CAS Chronicles
Stories
![±«Óătvâs Benjamin Mittler and Denise Wright work to capture 360 terrains at the Jimmy Carter Boyhood Farm. [Photo courtesy: Frank Rodriquez]](/arts-sciences/chronicles/images/2025/january/carter-farm.jpg)
±«Óătv memorializes former President Jimmy Carter with 3D virtual tour of boyhood farm
Prior to his death, ±«Óătvâs Center for Digital Heritage and Geospatial Information partnered with President Jimmy Carter and the National Park Service to create virtual tours of his boyhood farm, high school he attended and railroad depot that served as campaign headquarters for Carterâs successful 1976 presidential bid. Check out the interactive tours available to the public.
January 9, 2025Community Engagement, Research

Your work habits may be threatening your sleep, ±«Óătv-led study shows
People whose jobs are highly sedentary â an estimated 80% of the modern workforce â experience a much higher risk of insomnia symptoms.
January 7, 2025Research

Two ±«Óătv faculty members named NAI fellows
The ±«Óătv researchers are being recognized for their groundbreaking discoveries and innovations in chemical engineering to treat cancer and other challenging diseases and nanomaterials engineering for multifunctional manufacturing applications.
December 11, 2024Accomplishments
![Neda Latifi, assistant professor of medical engineering, works with undergraduate student Russel Kramer [Photo by Torie Doll, University Communications and Marketing]](/arts-sciences/chronicles/images/2024/december/research-listing.jpg)
±«Óătv sets new record with $738 million in research funding
The milestone comes during ±«Óătvâs first full fiscal year as a member of the prestigious Association of American Universities and helps demonstrate its impact as one of the nationâs most research-intensive institutions. The new record brings the university closer to reaching its goal of securing $1 billion in annual research funding.
December 10, 2024Research

±«Óătv to confer nearly 4,000 degrees during fall commencement ceremonies Dec. 13-14
This graduating class includes a 16-year-old, a 70-year-old grandmother of four and an electrical engineer seeking to revolutionize the medical, space exploration and military industries.
December 9, 2024Accomplishments

New book on immigration and belonging will illuminate indigenous peoples and languages of North Africa
When Heide Castañeda, a professor of anthropology at the ±«Óătv, travels to Morocco it isnât to visit Africaâs largest mosque or one of the historical kasbahs. Castañeda, a migration scholar, is there to study and understand the experience of the indigenous Amazigh people â the focal point of her new book, forthcoming from New York University Press.
November 25, 2024Accomplishments, Research
![Workers build the original Gandy Bridge, which opened in 1924. [Photo courtesy of ±«Óătv Special Collections]](/arts-sciences/chronicles/images/2024/november/gandy-bridge.jpg)
Gandy Bridge turns 100, how ±«Óătv is preserving its history
When built 100 years ago, the Gandy Bridge helped create the Tampa Bay area that consists of Hillsborough and Pinellas counties. That story is told through the archives stored in ±«Óătv Special Collections.
November 25, 2024Community Engagement

English professor featured in 'Best American Poetry'
Natalie Scenters-Zapico, an award-winning poet and assistant professor in the Department of English, is gaining global recognition. Scenters-Zapico, who shapes the local literary community as director of the Michael Kuperman Memorial Poetry Library, has a poem in the prestigious âBest American Poetryâ anthology, cementing her work as essential reading at ±«Óătv and for audiences across the country.
November 22, 2024Accomplishments

Latin American Film Studies scholar wins prestigious early career award
The Latin American Studies Association awarded Olivia Cosentino, an assistant professor of film and new media studies in the Department of Humanities and Cultural Studies, the Early Career Award 2024 for her outstanding scholarship on Mexican cinema.
November 21, 2024Accomplishments, Research

âOnce youâre in it, youâre in it for life.â Aspiring surgeon receives wraparound support from Women in Leadership & Philanthropy program
The Women in Leadership & Philanthropy program has invested thousands of dedicated mentoring hours and more than $4 million in grants, scholarships and programmatic funding to more than 700 scholars like Merlo, who received $1,000 to support her studies this year.
November 21, 2024Accomplishments, Alumni, Community Engagement

Anthropology professor honored for transformative work in University Area Community
Dr. Christian Wells from the Department of Anthropology has recently earned the University Area Community Development Corporation (UACDC) Advocate Award for the eight years of impactful community work he and his students have conducted.
November 21, 2024Accomplishments

Fellowship allows School of Public Affairsâ Ratna Dougherty to share Maui wildfire research at national public policy and management conference
The Association for Public Policy Analysis and Management has awarded Ratna B. Dougherty, an assistant professor in the School of Public Affairs, with a competitive national fellowship allowing her to highlight her work with socially vulnerable populations affected by wildfires in Maui.
November 21, 2024Accomplishments, Community Engagement, Research