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Describe your lab

Dr. Sarah Codd College of Engineering. Describe your lab. Electronics/Mechanics. MRI Spectrometers. People. Chemistry/Chemicals. Describe the kinds of data you collect. Images inside objects. How Fluids Move. Transport Phenomena in Complex Fluids.

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Describe your lab

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  1. Dr. Sarah Codd College of Engineering Describe your lab Electronics/Mechanics MRI Spectrometers People Chemistry/Chemicals

  2. Describe the kinds of data you collect Images inside objects How Fluids Move Transport Phenomena in Complex Fluids

  3. Describe the kinds of analysis you perform Comparisons to Simulations Comparisons to Theory

  4. What are some of the broader impacts of your research? Outreach Human resources • Biomedical • Environmental • Energy Applications • Physics of Fluids • New Materials Publications/Presentations

  5. Dr. Cathy Cripps Plant Sciences & Plant Pathology Dept Describe your lab Arctic-alpine BiologistField biologist Mycologist systematics ecology application Greenhouse-plant growth center Field & forests Fungal herbarium Plant Biosciences Facility Lab

  6. Describe the kinds of data you collect Collecting fungi - diversity Ecological data Experimental data Mushroom data Greenhouse data Tissue cultures spores

  7. Describe the kinds of analysis you perform Physiological parameters Classical taxonomy DNA analysis treatments Phylogenetic analysis survival, growth Comparative identification Colonization rates ANOVA Regression analysis Principal component analysis Dried herbarium specimens Evolutionary history

  8. What are some of the broader impacts of your research? People! ecological The discipline colleagues students mushroomers citizens Forays edible mushrooms poison cases Diversity – discovering life on earth Climate Change Hitting Entire Arctic and alpine Ecosystems-monitoring needed

  9. Dr. Lisa Davis Dept. of Mathematical Sciences Describe your lab Mathematics is "the queen of sciences.“ - Gauss Mathematics is both a language and a tool that scientists use to better understand and “know” our world. - Lisa Davis

  10. Describe the kinds of data you collect Spherical Cows and Cylindrical Crickets (Courtesy of Tomas Gedeon)

  11. Describe the kinds of analysis you perform What works well? – Software, Numerical Approximation Techniques DGFEM: Central Flux DGFEM: Upwinding Flux Finally, can we relate this information back to our original problem? Do the results of the numerical experiments make sense? Do they agree with what we believe should happen mathematically and/or physically?

  12. What are some of the broader impacts of your research? “As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain; and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality” - Einstein Mathematics is a fundamental tool that scientists use to understand as well as to communicate the reality of our world. It provides a building block for analysis, design and optimization of many physical systems. – Lisa Davis Big scientific contributions are made by those who speak many languages – Math, Engineering, Physics, Biology, Chemistry, Economics, Ecology, etc.

  13. Kristin Ruppel Native American Studies, College of Letters & Science Describe your lab

  14. Kristin Ruppel Native American Studies, College of Letters & Science Describe the kinds of data you collect Stories Histories http://thomas.loc.gov/

  15. Describe the kinds of analysis you perform [W]hy do many American Indians insist on appropriating—and maintaining—a “trust relationship” with the United States? Situated historically and pragmatically, this turns out to be a question of astonishing gravity.13 13“Pragmatically” is meant here in the dialectical sense of interpreting the relationship, and the maintenance of it, in light of its bearing on conduct, whether that conduct be in the day-to-day praxis of land ownership, the avenues of resistance, or the development of new policies. New policies, of course, affect and effect new perceptions and enactments of the trust relationship, which, in turn, may serve to generate new policy, and so on and so forth (Ruppel 2008: 40, 182).

  16. What are some of the broader impacts of your research? Education & Awareness AIPRA Factsheets with Dr. Marsha Goetting, MSU Extension Economics Outreach & Activism Unearthing Indian Land: Living with the Legacies of Allotment (U. Arizona Press 2008) “Inheriting Indian Land Symposium” (2007) “High Jinx” Indian Affairs in the Era of Indian Self-Determination (current book project)

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