background: B.S., economics, Frostburg State University, 2003; Ph.D., agricultural and consumer economics, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2008.
Last book read: "One Hundred Years of Solitude" by Gabriel Garcia Marquez.
In his own time: Running, basketball, hiking, skiiing, reading, spending time with family.
Xingzhong Yu, the Anthony W. and Lulu C. Wang Professor in Chinese Law
College: Law School
Academic focus: Chinese law and legal history, social theory and law, comparative legal philosophy, constitutional law, cultural studies of law.
Previous positions: Professor of law by special arrangements, Northwest University of Politics and Law, Xian, China, 2002-11; associate professor of law, Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2007-11; Wang Distinguished Visiting Professor, Cornell Law School, 2010; visiting associate professor of law, Harvard Law School, 2006; lecturer, Harvard Law School, 1999; associate (Chinese legal specialist), Baker and McKenzie, Chicago, 1995-98.
Academic background: B.A., English literature, Lanzhou University, China, 1982; LL.M. and S.J.D., Harvard Law School, 1995.
Last book read: "Collateral Knowledge" by Annelise Riles.
In his own time: Reading, hiking and listening to music.
Nicolas Ziebarth, assistant professor, policy analysis and management
College: Human Ecology
Academic focus: Health economics, labor economics and microeconometrics.
Previous positions: Research associate, chair for applied empirical economic research, Berlin University of Technology, Germany, 2010-11; research associate, Socioeconomic Panel Study Department, German Institute for Economic Research, 2010-11.
Academic background: B.S., economics, Humboldt-University Berlin, 2003; M.S., economics, Berlin University of Technology, 2006; Ph.D., economics, Berlin University of Technology/German Institute for Economic Research, 2011.
Last book read: "Notes from a Big Country" by Bill Bryson.
In his own time: Meeting friends, hiking, fishing, table tennis, watching soccer. ##
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