Biology PhD student Nicolas Hazzi Campo authored the article "Biogeographic regions and events of isolation and diversification of the endemic biota of the tropical Andes" in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
Leon Grayfer received a five-year, $750,000 CAREER award from the National Science Foundation for his studies on amphibian immune responses to ranaviruses that contribute to the worldwide decline in the amphibian population.
Valentina Harizanov was selected by the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute to lead a scientific program on “Decidability, definability and computability in number theory” in fall 2020.
Kerric Harvey presented at the Thirteenth International Conference on Interdisciplinary Social Sciences in Granada, Spain.
Oleg Kargaltsev received a $41,496 grant from the Smithsonian Institution for his pulsar wind nebulae project titled “The Answer is Blowing in the Wind: Jet Sweepback in Three PWNe.”
Dean Kessmann received a "Designed to Recycle" grant from the D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities to create artwork for District recycling trucks.
Ellen Kurtzman, PhD ’16, was awarded a Robert Wood Johnson Fellowship through the National Academy of Medicine.
Justin Linford received a $45,000 grant from the Smithsonian Institution to investigate the unusual wavelengths of the nova called “V1535 Sco.”
Peter Loge authored the book Soccer Thinking for Management Success: Lessons for Organizations from the World’s Game (Changemakers Books, 2018).
Stephen Lubkemann was awarded a $30,993 grant from the National Park Services for a project on “Repurposing Science and History for our Citizens.”
Svetlana Roudenko received a $319,998 grant to use mathematical equations to advance the science of wave phenomena and examine the properties of light.
Sanjit Sethi was quoted in the Weekly Standard article “A Talent for Exhibition, Anyway” on the Corcoran exhibition “Spiked: The Unpublished Political Cartoons of Rob Rogers.”
Cheryl W. Thompson co-presented "30 Investigative Ideas in 90 Minutes" at the National Association of Black Journalists Annual Convention.
Akos Vertes was awarded a $1.3 million grant from the Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity for the Proteos Program, a multi-year project to develop a new human identification method based on the analysis of proteins.etabolomics.