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Research & Innovation Awards

FORAA Awards & EII Awards

January 24, 2022 - Virtual Award Ceremony
(Outstanding Research Achievement Awards and Excellence in Innovation Awards)

2021 Faculty Outstanding Research Achievement Award Recipients

The annual Faculty Outstanding Research Achievement Awards are part of an open competition, judged by the ±«Óătv Research Council, to highlight professional acclaim received by the recipients from their national and international peers for their research.

John Adams

John H. Adams, PhD

Distinguished ±«Óătv Health Professor and Distinguished University Professor, Center for Global Health Infectious Disease Research and ±«Óătv Genomics Program, College of Public Health

is an international expert in malaria research. His research focuses on host‐parasite interactions and improving the understanding of infection and pathogenesis in malaria. His group is actively engaged in vaccine and drug discovery projects. In 2020, he received a National Institutes of Health grant to , the most prevalent type of malaria outside of the African continent. The project builds upon his group’s successful development of a greatly improved liver culture system for the early infective stages of human malaria parasites.

As the lead investigator on the grant, Dr. Adams brought together an international consortium from six institutions to prepare a vaccine for clinical trial. He also the lead investigator for an NIH 2020 exploratory grant to collaborate with researchers in Thailand to evaluate the pharmacogenomics of an antimalarial drug.


Ryan Carney


Ryan Carney, PhD, MPH, MBA

Assistant Professor, Department of Integrative Biology, College of Arts and Sciences

Dr. Carney , one in paleontology and one in epidemiology. In 2020, he was PI of a newly-awarded NSF proposal for more than $900,000 to fight mosquito-borne diseases worldwide using artificial intelligence. A first- and senior-authored paleobiology publication in on the iconic received substantial international recognition, including from , and ranked in the 99th percentile in global coverage by Altimetric. A second paper describing the , which is crucial to disease-control efforts, has already been cited multiple times. His collaborative research in 2020 resulted in two new invention disclosures with plans for multiple patents. Dr. Carney's dinosaur research was featured in , , and three international outreach activities with total viewership of 150,000.


Hadi Charkhgard


, PhD

Assistant Professor, Department of Industrial and Management Systems Engineering,
College of Engineering

Dr. Charkhgard is an assistant professor in the Department of Industrial and Management Systems Engineering and the founder and director of the . Dr. Charkhgard published nine journal articles in 2020 in highly-ranked journals in operations research. Additionally, he has six journal articles currently under review which were submitted last year. Dr. Charkhgard is the co-PI on a working to prevent and control harmful algal blooms in Lake Okeechobee by optimizing the implementation of technologies and practices. Also in 2020, Dr. Charkhgard graduated two PhD students, applied for a U.S. Patent for his methodological invention on radiotherapy treatment planning, and submitted a scientific journal article about his invention to , which was published this year.


George Davis


George Davis, MD, PhD

Professor, Department of Molecular Pharmacology and Physiology,
Morsani College of Medicine

Dr. Davis is an . He pioneered the use of three-dimensional collagen matrices as a platform for the study of blood vessels in the lab. More recently, his research has shed light on how aberrant cell signaling can result in abnormal blood vessels. Healthy communication, or molecular signaling, inside and outside capillaries appears to play a critical role in promoting healthy tissues such as the heart, lungs and liver. Many diseases arise from abnormalities in blood vessels that fail to communicate properly with tissues. Dr. Davis has 151 publications that have been cited 762 times in 2020 alone. He published six peer-reviewed manuscripts in 2020—four as author and two as co-author—all in outstanding journals. In 2020, Dr. Davis was the PI on three high-level NIH grants.


Richard Heller


Richard Heller, PhD

Professor, Department of Medical Engineering, Morsani College of Medicine

Dr. Heller’s research and innovations are focused on the delivery of plasmid DNA through pulse electric fields to solid tumors, skin, muscle, liver, heart and other tissues. In 2020, he was elected as a Fellow to the National Academy of Inventors. In addition, he continued working on four NIH grants, including three in which he serves as the PI. In 2020, he published four manuscripts in top journals, including one that was in the top 5% of all research outputs as scored by Altmetric. Dr. Heller also had four new U.S. patents issued and three additional patent applications filed. He also was involved in developing a new startup company focused on the technology he invented.


Mark Jaroszeski


Mark Jaroszeski, PhD

Associate Professor, Department of Medical Engineering, College of Engineering

Dr. Jaroszeski’s research has focused on biomedical devices using pulsed electric fields for the delivery of genes and drugs, an area of research he pioneered more than three decades ago. In 2020, his efforts were focused on commercializing technology he invented while continuing to work on a recently awarded grant with a student funded by an NIH Diversity Supplement. He was part of the founding of the startup company EF Therapeutics, Inc., located in the ±«Óătv incubator. Also in 2020, eight of his ±«Óătv patents were licensed. He also contributed to the creation of a new general education course on the scientific process and in efforts to better prepare students for research careers.


Autar Kaw


Autar Kaw, PhD

Professor, Department of Mechanical Engineering, College of Engineering

Dr. Kaw’s current research focuses on the impact of personalized and active learning on improving student achievement and on developing sustainable and quality open education resources. During 2020, he was a PI and co-PI on three highly competitive National Science Foundation grants. In one of the grant-funded programs, he is leading four universities—±«Óătv, Arizona State University, Alabama A&M University, and University of Pittsburgh—in investigating the effectiveness of personalized learning in flipped classrooms and using learner data to design early and successful interventions for struggling students. Additionally, he gave a keynote speech at the January 2020 International Symposium on Fusion of Science & Technology conference in Faridabad, India. Also, last year he published two peer-reviewed articles on personalized engineering education and presented two papers at the American Society for Engineering Education conferences on the impact of variable grading, cumulative tests, and practice examinations on improving blended learning. Dr. Kaw has been and internationally for his creative and effective teaching methods reaching engineering and mathematics students around the world via and .


Lynn Martin


Lynn B. Martin, PhD

Professor, Global Health and Infectious Disease Research Center, College of Public Health

Dr. Martin is an in disease ecology and invasive species. In 2020, he was awarded a $1.5 million, four-year to fund an international project on the molecular genetics of one of the world’s most invasive species, the house sparrow. The research will take him, postdocs and students to Senegal, Vietnam, Norway, Spain, Australia, and New Zealand to study how the sparrows became one of the most broadly distributed animals in the world. He also submitted several other large grant proposals in 2020 which are still pending decisions. In 2020, he and his trainees and collaborators published 10 papers in high-profile journals including American Naturalist, eLife, Proceedings of the Royal Society B, and Bioscience. Two of those publications were invited (eLife and Bioscience), and all but two papers included a student or postdoc from his lab. Dr. Martin is also the co-creator and co-host of the popular podcast, .


Sunil Mithas


Sunil Mithas, PhD

Professor and World Class Scholar, School of Information Systems and Management, Muma College of Business

is a Senior Editor of , and Department Editor of Production and Operations Management, and Management Business Review. In 2020, he contributed nine published or forthcoming articles, of which seven are on a highly selective list of business journals considered in the University of Texas at Dallas and Financial Times ranking of top business schools. In the summer of 2020, Dr. Mithas began a three-year assignment as Visiting Professorial Fellow at the School of Information Systems, Technology and Management at the . Dr. Mithas was the Muma College of Business' first World Class Scholar when he joined the college in 2018.


Mehran Mozaffari Kermani


Mehran Mozaffari Kermani, PhD

Associate Professor, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, College of Engineering

Dr. Mozaffari Kermani's focuses on the creation of novel hardware-oriented cyber-security techniques through post-quantum and lightweight cryptography to secure critical cyber infrastructures and computer hardware systems. He is the director of , and his research in 2020 resulted in more than $1 million in funding and grants where he served as either PI or Co-PI. In 2020, Dr. Mozaffari Kermani and his PhD students published five top journal papers (IEEE/ACM Transactions), three flagship conference papers, and . Dr. Mozaffari Kermani has served as the associate editor of three prestigious journals in the field, editing more than 40 journal papers. Moreover, he was the publications chair for two prestigious conferences in the field, the and , in 2020.


Ivan Oleynik


Dr. Ivan Oleynik, PhD

Professor, Department of Physics, College of Arts and Sciences

is a fellow of the American Association for Advancement of Science (AAAS), and a fellow of American Physical Society and American Vacuum Society, is best known for his groundbreaking contributions to the field of computational materials science that led to predictions of new materials phenomena and behavior of matter at conditions. In 2020, Dr. Oleynik was awarded a highly competitive and prestigious , which provides access to Summit, the most powerful computer in the world, with computing time equivalent to $3 million. In 2020, he also led an international team of researchers that received another competitive and peer-reviewed award that grants access to at the Sandia National Laboratory, the most powerful radiation source in the world, to perform groundbreaking experiments to uncover properties matter at extreme conditions. The award was the equivalent of $1.2 million.


Matthew Pasek


Matthew Pasek, PhD

Professor, School of Geosciences, College of Arts and Sciences

Dr. Pasek’s research focuses on . He recently received a highly selective for work that advances "the study of goal-seeking phenomena in nature," related to his work in origins science. Dr. Pasek also authored the article “Thermodynamics of Prebiotic Phosphorylation” in Chemical Reviews, which has the highest impact factor of all chemistry journals. Additionally, Dr. Pasek published six more papers in 2020 and had two other papers accepted for publication. This work is in addition to ongoing NASA and NSF grants totaling more than $1.6 million over three years. Dr. Pasek’s expertise is routinely quoted in leading publications such as and .


Christopher Passaglia


Christopher Passaglia, PhD

Professor, Department of Medical Engineering, Morsani College of Medicine and College of Engineering

Dr. Passaglia investigates in both normal and diseased conditions in his . He uses his findings to engineer new technologies for monitoring and treating ocular disorders. In 2020, he published five papers in top journals such, as Scientific Reports and Journal of Physiolog, that were highlighted by vision experts, covered by national media outlets, and featured on the . Additionally, Dr. Passaglia was awarded two high-level NIH grants in 2020 totaling approximately $2 million, one as co-investigator examining the effectiveness of assorted drug cocktails at promoting optic nerve regeneration and the other as a PI examining pressure fluctuations in normal and glaucomatous eyes and their effect on optic nerve health and function. He was issued in 2020 based on devices that his lab created for measuring and controlling pressure within the eye or other organs.


Manh-Huong Phan


Manh-Huong Phan, PhD

Professor and Director of Advanced Materials and Sensors Laboratory, Department of Physics, College of Arts and Sciences 

In 2020, published 23 peer-reviewed ISI papers in top-ranked journals, including Advanced Materials, Advanced Science, and Materials Horizons, highlighting the new discoveries of atomically thin quantum magnetic materials and the Giant spin-Seebeck Effect, an interaction that allows heat to move magnetic information, that will potentially revolutionize quantum information technology and the Internet of Things. During 2020, he was one of the most highly cited researchers in his field, with more than 1,600 citations, and was featured in the list of the . As the managing editor, Dr. Phan successfully led the Journal of Science-Advanced Materials and Devices to achieve its first high impact factor of 3.8 in 2020. He has secured a continuing Department of Energy grant of $563,247 to exploit novel nanomaterials for spintronics. In 2020, he was selected for an Honorary Doctorate Degree Award by Vietnam National University – Hanoi.


Lindsey Rodriguez


Lindsey Rodriguez, PhD

Associate Professor, Department of Psychology, College of Arts and Sciences, St. Petersburg Campus

Dr. Rodriguez’ play in substance abuse and in developing and evaluating interventions for addictive behaviors. In 2020, she published 20 peer-reviewed manuscripts in high-impact journals. Her on alcohol use during the COVID-19 pandemic received news coverage from several outlets, including , the , and the , the American Heart Association, and the , among others. Dr. Rodriguez was co-investigator on four new grants totaling $200,000 in 2020. She is an action editor for Addiction Research and Theory and the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs. She presented at eight symposia and 18 posters. She also continued her funded work on three grants from the NIAAA focusing on reducing hazardous alcohol use.


Brad Seibel


Brad Seibel, PhD

Professor, College of Marine Science, St. Petersburg Campus

In 2020, Dr. Seibel investigated the response of marine animals to ocean warming and deoxygenation. He published a on the novel quantitative relationship between the oxygen and temperature sensitivities of marine animals that had gone unrecognized, despite nearly a century of study. He used this relationship to determine whether a habitat is metabolically available and how it will shift with changing climate. It precisely measures the decrement in metabolism and the scope available for growth and reproduction with declining oxygen and increasing temperature. It was used to publish a new method for determining oxygen supply capacity in animals and led to new investigations of other marine species and ecotypes, such as ram ventilation in sharks, extreme temperature sensitivity in vertical migrators, gill development in larval fishes, and the success of invasive lionfishes. Dr. Seibel published in  and additionally is investigating bioluminescence, exercise physiology, and the effects of ocean acidification in marine animals with funding from NSF, the Office of Naval Research and the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration.


Patriann Smith


Patriann Smith, PhD

Associate Professor, Department of Language, Literacy, Ed.D., Exceptional Education & Physical Education, College of Education

Dr. Smith pursues a transdisciplinary research agenda situated at the intersection of linguistics, immigration and migration, and race in literacy education. She for literacy and language instruction and assessment for Black immigrant students and educators. In 2020, Dr. Smith published 15 refereed articles including one in the and another in , the leading global journal in literacy. In 2020, she received contracts from Cambridge University Press and Teachers College Press for sole-authored and co-authored books, and was featured on and authored blog posts for the United States Association for Public Policy. In 2020, Dr. Smith was elected to the Board of Directors of the national Literacy Research Association (LRA) and was a co-presenter of the report, commissioned by the LRA. Earlier this year, Dr. Smith was awarded a three-year, $3.6 million grant from the United States Agency for International Development to partner with the University of the West Indies Cave Hill in Barbados in creating an educational research center to help support decision making and policy in Barbados and the Eastern Caribbean.


Robert H. Tykot


Robert H. Tykot, PhD

Professor, Department of Anthropology, College of Arts and Sciences

Dr. Tykot is an archaeologist who studies the early history of Mediterranean civilizations. In 2020, had 10 formal publications (three as first or sole author), four technical reports, and eight published abstracts. One of his works was a major article on the chemical analysis of more than 1,000 on Ustica, a small Italian island in the Tyrrhenian Sea, is highly significant because it demonstrates open-sea, long distance maritime travel as far back as 6000 BCE. His studies of ceramic artifacts, copper-based metals, marble, human diet, and radiocarbon dating were published in nine other articles. Dr. Tykot received funding in 2020 as the PI from the Archaeological Institute of America / National Endowment of the Humanities for a project focusing on the Central Po Valley, Italy; and as senior researcher from the National Science Foundation focusing on the Horn of Africa. He is editor-in-chief of Science and Technology of Archaeological Research and on the editorial board of nine other international journals.


Edelyn Verona


Edelyn Verona, PhD

Professor, Department of Psychology, College of Arts and Sciences

Dr. Verona’s research focuses on the intersections of psychology and crime. She studies biosocial risk factors, violence risk and prevention, and evidence-based interventions to reduce crime and incarceration. In 2020, Dr. Verona published or had accepted two book chapters and seven articles in top-ranked journals such as Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, Personality Disorders: Theory, Research & Treatment, and Journal of Interpersonal Violence. Her articles have been cited more than 5,000 times, including 450 citations in 2020. In 2020, she secured $1.2 million of funding from the National Institute of Justice to implement and evaluate interventions in a county jail; in the Tampa Bay Times, and was invited to join the Tampa Police Department’s Community Advisory Board and the American Psychological Association’s Commission on Accreditation. She recently co-founded the Center for Justice Research & Policy at ±«Óătv, the first of its kind in Florida.


Christian Wells


Christian Wells, PhD

Professor, Department of Anthropology, College of Arts and Sciences

Dr. Wells is the director of ±«Óătv’s Center for Brownfields Research and Redevelopment and a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, recognized for his research aimed at improving human-environmental health outcomes through the redevelopment of underserved urban communities. In 2020, he partnered with the CDC of Tampa in a $200,000 grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to create an environmental workforce development and job training program for residents of East Tampa. This grant was the only one awarded in Florida in 2020 and the first ever awarded to a partnership with a Florida university. The program is currently training 60 residents in environmental remediation skills who will be placed in full-time jobs by the end of 2021. This project is an outgrowth of his existing interdisciplinary collaboration with ±«Óătv environmental engineers, in which he serves as co-PI of a study of infrastructure in Tampa.


Henry Lee Woodcock


Henry Lee Woodcock, PhD

Associate Professor, Department of Chemistry, College of Arts and Sciences

Dr. H. Lee Woodcock’s is focused on developing and employing computational methodology to solve critical problems where biophysics, medicine, and/or materials science meets. In 2020, Dr. Woodcock co-led one of the most high-profile scientific efforts of the year in developing a new method to breakdown plastics that pollute the world. Listed as , the engineered cocktail of enzymes can digest plastic up to six times faster than previous efforts. The two combined enzymes—PETase and MHETase—are described as “two Pac-men joined by a piece of string,” and provide new hope for tackling society’s global plastic waste problem. Published in , the discovery was covered by the world-wide media ranging from , the , , and many more. In addition to ongoing NIH and U.S. Department of Energy grants, Dr. Woodcock is in line to receive two new NIH grants for a combined total of more than $2 million.


Sarah Y. Yuan


Sarah Y. Yuan, MD, PhD

Professor and Chair, Department of Molecular Pharmacology and Physiology,
Morsani College of Medicine

Dr. Yuan is an . Her discoveries have significantly advanced the understanding of complex interactions that regulate the vascular barrier that separates blood from tissues during inflammation, trauma, infection, sepsis, atherosclerosis, and diabetes, and how that process can lead to organ failure. Dr. Yuan’s discoveries are frequently cited by researchers worldwide—241 times in 2020 alone. She had eight senior author publications in 2020 in leading journals. Also in 2020, she was awarded the prestigious . Dr. Yuan is the first ±«Óătv faculty member to receive this particular award. The grant will provide an additional $6.250 million over the next seven years. Additionally, she received the 2020 recognizing her groundbreaking contributions to the field of vascular biology.


2022 Excellence in Innovation Award Recipients

The Excellence in Innovation Award recognizes exceptional achievement in translational research and its transfer to practice, industrial partnerships and commercialization. It is awarded to ±«Óătv faculty members who have demonstrated high-quality research, innovation and entrepreneurship.

Brian Bunnell

Brian Bunnell, PhD

Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurosciences, ±«Óătv Health Morsani College of Medicine

In addition to demonstrating outstanding productivity as evidenced by his 12 publications in health technology, Brian Bunnell had many exceptional achievements during fiscal year 2021. He and his colleagues received more than $2 million in grant funding from the National Institute of Mental Health to use artificial intelligence to detect and predict suicidality based on electronic health records and developed Adhere.ly, a web-based platform to help mental health therapists engage youth and adult patients in therapeutic skill development. Bunnell formed a strategic partnership between Adhere.ly and Doxy.me, a telemedicine platform with one million provider users to integrate Adhere.ly into its user interface, which is being funded by a $136,289 award from the Florida High Tech Corridor. Adhere.ly holds an exclusive option agreement with ±«Óătv and is currently negotiating a license agreement with the ±«Óătv Research Foundation.


Jing Wang


Jing Wang, PhD

Professor, Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering

Jing Wang holds 11 U.S. patents and several provisional patents, including one jointly filed with II-VI, a publicly traded global manufacturing company, and has multiple projects being funded by about a dozen technology corporations and organizations. In fiscal year 2021, three doctoral students and one master’s student involved in industry-funded research projects graduated under his supervision. During this time, three invention disclosures were filed by student-inventors. He was also elected a senior member of the National Academy of Inventors and Agere Systems Endowed Chair, a tribute to his translational research and innovation.


Attila Yavuz 


Attila Yavuz, PhD

Associate Professor, Computer Science and Engineering, College of Engineering

Attila Yavuz's research focuses on efficient end-to-end protection of encrypted systems to enable trustworthy machine learning for users without revealing sensitive contents to cloud servers. Prior work has been expensive for embedded devices and relied on strong trust assumptions for data collection and analysis. Yavuz's research presents a series of new techniques that offer lightweight post-quantum signatures, consensus and metadata-hiding file-sharing properties. This research has resulted in several papers and a patent filing.


Ying (Sarah) Zhong


Ying (Sarah) Zhong, PhD

Assistant Professor, Mechanical Engineering, College of Engineering

Sarah Zhong responded quickly to combat COVID-19 by enabling safe reuse of masks through corona discharge, which can simultaneously disinfect and recharge masks. This NSF-funded and patent pending technique addresses mask shortages and environmental burdens caused by the pandemic. It has drawn significant attention from the media and society. She also invented another patent-pending technology to realize ultra-fast binder-free printing through electrostatic printing. Zhong’s entrepreneurial accomplishments include a registered startup company and participation in I-Corps training. She published four papers in top academic journals, which included being featured on the supplemental cover of Environmental Science & Technology and ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces. In addition to receiving an NSF RAPID award, she received a $25,000 ±«Óătv COVID-19 Rapid Response Grant and a $20,000 ±«Óătv Interdisciplinary Research Grant.


TEAM AWARD

Richard Heller, PhD
Professor, Medical Engineering, Morsani College of Medicine

and

Mark Jaroszeski, PhD
Associate Professor, Medical Engineering, College of Engineering

Team Award

Richard Heller (photo on left) and Mark Jaroszeski (photo on right) have advisory and ownership interests in MMD Technologies, enabling them to commercialize intellectual property related to drug/gene delivery for the veterinary and human clinical markets. During the 2020-2021 fiscal year, they received four U.S. patents for new intellectual property and submitted applications for four utility patents and one provisional patent. Their entrepreneurial achievements resulted in forging a licensing agreement with MMD Technologies. Heller and Jaroszeski have successfully competed for a $25,000 Bull Ring Accelerator Award to foster commercialization and were awarded a nearly $60,000 National Institutes of Health Diversity Supplement to fund a graduate student for instrumentation development related to this technology. They also commercialized a ±«Óătv-discovered product, partnering with medical device manufacturer PRESCO to design and build a commercial-grade device that is ready for the veterinary market.


 

2020-2021 Patent Recipients (PDF)

111 U.S. patents were issued to the ±«Óătv in the fiscal year of July 2020 through July 2021

Thanks to the 2022 Excellence in Innovation Awards Selection Committee

  • Dr. Norma Alcantar
  • Dr. Subhra Mohapatra
  • Dr. Niketa Patel
  • Michele Tyrpak, J.D.

Thanks to the ±«Óătv Research Council

Thanks to our Sponsors:

 

 

±«ÓătvRI

 

ResearchOne

 

Virtual Research & Innovation Awards - Event Recording video

Research & Innovation virtual awards group photo

Group photo from the virtual event, January 24, 2022 (click to open larger image)