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  • Telecomms Pioneer Recognized With Prestigious Schawlow Award

    Video conferencing has kept the remote workplace humming during this year’s pandemic, and it was made possible through the work of researchers like Peter Delfyett, Ph.D., the 2021 winner of the prestigious Arthur L. Schawlow Prize in Laser Sciences. Specifically, Delfyett, a Pegasus Professor of optics and photonics, studies the application of semiconductor lasers to […]

    Posted: October 7th, 2020
    Filed under: Faculty News, News, Notables, Physics, Research, Top News, UCF News
  • Charter Faculty Member Provides Perspective On UCF Overcoming Historical Challenges

    We hear “unprecedented times” often as the coronavirus pandemic unfolds through 2020 and into the next year. But someone with the long lens of history like Professor Emeritus Robert Bledsoe, Ph.D., a charter faculty member of UCF, can attest this is far from the first challenge the university has faced. “This university has weathered a […]

    Posted: October 7th, 2020
    Filed under: COS News, Faculty News, News, Notables, School of Politics, Security, and International Affairs, Top News
  • TV Show ‘The Office’ Forms Basis for NSCM Professional Communication Class

    Successful professional communication is as much about what not to say as it is the right way to negotiate a raise or write a thorny email, reasons Communication Assistant Professor Michael Strawser, Ph.D. And what better teacher of gaffes and miscues than the “world’s greatest boss” Michael Scott of NBC’s hit series “The Office.” “This […]

    Posted: October 6th, 2020
    Filed under: COS News, News, Nicholson School of Communication and Media, Top News
  • UCF Announces 2020 Alumni Award Winners

    UCF Alumni announced its slate of its Shining Knights award winners for 2020 —  seven individuals recognized for their commitment to the university in the categories of Distinguished Alumni, Honorary Alumni, Young Alumni and Distinguished Student. They will be honored in a virtual ceremony on the evening Sunday, Oct. 18 to kick off UCF Homecoming […]

    Posted: October 2nd, 2020
    Filed under: 30 Under 30 - School of Politics, Security, and International Affairs, Alumni News - School of Politics, Security, and International Affairs, COS News, School of Politics, Security, and International Affairs, Top News, UCF Today
  • Pandemic Inspires Creative New Partnerships to Complete Research

    When the COVID-19 pandemic restricted travel at UCF, Assistant Professor Michelle Gaither, Ph.D., got creative. Gaither planned to conduct field research in various parts of the country this past summer to complete some of her research, but COVID derailed those plans. So, she and her team of students came up with another idea that will […]

    Posted: September 29th, 2020
    Filed under: Biology, COS News, Faculty News, News, Notables, Research, Top News, UCF Coastal
  • Asteroid Bennu Continues to Surprise Scientists

    If UCF physics Professor Humberto Campins was a betting man, he should run out and play the lottery. The planetary scientist, who is an international expert on asteroids, predicted a finding from NASA’s OSIRIS-REx mission to asteroid Bennu — remnants of another asteroid scattered across its surface. The spacecraft took images and made observations of […]

    Posted: September 25th, 2020
    Filed under: News, Physics, Planetary Sciences, Top News, UCF Today
  • Alumnus’ Advocacy Secures Garbage Truck To Improve Dominican Republic Sanitation

    By WHITNEY CHISHOLM ’17 The Dominican Republic holds a special place in my heart, going all the way back to high school when I was introduced to the future mayor of Santo Domingo. I stayed in close contact with the island for years and eventually landed a position as the city’s U.S. liaison. It was […]

    Posted: September 24th, 2020
    Filed under: Alumni - School of Politics, Security, and International Affairs, Alumni News, Alumni News - School of Politics, Security, and International Affairs, COS News, News, Notables, School of Politics, Security, and International Affairs, Top News
  • Animals’ Magnetic ‘Sixth’ Sense May Come from Bacteria, New Paper Suggests

    A University of Central Florida researcher is co-author of a new paper that may help answer why some animals have a magnetic “sixth” sense, such as sea turtles’ ability to return to the beach where they were born. The question is one that has been unresolved despite 50 years of research. “The search for a […]

    Posted: September 23rd, 2020
    Filed under: Biology, Faculty News, News, Research, Top News, UCF Today
  • New Study: Face-Covering Use Up, More People Are Taking COVID-19 Threats Seriously

    A new National Science Foundation-funded survey of six states has found that during the past two months, more people are wearing masks, vaccine uncertainty is on the rise, and many people are overestimating their risk of becoming seriously ill and dying from COVID-19. The results are in a new report published this month by the […]

    Posted: September 23rd, 2020
    Filed under: COS News, News, Nicholson School of Communication and Media, Research, Top News, UCF Today
  • UCF Researcher to Build a System that Identifies Habitable Planets Based on the Color They Emit

    Only a handful of the roughly 4,000 identified planets outside our solar system can potentially support human life — what experts call “habitable exoplanets” — but astronomers are certain there are many more. The best candidates were found when they crossed in front of the star they orbit. A silhouette is hard to analyze for […]

    Posted: September 23rd, 2020
    Filed under: COS News, News, Physics, Planetary Sciences, Top News, UCF Today
  • UN Communications Coordination Committee Taps Psychology Faculty For Board Position

    Associate Lecturer Chrysalis Wright, Ph.D., serves as the Honors in the Major program coordinator for the Department of Psychology. She was recently elected to the board of directors at the Communications Coordination Committee for the United Nations. In an interview with the College of Sciences, Wright shared the latest developments in her research into fake […]

    Posted: September 21st, 2020
    Filed under: COS News, Faculty News, Psychology, Top News
  • Celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month: Food

    Kicking off this year’s Hispanic Heritage Month celebration is Sociology Professor Fernando Rivera, Ph.D. director of the Puerto Rico Research Hub. Join Rivera as he shows us how to make a staple of Puerto Rican cuisine: bacalaitos. Bacalaitos, also known as fried codfish fritters, are flavorful and easy to make! Here’s how it’s done.   Bacalaitos […]

    Posted: September 18th, 2020
    Filed under: COS News, Puerto Rico Research Hub, Sociology Department
  • Arboretum Donation Inspired By Work of Granddaughter

    Kelsie Johnson’s thumb was decidedly not green growing up. So it was all the more surprising to her grandparents when Johnson ‘16 announced she was pursuing horticulture and environmental conservation as a career. “Kelsie has always been outgoing, but never did we picture her becoming involved in the Arboretum program or any of the outdoor […]

    Posted: September 11th, 2020
    Filed under: Arboretum, COS News, News, Top News
  • Questioning Chemistry Benchmark Sets Stage for New Protocols

    A little due diligence went a long way for a team of UCF chemists studying a fundamental catalytic reaction used by hundreds of research groups around the world. Assistant Professor Titel Jurca, Ph.D., and graduate student, Lorianne Shultz, in collaboration with Assistant Professors Melanie Beazley (UCF Chemistry) and Xiaofeng Feng (UCF Physics) published the initial […]

    Posted: September 10th, 2020
    Filed under: Chemistry, COS News, Faculty News, Graduate Student News, News, Top News
  • UCF Researcher Awarded NASA Grant to Study Little Understood trans-Neptunian Objects

    Florida Space Institute Planetary Scientist Estela Fernández-Valenzuela has been awarded a $315,700 NASA grant to use modern day technology to analyze one of the oldest and least understood objects of our solar system. The first trans-Neptunian Object (TNO) — objects that orbit the Sun beyond Neptune — was discovered more than 25 years ago. Some […]

    Posted: September 10th, 2020
    Filed under: News, Physics, Top News, UCF News, UCF Today
  • UCF Researchers Are Developing Models to Predict Storm Surges

    Storm surges sometimes can increase coastal sea levels 10 feet or more, jeopardizing communities and businesses along the water, but new research from the University of Central Florida shows there may be a way to predict periods when it’s more likely that such events occur. In a study published recently in the Journal of Geophysical […]

    Posted: September 8th, 2020
    Filed under: News, Research, Top News, UCF Coastal
  • Awards Presented to Artificial Intelligence, Big Data Projects for COVID-19 Research

    Five research teams using Artificial Intelligence and Big Data have been awarded a total of $185,000 to conduct COVID-19-related research. Establishing the awards was the first act of UCF’s new Artificial Intelligence & Big Data Initiative announced this summer. The intent of the program is to seed the development of research projects that use these […]

    Posted: August 31st, 2020
    Filed under: COS News, Faculty News, News, Notables, Research, Statistics & Data Science, Top News, UCF News, UCF Today
  • UCF Grad Impresses Magicians Penn & Teller

    Of all the majors at UCF that a mentalist could choose, psychology seems like the best fit. Keith Kong ’17 certainly thought so. Kong recently celebrated one of his biggest achievements to date as a mentalist — or a “mind-reading” magician — with an appearance on the CW’s show “Fool Us,” which features legendary magician […]

    Posted: August 31st, 2020
    Filed under: Alumni News, COS News, News, Psychology, Top News, UCF Today
  • New Equipment Expands Testing Capacity of REACT Cluster

    By WILLIAM KADEN, PH.D. An interdisciplinary team of faculty led by Physics Assistant Professor William Kaden, Ph.D. has received funding to bring a new piece of equipment to UCF’s Materials Characterization Facility (MCF). The state-of-the-art Near-Ambient Pressure Xray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (NAP-XPS) apparatus – the only of its kind in the southeast U.S. – is made […]

    Posted: August 31st, 2020
    Filed under: COS News, Faculty News, News, Physics
  • UCF Researchers Develop AI to Detect Fentanyl and Derivatives Remotely

    To help keep first responders safe, University of Central Florida researchers have developed an artificial intelligence method that not only rapidly and remotely detects the powerful drug fentanyl, but also teaches itself to detect any previously unknown derivatives made in clandestine batches. The method, published recently in the journal Scientific Reports, uses infrared light spectroscopy […]

    Posted: August 27th, 2020
    Filed under: COS News, News, Notables, Statistics & Data Science, Top News, UCF News, UCF Today
  • UCF Offers Free Nature-themed VR and AR Applications to Help Students and Those Isolated Because of COVID-19

    UCF is offering a free virtual reality environment and augmented reality app to help teachers supplement science lessons and provide some stress relief for those isolated because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Maria Harrington, an information scientist and artist, created the applications as a way to advance virtual reality technology, while engaging the public in informal […]

    Posted: August 27th, 2020
    Filed under: Arboretum, COS News, News, Top News, UCF News, UCF Today
  • Semi-Metal Research Earns Physics Assistant Professor First NSF Career Grant

    Physics Assistant Professor Yasuyuki Nakajima, Ph.D, has received his first National Science Foundation CAREER grant for research on semi-metal materials with characteristics of nematic superconductivity. “We are exploring materials that could potentially revolutionize information technology,” said Nakajima. “I formed the hypothesis that an unusual superconducting state called nematic superconductivity could be a key research ingredient […]

    Posted: August 26th, 2020
    Filed under: COS News, Faculty News, News, Physics, Research, Top News
  • Third Scholarship Recipient Chosen By National Save the Sea Turtle Foundation

    A new scholarship for a Biology student will support her final undergraduate year studying and promoting sea turtle conservation. Christine Sarkis is the third 2020 recipient of the $10,000 scholarship from the National Save the Sea Turtle Foundation. She’s joined by two other students working in tandem with the UCF Marine Turtle Research Group, led […]

    Posted: August 26th, 2020
    Filed under: Biology, COS News, News, Research, Top News, Undergraduate Student News
  • New Scholarship Honors Legacy of Faculty Pioneer John T. Washington

    A notable figure from UCF’s past is the inspiration behind a new scholarship created to help students build a brighter future. The name John T. Washington is probably familiar to campus visitors walking through the breezeway named in his honor, but his connection to UCF less so. Washington, Ph.D., was one of the first African […]

    Posted: August 21st, 2020
    Filed under: Alumni News, COS News, News, Notables, School of Politics, Security, and International Affairs, Sociology Department, Top News, UCF News
  • New Grant Program for Grad Students Launched to Fund Research Fighting Social Injustice

    Graduate students interested in developing social justice research projects have a new funding source through Citizen Science GIS in the Department of Sociology. The new initiative splits proposals into two areas: Amplify Knight Voices and Broaden Community Connections. Amplify Knight Voices funds projects that address “educational or environmental inequality; oppression; anti-racist practices and systems; and/or […]

    Posted: August 18th, 2020
    Filed under: COS News, Graduate Student News, News, Research, Sociology Department, Top News
  • Broken Cable Damages Arecibo Observatory

    One of the auxiliary cables that helps support a metal platform in place above the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico, broke on Monday (Aug. 10) causing a 100-foot-long gash on the telescope’s reflector dish. Operations at the UCF-managed observatory are stopped until repairs can be made. The break occurred about 2:45 a.m. When the three-inch […]

    Posted: August 17th, 2020
    Filed under: News, Physics, Planetary Sciences, Research, Top News, UCF News, UCF Today
  • Alumna Blends Medicine and PoliSci To Create World-Changing Impact

    At the intersection of political science and medicine sits the passion of Kezia Domond ’20, a recent UCF political science graduate with a calling to help those in underrepresented and underprivileged communities throughout the world. This upcoming fall, Domond takes a seat in Boston University’s Masters of Public Health program, where her hope is to […]

    Posted: August 17th, 2020
    Filed under: Alumni - School of Politics, Security, and International Affairs, Alumni News, Alumni News - School of Politics, Security, and International Affairs, COS News, News, School of Politics, Security, and International Affairs, Top News
  • Focus On Active Learning Improves Drop Rate for Calculus Classes

    By ALLY FRIEDMAN A shift from rote memorization to active learning is producing measurable, positive results for students taking Calculus I. The Fall 2019 drop/add rate fell from UCF’s historical 54% to 18-22% across all calculus courses after Professor Eduardo Teixeira, Ph.D., deployed a technique called meaningful learning theory.  The statistical majority grade also rose […]

    Posted: August 14th, 2020
    Filed under: COS News, Faculty News, Mathematics, News, Top News
  • National Program Opens Door for More Underrepresented Students in Physics

    When Taylor Douglas fell in love with physics and began to pursue it in college, she started to feel like an outsider. Most of her classmates were men and white. After earning her bachelor’s degree at Rowan University in New Jersey, she applied to several institutions to pursue a master’s degree, something only 6 percent […]

    Posted: August 11th, 2020
    Filed under: COS News, Graduate Student News, News, Physics, Research, Top News, UCF Today
  • Arecibo Observatory Returns from Tropical Storm Isaias Lockdown to Track Asteroid for NASA

    The Earth has one less asteroid to worry about thanks to the research of an international team of scientists at the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico. Asteroid 2020 NK1 was spotted in early July by the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) survey team at the University of Hawaii. Little was known about the asteroid, […]

    Posted: August 11th, 2020
    Filed under: COS News, News, Physics, Research, Top News, UCF Today
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