Academic Affairs Vice Provost Phil Kass recently named UC Davis’ 11th class of Hellman Fellows: 11 assistant professors who received a total of $244,000 in grants for research in a wide range of disciplines.
In engineering, for example, Seongkyu Lee is researching the noise generated by electrical vertical aircraft, a mode of transportation he calls transformative and an enhancement to human life. He is working toward “quiet” operation as a way to “increase public acceptance of small-sized urban aircraft flying in heavily populated cities.”
Anthropologist Cristina Moya is taking advantage of “a rare opportunity to study the origins and spread of a new ritual,” in this case an annual celebration of an apparition of Jesus’ face as seen in 2013 on a rocky outcrop in Peru. Moya said she aims “to understand why people adopt novel religious behaviors and ideas.”
With this year’s awards, UC Davis have awarded almost $3 million in total Hellman Fellowship grants since 2008, given to 136 early-career faculty members.
“UC Davis is grateful for the opportunity the Hellman Fellows Fund provides for our early-career faculty members,” Kass said. “At this stage of their research, they don’t always have the support they need — so this can help them get to the next level.”
That was the intent of the late Warren and Chris Hellman of San Francisco when they started the fellowship program in 1995 at UC Berkeley and UC San Diego. The Hellman Fellows Fund now provides grant money to all 10 UCs (it’s the only privately funded, systemwide program) and four private institutions — supporting more than 100 junior faculty members annually.
Each campus sets up its own process for applications, review and selection. Preference is given to faculty members who exhibit the potential for great academic distinction, but who have garnered only modest support and have not received other young investigator awards.
Here are our new UC Davis Hellman Fellows, listed with their departments and fellowship project titles. Click on any of the boxes to see the complete project description.
Katherine Eriksson
Department of Economics, College of Letters and Science
“Mortality and Migration in the Early 20th Century USA: Infants and Cities”
Ryan Finnigan
Department of Sociology, College of Letters and Science
“How Effectively Do Reporting-Pay Laws Limit Work Schedule Variability?”
Seongkyu Lee
Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, College of Engineering
“Toward Quiet Transformative Electrical Vertical Aircraft”
Alejandro Martinez
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, College of Engineering
“Enhanced Harvesting of Clean Renewable Geothermal Energy Enabled by Soil Treatment”
Sarah “Sabbie” Miller
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, College of Engineering
“Bioinspired Geometries to Advance Sustainable Plastics”
Frances Moore
Department of Environmental Science and Policy, College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
“Quantifying the Costs of Ecosystem Damages From Climate Change for Improved Climate Policy Analysis”
Cristina Moya
Department of Anthropology, College of Letters and Science
“The Origins and Spread of Ritual”
David Olson
Department of Chemistry, College of Letters and Science
“Cellular Methods for Determining Hallucinogenic Potential”
Justin Spence
Department of Native American Studies, College of Letters and Science
“P.E. Goddard’s Unpublished Hupa Texts: Translation, Analysis and Publication”
Rachel Vannette
Department of Entomology and Nematology, College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
“Characterizing the Structure and Function of Pollinator Microbiomes”
Jiayi Young
Department of Design, College of Letters and Science
“What Does the Bot Say to the Human? Data Mapping Presidential Election Social Media Activity”