Grant Recipients & Outcomes

The Provost Research Fellows Program encourages outstanding and ambitious research and creative activity at TU by awarding merit-based grants to faculty members.

Summer 2024 Fellows

Meet the most recent group of research fellows and learn more about their latest work.

Gashaw Abeza, Ph.D.

Associate Professor | Dept of Kinesiology

Gashaw Abeza

Positive Image Transfer from a Sponsor to a Sponsee: The Case of Popular Brands and Small Properties
Sport sponsorship is a strategic investment for brands aiming to achieve various objectives by connecting with a passionate and engaged audience. While much research has focused on financial and in-kind benefits for sponsees, there is limited exploration of how small sport properties benefit from the positive image transfer associated with well-known brands. Dr. Gashaw's research examines how sport sponsorship agreements can enhance the credibility, visibility, and overall reputation of smaller sport properties through such image associations. Understanding these dynamics could reveal additional value in sponsorships beyond direct financial gains for small sport organizations.

Comfort Tosin Adebayo, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor | Dept of Communication Studies

Comfort Tosin Adebayo

Digital Guardians: Using Technology to Combat Sexual Violence in Nigeria: A Fellowship Proposal
Dr. Adebayo's project focuses on sexual violence in Nigeria, aiming to examine the barriers impacting the disclosure of sexual violence among females, which remains significantly underreported due to structural and cultural factors. The study highlights the particularly high prevalence of sexual violence among young and adolescent girls, with most cases occurring in homes or schools. By addressing these barriers, her research aims to shed light on the muted experiences of Nigerian females and inform strategies for more effective support and intervention.

Brain-behavior Correlations in Auditory Processing
Aging causes degenerative changes in the auditory system that can impair speech perception, particularly in challenging listening environments, reducing communication ability and quality of life. Dr. Ananthakrishnan's research investigates how to improve auditory (re)habilitation programs for older adults using tools like Cortical Auditory Evoked Potentials (CAEPs). While CAEPs can provide valuable insights into brain activity, many studies use mismatched stimuli for neural and behavioral assessments, limiting the accuracy of brain-behavior correlations. This research addresses this gap by aligning both CAEPs and behavioral tests to similar, ecologically valid speech stimuli, enabling more accurate brain-behavior comparisons.

Amanda Burham, Ph.D.

Professor | Dept of Art + Design, Art History, Art Education

Amanda Burnham

Parvazha – A Graphic Memoir
Parvazha is a full-length graphic novel written by Dr. Burham in collaboration with author Adam Hossein Fuller. It follows the life of Adam, born on a Gulf Coast Air Force base to an Iranian father who boarded a flight back to Iran just before diplomatic relations between the U.S. and Iran were severed. Raised by a dismissive stepfather and grappling with racism and Islamophobia in the Deep South, Adam grows up constructing his identity around others' assumptions, but later discovers his latent talents and buried Iranian heritage.

Qijie (Vicky) Cai, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor | Dept of Learning Technologies, Design & School Library Media

Qijie (Vicky) Cai

Unlocking Student Creativity through an Immersive Robotics-based Storytelling Approach
The primary focus of Dr. Cai's research was to conduct a pilot study exploring how second and third-grade students express and develop creativity during a one-week summer camp at TU. At this camp, students engaged in robotics-infused storytelling activities. This study involved collaboration with colleagues to investigate the impact of the camp on participants' expressive language development, aiming to provide empirical evidence and develop training resources to support educators.

Gilbert (Zhe) Chen, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor | Dept of History

Gilbert (Zhe) Chen

Manly Monks: Sex, Family, Community in Qing China
Using an intersectionality approach, Dr. Chen's study investigates how Buddhist monks in Qing China negotiated various gender regimes to navigate their everyday lives, drawing on sources such as Buddhist literature, state legislations, and legal archives. By analyzing discursive constructions of clerical masculinity and monks' interactions with lay society, this book project aims to shed light on the lived experiences of lower-level clergy in late imperial China and challenge existing stereotypes of the debauched monk.

Kimberly Corum, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor & Fisher Endowed Chair | Dept of Mathematics

Kimberly Corum

Leveraging Social Justice-Centered Making to Support STEM Teaching and Learning
Dr. Corum's research explores how K-12 teachers can effectively use makerspace technology to support equitable STEM learning. Makerspaces provide access to costly tools and resources that can empower diverse students to engage in creative problem-solving and design thinking. By supporting teachers in leveraging makerspaces, this work aims to advance equity in STEM learning and address a critical gap in mathematics education research.

Chantal Francois, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor | Dept of Instructional Leadership & Professional Development

Chantal Francois

Black Women Teachers of Secondary Literacy: Identity, Beliefs, and Agency
Dr. Francois' research project addresses the understudied perspectives of Black women educators in secondary literacy and aims to identify the supports necessary to retain this underrepresented group in U.S. public schools. The plan is to analyze data and begin drafting manuscripts from this study, which explores how seven Black women educators develop their beliefs to teach literacy amidst ongoing racial reckonings and legislative efforts against diverse identities in K-12 schools.

Medicaid Work Requirements, Labor Market Effects and Welfare
Dr. Jung's project examines the potential impacts of implementing Medicaid work requirements across the U.S., focusing on the restrictive programs in Southern states. Advocates argue that work requirements encourage self-sufficiency, while opponents warn of harm to vulnerable populations. Using a large-scale simulation framework, this research models the effects of such policies on health expenditures, insurance coverage, labor supply, and welfare outcomes, offering policymakers critical insights into the implications of these reforms. 

Sarah Oliver, Ph.D.

Associate Professor | Dept of Political Science

Sarah Oliver

From Marginalization to Mobilization: The Role of Discrimination and Resources in Explaining the Political Participation of Transgender Americans
Dr. Oliver's research addresses the significant gap in political science literature concerning transgender political participation and partisanship, which has been largely overlooked compared to research on health and well-being within the trans community. By examining the political experiences of transgender individuals and evaluating the impact of marginalization and resources on their political engagement, this study aims to fill this gap. The findings will contribute to increasing awareness and inclusion of transgender people in policies that affect them. 

Using Host Model Organisms to Characterize a Bacterial Virulence Protein
Antimicrobial resistance is projected to cause 10 million annual deaths worldwide by 2030. To combat this, alternative strategies, including novel therapeutics targeting specific microbial virulence mechanisms, are crucial. Dr. Snyder's research investigates bacterial Toll/interleukin-1 receptor (TIR) proteins, which help pathogens evade immune responses through enzymatic activity that disrupts cellular metabolism. The aim is to determine if this activity enhances immune evasion, with findings expected to guide future therapeutic development.

Summer 2023 Fellows

What Goes Right and Wrong at School: Perspectives of Young Autistic Adults, Their Parents, and Educators
For years, less than 4%* of U.S. autism research funding has been focused on autism in adulthood. Dr. Anderson has dedicated herself to this under-researched area, conducting in-depth interviews with young adults on the autism spectrum and their parents. The emphasis for her work has been on what occurs after high school in terms of adult services, employment, and postsecondary education. The goal is to reveal challenges that need to be addressed in order to improve outcomes for autistic individuals across the lifespan.

Work on Novel Methods of Urban Reforestation
Dr. Beauchamp is a plant community ecologist with research interests that include urban forest succession, the effects of invasive plant species on community diversity, the effects of deer browse on ecosystem processes, and the ecology of riparian plant communities. This work looks at the success of different planting methods for urban reforestation projects used to capture nutrients and reduce pollution discharges into the Chesapeake Bay.

Caringscapes of End-of-Life Care in Northern Ghana
Dr. Hanrahan is a feminist geographer interested in how everyday spaces are constructed as people engage in caring relationships that aim to support the needs of others experiencing dependencies and vulnerabilities, as well as how caring relations can be fraught and harmful. Her current a project considers the ways in which end of life care is woven together from formal health services and extensive informal care strategies. In this context, end of life care is aimed at addressing physical and emotional needs within intergenerational relationships that are traced along material and psychical connections across the past, present, and future.

Small Proteins in Bacteria
Little is known about the abundance of small proteins in any organism. These proteins are difficult to isolate and identify using standard biochemical techniques. Since 2012, we have offered a Course-based Research Experience (CURE) Molecular Biology Laboratory class where students test for protein expression in the bacterium Escherichia coli, potentially discovering new small proteins. Once identified, students then characterize small protein expression and function in the lab as independent researchers. Dr. Hemm's current work in the lab focuses on characterizing the prevalence of this type of small protein and investigating their role in E. coli cell biology.

Investor Sentiment and Holiday Effect on the Cryptocurrency Market
Dr. Huang's research explores underlying mechanisms of the cryptocurrency holiday effect, including the influence of epidemic transmission risk and heterogeneity characteristics. Overall, this work advances our understanding of the holiday effect phenomenon, providing valuable insights for investors, financial researchers, and institutions in the dynamic cryptocurrency market.

Waves of Pipe Organ Jazz Across the Ocean
Dr. Luchese has been researching the use of pipe organs in jazz and rock musical styles. Being the first of its kind, her book, Piping Hot: Blasting the Pipe Organ Outside the Classical Music Canon, will provide the historical, social and musical contexts enveloping these examples, as well as serve as a reference that lists every recording of the pipe organ in rock or jazz to date, thereby filling a void in the scholarship of pipe organ practices as well as contributing to rock/jazz scholarship.

Preparing Effective Writing Teachers
Dr. McQuitty’s research focuses on preparing teachers to implement high-quality writing instruction in K-12 schools. This project, done in close collaboration Dr. Pamela Hickey, seeks to determine how teachers learn to teach writing and how teacher education programs can best support their learning. Through this work, they were able to determine how teacher education programs can best support writing teachers and improve their writing instruction in their future classrooms.

Work on Organizational Behavior with a Focus on Worker Owned Cooperatives in Baltimore
Dr. Mello’s present research is focused on the specific organizational context of worker cooperatives. Worker cooperatives are defined as businesses that are cooperatively owned and democratically controlled by their worker-owners. This project takes a mixed-method approach with surveys of individual differences in addition to in-depth interviews with worker-owners. The long-term goals are to better understand the unique organizational dynamics of worker coops for the purpose of better supporting existing and new coops in the Baltimore regional area.

Using Immersive Virtual Reality to Enhance Intercultural Sensitivity: An Empirical Study
Dr. Moallem's study aims to develop and pilot test implementing an immersive VR intervention to enhance teacher education students' cultural sensitivity. It further assesses the efficacy of I-VR as a medium to develop empathy, emotion, motivation, and desire to understand, appreciate and accept differences among cultures.

Risk Management in Election Security
Dr. Scala co-directs the Empowering Secure Elections research lab at Towson University, which is committed to non-partisan academic research that increases the security of U.S. elections and ensures the integrity of votes from the moment they are cast to the moment they are counted. This project examines potential threats to in-person voting, especially precinct count optical scan machines, which are used in Maryland and will be used by almost 70% of the country in 2024.

Work on British Satire in the Age of the Revolution
Visual metaphors, linking political figures and events to food and commodities, formed the basis for a distinct genre of eighteenth and early nineteenth-century satirical prints made by British artists sympathetic to the plight of the American colonists surrounding the years of the Revolution. This project combines Dr. Siegel’s academic expertise in both art and culinary histories. She posits that the culinary iconography found within these prints is more than merely humor-driven with popular appeal.

Measuring Listening Effort in Complex Environments Using Eye Tracking
Dr. Srinivasan is the director of the Spatial Hearing and Auditory PErception (SHAPE) lab. The ultimate goal is to develop statistical models that reveal how the variability on a given behavioral test is related to multiple predictors of speech perception and to better understand the difficulties in perceiving speech in complex listening environments by individuals with varying hearing abilities.