Interdisciplinary Research

The ČâČâ´«Ă˝ Office of Research launched four Research Communities, which represent an interdisciplinary infrastructure that has the resources to provide meaningful research experiences and workforce preparedness to our students and invite corporate and community partners to work with us toward this goal. These Research Communities below were identified following an internal examination of the university's research strengths.

Research Champions

The Office of Research is proud to announce the inaugural Faculty Research Champions!

These faculty researchers will develop and lead interdisciplinary research cluster teams, assess funding opportunities, and support grant applications. Champions are expected to build and support successful research teams for each track, including other faculty researchers and students. Research success is measured by subject-specific research outcomes, typically external grant support, publications, exhibits or performances.

  • Dr. Mario Bretfeld

    Dr. Mario Bretfeld

    Assistant Professor of Biology

    Born and raised in Wilhelmshaven, Germany, Dr. Mario Brefeld studied Landscape Ecology at the Carl-von-Ossietzky University of Oldenburg. During an exchange year in Colorado, he studied aspen (Populus tremuloides) regeneration in response to different disturbances, including fire and conifer mortality due to mountain pine beetles. After graduating in 2010, he returned to Colorado to pursue a Ph.D. at the University of Northern Colorado in the Franklin lab. His dissertation research included long-term aspen community changes in and around Rocky Mountain National Park, responses to the mountain pine beetle outbreak, and resource sharing through the connected root system of aspen (i.e. clonal integration). He received his Ph.D. in Biological Education in 2014.

    After graduation, Dr. Bretfeld moved to Panama as part of a post-doctoral fellowship with the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI) and the University of Wyoming. In Panama, he worked primarily in the Agua Salud project and measured plant water use (i.e. transpiration) in regrowing tropical forests of different ages, as well as in a cattle-pasture and a coffee plantation. From April 2017 to July 2019, he lived and worked in Laramie as a post-doctoral fellow in the Ewers lab at the University of Wyoming. Since August 2019, he has served as assistant professor of biology in the Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology at ČâČâ´«Ă˝.

    Dr. Erin Adams

    Dr. Erin Adams

    Associate Professor of Social Science Education

    Dr. Erin Adams teaches courses in Elementary Social Studies Methods and Classroom Community Building. She works with Ed.D. students in Teacher Leadership and Secondary and Middle Grades Education (history and social studies education). 

    Her research is primarily concerned with economic education in general, but specifically in elementary and early childhood. More broadly, she is interested in resource use and extraction, posthumanisms, and social studies and civic education. Her inquiries use post-qualitative, theory-driven research methodologies and analyses. 

    mine hashas-degertekin

    Dr. Mine Hashas-Degertekin

    Associate Professor of Architecture

    Dr. Hashas-Degertekin has been teaching and conducting research on urban environments with a focus on human experience, place character and equity for humane, sustainable and healthy places for diverse groups of age, race and income. She conducted research individually and at various research centers at NC State, GA Tech and KSU linking physical and emotional health, culture and behavior to built-environments, economic development and equity. 
     
    She has been active on various action groups and task force groups of United Nation’s Regional Centers of Expertise (RCE) Greater Atlanta and has been co-leading its  â€śAdvancing Justice for All” Action Group since August 2021. She also serves on NAACP’s “Centering Equity in the Sustainable Building Program Initiative Committee.” She is the founder and chair of Equitable, Ecological and Creative place Making Initiative, as well as Creative Place Making Biannual Symposium. As a member of Transformation Alliance Atlanta, she has conducted research and taught urban design studios in collaboration with TFA partners focusing on sustainability with all three pillars, as well as closed loop and generative economies utilizing local history and cultural elements of low-income communities. 

  • Dr. Michael Carroll

    Dr. Michael Carroll

    Associate Professor of Architecture

    Michael Carroll is a tenured associate professor at ČâČâ´«Ă˝. Prior to this appointment he was an Assistant Professor at Syracuse University. He is a registered Canadian architect. He is a founding partner of atelier BUILD, a design/build firm based in Montreal. Atelier BUILD was awarded the Canadian Professional Prix de Rome of Architecture in 2004. 
     
    Michael Carroll is the founder and director of MAT_LAB at ČâČâ´«Ă˝, a materials library, lab and exhibition space. His research focuses on materiality in contemporary architecture with a focus of  material expressions of under-represented communities.

    As Principle Investigator (PI) he is the architectural designer of the KSU Mini-Pavilion at the Cobb County Safety Pavilion. Together with Dr. Billy Kihei (Co-PI 1) they lead the charge to constuct the pavilion and use it as a site for off-campus research as well as a 'classroom' to instruct elementary students on the interconnection between safety and sustainability.

    Dr. Victoria LaGrange

    Dr. Victoria Lagrange

    Assistant Professor of English

    Dr. Victoria Lagrange is an Assistant Professor of Game Narrative in the Department of English at ČâČâ´«Ă˝.

    Her scholarly interests revolve around the examination of novel storytelling formats and their impact on audience reception and participatory culture. Dr. Lagrange’s scholarship includes multiple published articles, including analyses of the transmedia expansions of Bill Willingham’s Fables, the intricate relationship between violence, empathy, and decision-making in interactive fiction, and the study of user reception of video games. Her recent publications include work in Behavioral and Brain Sciences and PloS ONE.

    Additionally, she serves as the director of the Game Narrative Lab at ČâČâ´«Ă˝, where her team’s focus is on the creation and evaluation of prosocial video games. Their latest game, Corporation, Inc., recently achieved recognition by winning an international critical thinking games competition.

    Andrea Knowlton

    Andrea Knowlton

    Associate Professor of Dance

    Andrea Knowlton is an Associate Professor of Dance at ČâČâ´«Ă˝, where she teaches Dance Technique, Dance Filmmaking, Improvisation, Dance Pedagogy, and mentors undegraduate research. She is a choreographer, filmmaker and educator. She is the recipient of the College of the Arts' Early Career Faculty Award (2023). She has presented her artistic work in New York City, Los Angeles and Atlanta, GA.  She creates and screens films nationally and internationally, at top tier festivals including Dance Camera West, Screen Dance International, and Frame Rush @ The Place London.

    As an educator, she has taught at California Institute of the Arts, California State University Long Beach, and Pasadena City College. She regularly presents research on her areas of focus, including Dance & Artificial Intelligence, and Dance Filmmaking. She is the Principal Investigator and recipient of a National Science Foundation Award which supports collaborative research exploring relationships between improvisational dance and artificial intelligence towards the creation of an interactive dance avatar.

    She has published in several Human Computer Interaction journals as a dance specialist. She holds a BFA in Dance/Choreography from Marymount Manhattan College in NYC and an MFA in Choreography/Integrated Media from California Institute of the Arts.

  • Dr. Sylvia Bhattacharya

    Dr. Sylvia Bhattacharya

    Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering Technology

    Dr. Sylvia Bhattacharya is an Assistant Professor in the department of Electrical Engineering Technology at ČâČâ´«Ă˝ (KSU), USA and Faculty Research Champion in. Office of Research, KSU. She is also an ex-ČâČâ´«Ă˝ing Research Faculty at Google, Mountain View. She graduated with a PhD degree in electrical engineering from Florida State University in 2019. Her research expertise is in Autonomous and Intelligent Transportation System, Neural Signal Processing, Human Computer Interface, and Artificial Intelligence. She has been awarded funding by U.S Army Research Laboratory to conduct research on “Multimodal Inference of Human State to Track Cognitive Processes in Risky Environments” and “AI Blind Spots.” She is also the 2020 and 2021 Google Explore CSR funding recipient for “An Initiative to support Under-represented and Minority groups toward Graduate Computing Research and Studies.” Dr. Bhattacharya is the director of in ČâČâ´«Ă˝ and has been mentoring PhDs, masters, and a team of undergraduate students.

    Dr. Jason Harron

    Dr. Jason Harron

    Assistant Professor of Instructional Technology

    Dr. Jason Harron is an Assistant Professor of Instructional Technology in the Bagwell College of Education. He specialized in emerging technology research at the intersection of computation, design, technology and the arts in K-12 and higher education. His current research focuses how to support student and teacher agency through the creation of digitally fabricated mathematical manipulatives, and how to support the development of spatial reasoning and design skills using collaborative models and simulations mediated by extended reality (e.g., augmented, mixed, and virtual reality) technologies.

    Dr. Mahmut Karakaya

    Dr. Mahmut Karakaya

    Assistant Professor of Computer Science

    Dr. Mahmut Karakaya is an Assistant Professor of Computer Science in the College of Computing and Software Engineering. He received his BS degree in 2005, MS degree in 2007, and PhD degree in computer engineering from the University of Tennessee in 2011. He is the author of more than 40 articles and holds two patents. His research interests include machine learning, security, biometrics, and medical data analytics. He has managed four externally funded research projects as PI with a total budget of $669,000 including the recent NSF-SaTC award. He is a member of IEEE and SPIE.

     

  • Dr. Weiwei Chen

    Dr. Weiwei Chen

    Assistant Professor of Economics

    Dr. Weiwei Chen is an Assistant Professor of Economics in the Coles College of Business. She specializes in empirical analyses in health economics and health services research. Her work has covered the effect of health insurance, changes in health care utilization and expenditures, child health, and issues of vaccine uptake. Her recent research focuses on substance use, hospital care outcomes, and health care in correctional facilities.​
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    Dr. Chen has served as principal investigator, co-investigator, and consultant on research projects funded by local and federal government, international organizations, and private entities. 

    Dr. Brian Kliszczewicz

    Professor of Exercise Science

    Dr. Brian Kliszczewicz is a Professor of Exercise Science in the Wellstar College of Health and Human Services where his research line is cardiovascular and metabolic stress with a sub-emphasis on body composition variables as they relate to acute and long-term exercise.

    The evaluation of cardiovascular stress (via Heart Rate Variability) and metabolic stress (via Glucose, Insulin, Catecholamines...) following acute bouts of exercise provides important insight to exercise appropriateness and effectiveness. The evaluation of these markers over long-term exercise interventions allows for the assessment of exercise effectiveness and adaptation. The evaluation of body composition beyond simple measure of body fat provides much-needed insight into variables that lead to metabolic and cardiovascular responses to acute and chronic exercise. Initial assessments performed in our lab evaluated high-intensity exercise in relatively healthy and active individuals. 

    Dr. Brian Kliszczewicz
    Dr. Maria Valero

    Dr. Maria Valero

    Assistant Professor of Information Technology

    Dr. Maria Valero is an Assistant Professor of Information Technology in the College of Computing and Software Engineering at ČâČâ´«Ă˝, where she also serves as the Director of the pioneering IoT as a Service (IoTaS) Research Group. She earned a Ph.D. in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the University of Georgia and a master's degree in Computer Science from the University of Los Andes in Venezuela.​
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    Dr. Valero has carved a niche for herself in cutting-edge research. Her diverse research interests converge around  IoT and AI, catalyzing transformative innovations in smart healthcare, distributed computing, signal processing, wireless sensor networks, and cyber-physical systems. Dr. Valero has served as PI of multiple research grants in NSF, NIH, and NSA. She is currently the PI of an NIA-funded project related to developing a non-invasive AI-powered blood glucose monitoring system, for which she secured a provisional patent and national and international recognition.