January Mini-Symposium Lunch

Please sign up here if you would like lunch during the September Mini-Symposium. More information about the symposia is below.
The Mini-Symposia Series builds on the extraordinary enthusiasm for the Faculty and Staff Research Symposium, offering a new rhythm of exchange across the academic year. Instead of one full day, we gather four times– in the fall and spring—for half-day symposia that revisit and reimagine presentations from the full Symposium. This new format allows more opportunities to engage with colleagues’ research, creative projects, and collaborations in a focused and accessible way. Next fall, the full one-day Symposium returns, as the formats will alternate in two-year cycles.
Each Symposium features one or two morning panels and one or two afternoon panels, with time for community connection:
- 10:00 a.m. – Coffee and light snacks at the Faculty Hub
- 10:30–11:45 a.m. – Morning Session (1-2 concurrent panels)
- 11:45 a.m.–1:15 p.m. – Lunch at the Faculty Hub
- 1:30–2:45 p.m. – Afternoon Session (1-2 concurrent panels)
- 3:00 p.m. – Conclusion
Please feel free to come for all or part of the day–no need to register; if you would like to join in the lunch, sign up above. The 2025-2026 academic year will feature the Mini-Symposia on Friday, September 26, 2025; Friday, November 7, 2025; Friday, January 30, 2026; and Friday, February 20, 2026.
The schedule for Friday, January 30, 2026, is as follows:
Session One: 10:30 - 11:45 a.m.
Panel 1: Knowledge, Persuasion, and Protest: Narrating Systems of Influence
Chair: Carrie Wu, Arts & Sciences, Biology
Jeff Seeman, Arts & Sciences, Chemistry - Revolutions in Science, Revolutions in Chemistry
Raika Sadeghein, Robins School of Business, Marketing - That’s Not What Happened: Dealing with Consumer-Generated Fake Reviews
Karen Masterson, Arts & Sciences, Journalism - Americans in Africa: How the Ghosts of Ohio's Republic Steel Corporation Helped the People of Liberia "Speak for the Trees"
Panel 2: Framing the Arts: Sacred Bodies, Sonic Spells, and Curated Canons
Chair: Paul Brohan, Modlin Center for the Arts
Anthony Russell, Arts & Sciences, English and Languages, Literatures, & Cultures - Body, Art, and the Sacred: From Michelangelo's Last Judgment to Serrano's Piss Christ
Jessie Fillerup, Arts & Sciences, Music - Ravel's Magical Harp Clichés
Sara Pappas, Arts & Sciences, Languages, Literatures, & Cultures - Organizing Nineteenth-Century French Art in Today's Museum
Lunch: 11:45 a.m.–1:15 p.m.
Session Two: 1:30 - 2:45 p.m.
Panel 1: Networks of Influence: Spies, Sovereigns, and the Art of Diplomacy
Chair: Allison Tait, School of Law
Elena Calvillo, Arts & Sciences, Art & Art History
Kristin Bezio, Jepson School of Leadership - End of an Era: The Change in Spycraft from the Tudors to the Early Stuarts
Sydney Watts, Arts & Sciences, History - Unlikely Agents under Britain’s Expanded Spy Network during the Revolutionary Wars
Panel 2: Models, Molecules, and Metrics: Mapping Influence Across Systems
Chair: Kathy Hoke, Arts & Sciences, Math
Christopher Shugrue, Arts & Sciences, Chemistry - Tools for Selectively Modifying Peptides
Jean L. B. Creamer, Office of the Registrar - Biggest Factor for a Healthy Life? It’s the Food.
Aslan Lotfi, Robins School of Business, Analytics & Operations - Modeling the Influence of Multichannel Digital Advertising: A Fractional Calculus-Based Approach
Bo Yun Park, Jepson School of Leadership Studies, Sociology - Big Data in a Small World: How Data Analytics is (Re)Shaping Presidential Elections
Contact us
- The Teaching and Scholarship Hub
- fa••••b@ric••••d.edu
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- Scholarship