The Division of Research and Sponsored Programs (RASP) is the source for up-to-the-minute information about all Kent State research and researchers. The division presents a variety of research events each year, among them two research forums spotlighting the work of research teams on campus. Douglas Delahanty, Ph.D., vice president for RASP, estimates that, to date, the division has presented more than 20 Research and Innovation forums.
The Spring Semester Research Innovation Forum explored the topic of data collection, AR/VR innovation and media influence.
鈥楽ignificant Heterogeneities: Making Sense of Environmental Data in a Noisy World鈥
鈥榃e live in a messy world. We have to be mindful stewards of data.鈥
Christie Bahlai, Ph.D., describes herself as 鈥渁 computational ecologist who does stuff with bugs.鈥 An assistant professor in the Department of Biological Sciences, her research is focused on interpreting broadscale ecological data using technology and new analytical methods to see how biodiversity responds to environmental changes.
She presented an example of a noted environmental researcher, who in the late '50s, did a study of territorial competition in warblers. His methods were basic, using the tools of his time, and his study became a foundational work in community ecology. However, upon reexamination, with modern research tools and methods, it was determined that his findings were what Bahlai called 鈥渃onveniently good looking.鈥
A slide from Bahlai's presentation illustrates how insects are captured for research.
Working with her research colleagues, Bahlai has determined that nature is inherently a 鈥渘oisy environment,鈥 data-wise. 鈥淚n variable environments, it鈥檚 harder to detect a clear trend,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his is not a really surprising result, but when you have a noisy system, you鈥檙e not going to get at mechanisms or management unless you study for longer.鈥
鈥楾he world would be a better place if we spent a little more time thinking about, and being thoughtful about our data and how it should vary. A clear, simple pattern that emerges from a complex system is a signal that you鈥檙e not capturing authentic variability.鈥
鈥楾he Smell of Education: How Olfaction and Technology Could Change How We Teach and Learn鈥
鈥極f all the senses that the creator bestowed us with, I鈥檓 most fascinated with smell.鈥
Delahanty introduced Rick Ferdig, Ph.D., as 鈥渢he Summit Professor of Learning Technologies (as named by Akron's GAR Foundation) and a professor of educational technology here at Kent State.鈥 Ferdig鈥檚 research studies the impact of emerging technologies like virtual reality and augmented reality in K-12 schools.
鈥淢ost of what we know about olfaction (the sense of smell) was discovered in the last 15 to 20 years,鈥 said Ferdig. 鈥淎nd the truth is, we don鈥檛 really know as much as we should.鈥 His research tackles the 鈥渨icked鈥 problems of integrating olfaction into teaching technologies.
Part of the apparatus Ferdig's team uses to deliver precise doses of scent to research volunteers.
鈥淲icked鈥 problems, in the world of research are those that are resistant to solution, or a single solution, because of changing conditions. Ferdig says the wicked problems with olfaction include the aforementioned lack of research knowledge about olfaction, controlling the 鈥渄osage鈥 and diffusion of scents, and then determining what the demand for this technology would be, when it鈥檚 successfully developed.
鈥楾he final wicked problem is that we used to think there were 10,000,' Ferdig said. 鈥楴ow, there鈥檚 proof that there may be more 鈥 as many as 1 trillion 鈥 kinds of scents that are available to people.鈥
鈥淭he truth is that these wicked problems are going to require an interdisciplinary response,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd I鈥檓 hopeful in presenting this today that you鈥檙e either willing, or know someone who鈥檚 willing to smell up some solutions with me.鈥
鈥楢gnotology, Ecofeminism and Environmental Justice: Tools to Explore the Social Response to the Chemical Spill in East Palestine, Ohio鈥
鈥楾his is the idea that ignorance is propagated. It鈥檚 created; it鈥檚 socially constructed.鈥
In February, Lydia Rose, Ph.D., an associate professor in the Department of Sociology and Criminology, was teaching at Kent State鈥檚 East Liverpool Campus and assisting in preparing an undergraduate research conference about litter. Then, the train derailment happened in nearby East Palestine. She closely observed the media coverage of the incident under the lens of her research of what she calls 鈥渢he Agnotology and Epistemology of Ignorance.鈥
鈥淎gnotology鈥 is a term coined by a researcher at Stanford University to define the study of 鈥渃ulturally induced ignorance.鈥 Rose said, 鈥淢edia has been balkanized, where we don鈥檛 really have a lot of control of what gets put in the media.鈥
鈥楾here are so many different kinds of media in a variety of different ways, even from just regular citizens who take a picture that goes viral,' she said.
Rose used her research as a tool to look at the chemical spill in East Palestine to understand how the incident will unfold and what it will mean for the people in the area. She said 鈥淓cofeminism is a tool that we can also use to understand this. This is a theoretical perspective that provides a lens that allows us to recognize that capitalism and patriarchy and colonialism are ideologies that also let us know that this history of propagated ignorance has an agenda in our social structure.鈥
Rose's book, that her current research references, was recently released in paperback.
Rose's studies are also the subject of the latest "What's the Big Idea" video, a series in which Kent State President Todd Diacon meets with Kent State researchers to explore their areas of expertise.
The recent forum event took place on the Kent Student Center Ballroom Balcony.
In just two weeks, Kent State鈥檚 Office of Student Research will present its annual Undergraduate Symposium on Research, Science and Creative Endeavors, on Monday, April 17, in the Kent Student Center. April 17-21 is National Undergraduate Research Week.
Kent State has earned the prestigious R1 designation from the Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education. R1 status is the highest recognition that doctoral universities can receive, and Kent State is one of only five universities in Ohio to have earned it. This designation recognizes the high level of research activity on Kent State鈥檚 campuses.