Faculty

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Jeffrey Rosen

Jason and Chloe Epstein Term Professor of the Practice
Urban & Environmental Policy & Planning
Catalytic Capital Community Investing Sustainable Finance Impact Measures Impact Investing for Racial Equity
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Eric Rosenberg

Associate Professor and Department Chair of History of Art and Architecture
History of Art and Architecture
American Art, Modern and Contemporary Art, and Theories and Methods
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Joel Rosenberg

Lee S. McCollester Associate Professor of Biblical Literature
International Literary and Cultural Studies
Judaic Studies, Film and Media Studies, ILVS, Middle Eastern Studies, Central European writers, South African writers, and World Literature
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Andreola Rossi

Senior Lecturer
Classical Studies
Latin and Greek Epic; Roman Historiography
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Kareem Roustom

Professor of the Practice
Music
Composition, Music of the Arab World, Music for media
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Modhumita Roy

Associate Professor
English
Anglophone literatures of Africa and the Africa Diaspora South Asian Literature Litertures of Empire Post-colonial Theory Feminist Theory Literary Theory
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Kim Ruane

Professor and Department Chair of Mathematics
Mathematics
Geometric Group Theory/Topology
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Lorenzo Ruffoni

Norbert Wiener Fellow
Mathematics
Geometry and Topology, Geometric Group Theory
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Pablo Ruiz

Associate Professor
Romance Studies
Twentieth century Latin American fiction; Jorge Luis Borges; poetry and poetics; Oulipo; translation studies; song and songwriting
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Susan Russinoff

Distinguished Senior Lecturer
Philosophy
Philosophy of Language, Logic, Philosophy of Logic, History of Logic, Critical Thinking Pedagogy
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Diane Ryan

Associate Dean for Programs and Administration
Tisch College
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Daniel Ryder

Associate Professor
Chemical and Biological Engineering
process control
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Jugal Sahoo

Research Assistant Professor
Biomedical Engineering
Silk chemistry and biomedical materials design, Biopolymers, Hydrogels
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Miriam Said

Assistant Professor
History of Art and Architecture
Ancient Near Eastern and Mediterranean art and architecture, especially in the 1st millennium BCE; materiality studies; ancient magic and religion; reception and museum histories.
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Anil Saigal

Professor
Mechanical Engineering
materials engineering, materials science, manufacturing processes, quality control
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Anna Sajina

Associate Professor
Physics & Astronomy
Extragalactic astrophysics How did galaxies and their central black holes co-evolve from the Big Bang to the present? Despite much progress through large scale galaxy surveys as well as ever more sophisticated numerical simulations, we are still hampered by the fact that much of the star-formation activity and black hole growth are buried in thick cocoons of dust and gas. Observations suggest that much of this activity took place in the past, before the Universe was half its present age, and likely involved mergers of nearly equal sized galaxies. As the merger progresses, gas and dust are more and more concentrated, triggering prodigious star-formation and gradually increasing accretion onto the central black hole (Active Galactic Nuclei or AGN). The process is short lived as supernovae- or AGN-driven winds lead to a 'blow-out' event which disperses the intervening gas and dust halting further star-formation and black hole growth. Indications that starbursts and AGN may regulate each other as above can be seen in the local correlation between the mass of a central black hole and the stellar mass of its host galaxy. The same galaxy observed at different stages of this process can appear very different. Therefore observations of different types of galaxies at different epochs and in different wavelength regimes are crucial to build a more complete understanding of the whole process.
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Fernando Salinas-Quiroz

Assistant Professor
Eliot-Pearson Department of Child Study & Human Development
I approach my research through a lens of reflexivity, with an understanding that my own experiences and positions in the world have shaped the focus of my work. It is perhaps unsurprising, then, that as the effeminate child of a single mother, raised by a network of powerful women, with aspirations to raise children and in daycare throughout childhood, I was driven to study clinical and developmental psychology, as well as to deepen my studies of gender. I've always been fascinated by children and the relationships they co-construct with adults. For eight years I mostly focused on studying those raised outside of the context of a "traditional" family using (developmental) psychology lenses. My previous research projects demystified and reimagined Attachment Theory. We assessed the quality of Mexican public daycare settings -becoming the first study in Latin America that used the q-sort methodology to describe professional secondary caregiver-child interactions-; described parental sensitivity and attachment security in lesbian and gay parented families -an avant-garde project in testing the universality and the sensitivity hypothesis with other than heterosexual parents-, and centered the experiences of Black and Brown scholars to push the attachment field toward anti-racism. I lead a research team that analyzed the pedagogical function of legal protections of LGB individuals for promoting social changes, specifically the role of contact and comfort in shaping attitudes toward same-sex parenting in 15 countries. I also lead another group that examined parenting aspiration among folks with diverse sexual orientations and gender identities, and its association with internalized homo/transnegativity and community connectedness to the LGBTQ community -the first world-wide study including trans and plurisexual participants-. In Fall 2021, I joined the Eliot-Pearson Department of Child Study and Human Development at Tufts University as an Assistant Professor. I dedicated my first months in the U.S. to wrap up ongoing projects in Latin America. In 2022, Dr. Ellen Pinderhughes asked me to conduct further analysis on their pioneering "Gay Fathers" dataset and lead an article. I decided to focus on Latinx gay fathers' pathways to parenthood, social stigma, helpfulness of social relationships and comfort being out (manuscript in progress). Now I had the resources to book an eye examination and renew my prescription. It turns out that my near vision ([developmental] psychology) was okay but I needed to correct my farsightedness. Since my times in my beloved Mexico City, I've been thinking that psychology is often a frustratingly narrow discipline which tends to privatize, individualize, and depoliticize the phenomena it studies (Kitzinger, 1995). Don't get me wrong, is not that we don't have top Optometrists in the Majority World, but now I had the privilege to be covered by an elite health insurance that allows me to choose a provider. Via by my Faculty Research Funds, and the Summer Scholars Program 2022, Office of the Provost, I led the project "How Do Children Identifying Beyond the Gender Binary and Their Parents Understand Gender?" To the best of my knowledge, no research team had directly asked 5-8 y/o non-binary (enby) children about what being enby means to them (i.e., a child-centered approach which prioritizes their experiences over adult–centric narratives). When recruiting for the aforementioned project, I learned about Trans formative Schools (TfS) and my life transformed. TfS is a new, progressive education initiative centering transness and social justice. We are a community of students, educators, and families whose collective mission is to support trans futures. To trans is a way of seeing and knowing; an epistemological position to produce dissident forms of knowledge (i.e., brand new prescription lenses). Our mission of transing education embodies the work of liberation through rigorous academics, joyful connections, identity exploration, and progressive practice. TfS seeks to move toward societal systemic change, equipping our students with the scaffolding to challenge racist, ableist, transphobic, transmisogynistic, and other white supremacist systems of oppression. TfS co-founder Alaina Daniels and I co-constructed a longitudinal research proposal to facilitate trans-led ways of building, identifying, and testing evidence in order to trans education by centering and uplifting trans people in the design, execution, and application of research as the practice of education is fundamentally a relational one. We will apply a Youth Participatory Action Research-mixed-methods approach to explore how a middle school, designed toward subverting the cis-supremacist systems that govern educational practice, impacts the belongingness, health, wellness, and learning outcomes of trans students and communities. Through this condensed overview of my past, present, and future as a researcher I intend to illustrate not only how my vision has changed and will keep changing, but my commitment to investigate how historical and contemporary structural inequalities disproportionately shape outcomes for marginalized folks, families, communities, and institutions that serve them.
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Raja Sambasivan

Ankur and Mari Sahu Assistant Professor
Computer Science
Cloud computing, evolvability, debugging distributed systems.
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Masoud Sanayei

Professor
Civil and Environmental Engineering
Bridge structural health monitoring, building train-induced vibrations, nondestructive testing of full-scale structures, fatigue life prediction of structures with nonproportional multi-axial loading.
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Vasanth Sarathy

Research Assistant Professor
Computer Science
Embodied AI approaches for performing complex tasks that require creativity, reasoning, and alignment with social and ethical norms.
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Angelo Sassaroli

Research Assistant Professor
Biomedical Engineering
near-infrared spectroscopy, diffuse optical tomography
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W. George Scarlett

Distinguished Senior Lecturer
Eliot-Pearson Department of Child Study & Human Development
Children's development as earth stewards, children's play, Approaches to children's challenging behaviors, religious and spiritual development across the lifespan, the arts in support of children's development.
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Ursina Schaede

Assistant Professor
Economics
Labor Economics, Economics of Education
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Rebecca Scheck

Associate Professor
Chemistry
Bioorganic Chemistry and Chemical Biology. A significant frontier in chemical biology lies in the ability to develop new, selective chemical transformations that transpire at mild temperatures amidst many other reactive species and in parallel with the countless transformations that occur inside of a living cell. Research in the Scheck laboratory focuses on the invention and application of encodable, bioorthogonal chemical strategies. These tools will be used to report on inducible changes in protein function in living cells. Current efforts in the lab fall into two broad categories: 1) The development of new chemical methods that are used to study complex posttranslational modification networks and 2) The study of native and unnatural posttranslational modifications to provide valuable chemical and synthetic biology tools.
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Patrick Schena

Barton L. Rachlin, E59, A85P Professor
Economics
Finance and banking in East Asia
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Matthias Scheutz

Karol Family Applied Technology Professor
Computer Science
Artificial intelligence, artificial life, cognitive modeling, foundations of cognitive science, human-robot interaction, multi-scale agent-based models, natural language understanding.
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Jennifer Schmidt

Professor of the Practice
School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts
Print Media, Multiples, Performance, Sculpture, Installation, Site-Responsive Projects, Writing, Sound, Graphics, Publications, Ephemera
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Claire Schub

Distinguished Senior Lecturer
Romance Studies
20th and 21st Century French and Francophone literature, Women's Studies, Film Studies
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Erin Seaton

Senior Lecturer and Associate Chair
Education
Special Education, human development, teaching and learning, adolescence, gender, equity in education, qualitative research methods, child and adolescent literature and literacy, writing
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Paola Sebastiani

Professor
Medicine
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Jane Seminara

Senior Lecturer
Gordon Institute
ethical leadership, social justice, and public speaking.
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Elizabeth Setren

Gunnar Myrdal Assistant Professor
Economics
Economics of Education, Labor Economics
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Rebecca Shakespeare

Lecturer
Urban & Environmental Policy & Planning
Geographic information system; urban geography; housing; critical GIS
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Shomon Shamsuddin

Associate Professor
Urban & Environmental Policy & Planning
Housing; Education; Inequality; Policy Implementation; Community Development
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Mark Sheldon

Associate Teaching Professor
Computer Science
programming languages, software systems, concurrency, distributed information systems
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Lisa Shin

Professor
Psychology
Clinical Neuroscience
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Elaine Short

Clare Boothe Luce Assistant Professor
Computer Science
Algorithmic human-robot interaction for robust and socially appropriate assistance to human users, especially users with disabilities.
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Mary Shultz

Professor
Chemistry
Physical Chemistry and Surface Science. The Shultz group applies physics and chemistry to understand the inner workings of hydrogen bonding. Hydrogen bonding plays key roles in environmental, biological, and atmospheric chemistry. Our program has research thrusts in all three directions. We specialize both in devising environments that clearly reveal key interactions and in developing new instrumentation. The most recent focus is on icy surfaces and on clathrate formation. Probing the ice surface begins with a well-prepared single-crystal surface. We have unique capabilities for growing single-crystal ice from the melt and for and preparing any desired ice face. Our clean water efforts are aimed at developing new materials to fill the significant need for safe drinking water. According to the World Health Organization, over one billion people lack safe drinking water. Our program is based on using photo catalysts to capture readily available sunlight to turn pollutants into benign CO2 and water. We developed methods to grow ultra-nano (~2 nm) particles that have well-controlled surface structures and chemistry.
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Paul Simmonds

Associate Professor
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Quantum Information, Computation and Communication Electronic Nanomaterials Quantum Photonics Semiconductor Optoelectronics
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Dean Simpson

Lecturer
Romance Studies
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Ted Simpson

Distinguished Senior Lecturer
Theatre, Dance, and Performance Studies