Faculty Receive Stipends for Summer
Study
From Dateline (April 10, 2003)
Twenty-four Cal State Fullerton faculty members
are recipients of this year's CSU Special Fund for Research,
Scholarship and Creative Activity Summer Stipends.
In addition to Denise
Stanley, assistant professor of economics, other recipients
are: Alfonso F. Agnew, assistant professor of mathematics,
“Biquaternionic Methods in Space Time and Particle Physics”;
Scott A. Annin, assistant professor of mathematics,
“Investigation in Probabilistic Group Theory”; Radha
S. Bhattacharya, associate professor of economics, “Bubble
Trouble: Housing Prices in California”; Jennifer L.
Deven-port, assistant professor of psychology, “Elderly
Eyewitnesses: The Effect of Witness Age on Juror Decision Making”;
Alan L. Emery, assistant professor of sociology,
“Insurgency and Democratization in South Africa: Movement
Mobilization of Ideological, Military and Political Power”;
Adrian R. Fleissig, associate professor of economics, “Economic
Impact of the Euro on California”; Natalie M. Fousekis,
assistant professor of history, “Fighting for Our Children:
Women's Activism, the Battle Over Child Care and the Politics of
Welfare, 1940-1971”; and Mortaza Jamshidian,
associate professor of mathematics, “Nonparametric Estimation
of the Probability Distribution of Cancer Onset Based on Cen-sored
Data.”
Also conducting research this summer are: Matthew
E. Kirby, assistant professor of geological sciences, “Holocene
History of Water-Cycle Dynamics as Recorded in Sediments From a
High Alpine Lake in Southern California”; Kari A.
Knutson-Miller, assistant professor of child and adolescent
studies, “The Impact of Early Field Experiences on the Achievement
of Standards Articulated for Teacher Candidates”; Pamela
A. Madsen, assistant professor of music, “The Sybil
Cycle: A Liturgical Drama for Soloists, Ensembles and Electronics”;
Shari G. McMahan, associate professor of kinesiology
and health promotion, “Strategies Utilized to Minimize Musculoskeletal
Discomfort Among University Personnel”; Mindy B. Mechanic,
assistant professor of psychology, “Intimate Partner Abuse:
Effects of Parenting”; Zena Pearlstone, assistant
professor of art, “Pueblo Artistic Routes: The Commodication
of Hopi Katsinas and Zuni Fetishes”; Karen L. Perell,
associate professor of kinesiology and health promotion, “Knee-Joint
Reaction Forces During Recumbent Bicycling in Subjects With Knee
Pain”; and Felipe A. Ramirez-Weber, assistant
professor of biological science, “In Vivo Spatial and Temporal
Distribution of Morphogen Receptors During Drosophila Embryonic.”
Other awardees are: Jonathan S. Taylor,
assistant professor of geography, “A Land-Use History of Northern
Okinawa, Japan”; Ying-Chiao Tsao, assistant
professor of speech communication, “The Partnership Between
Speech-Language Pathologists and People Who Stutter”; Charles
C. Tu, associate professor of finance, “How Do New
Sports Stadiums Affect Real Estate Values? The Case of FedEx Field”;
Joseph A. Weber, assistant professor of sociology,
“Asian-American Grandparents Raising Grandchildren: A Unique
Cultural Perspective”; Frederick W. Whipple,
assistant professor of biological science, “Mechanism of Polymerization
of E. coli RecA Protein”; and Shu-Chen J. Yen,
assistant professor of child and adolescent studies, “Temperment
and Behavior: Does Early Childhood Curriculum Moderate the Impact
of Temperment on Children's Behavior?”
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