Outstanding Dissertation Awards
2019-2020
Humanities and Humanistic Social Sciences
Winner: Jiangtao Gu, Visual and Cultural Studies A Nation in Prospect: Photography and the Making of Modern China
Winner: Andrew Kless, History, Infighting at the Front: Officers, Bureaucrats, and Politicians at War in German-Occupied Russian Poland, 1914-1915
Social Sciences
Winner: Zuheir Desai, Political Science, Elections and Voting in Developing Democracies
Natural Sciences
Winner: Philippe Lewalle, Physics, Quantum Trajectories and their Extremal–Probability Paths: New Phenomena and Applications
Winner: Georgios Alachouzos, Chemistry, Development of the Interrupted halo-Nazarov Reaction Methodology, Computational and Natural Product Synthesis Studies Towards Complex Halocyclopentenes
Engineering and Applied Sciences
Winner: Bochen Li, Electrical and Computer Engineering, Multi-modal Analysis for Music Performances
2018-2019
Humanities and Humanistic Social Sciences
Winner: Adam Stauffer, History, ““Is there any such thing as a California literature?” Literary Culture and Regional Identity in Nineteenth-Century California”
Commendation: Nicholas Knopf, English “Disability, Disease, and Dissent: Embodiment as Critique of British and American Empire from the Stamp Act Crisis to Manifest Destiny
Social Sciences
Winner: Courtney Ball, Psychology, “Differential Associations among Affective and Cognitive Empathy and Moral Judgments across Middle Childhood”
Winner: Judd Gleason, Political Science, “Essays on Democratic Institutions”
Natural Sciences
Winner: Cara Brand, Biology, “The Evolutionary Genetics of Recombination and Segregation in Drosophila”
Winner: Thomas Nevins, Physics, “Fronts and Filaments: Methods for Tracking and Predicting the Dynamical Effects of Advection on Excitable Reactions”
Engineering and Applied Sciences
Winner: Maureen Newman, Biomedical Engineering, “Bone-targeted Polymer Delivery of Osteoanabolics for Bone Regeneration”
Commendation: Rui Luo, Optics, “Nonlinear Nanophotonics in Lithium Niobate”
2017-2018
Humanities and Humanistic Social Sciences
Winner: Jenevive Nykolak, Visual and Cultural Studies, "Painting in Question, 1967-1981: “BMPT,” Supports/Surfaces, ja-na-pa"
Commendation: Kyle Robinson, History, "Body and Soul of Enlightenment: John Wesley, Methodism, and the Age of Reason"
Social Sciences
Winner: Brett Peters, Clinical and Social Sciences in Psychology, "The Consequences of Having an Insecure Partner: A Pre-Emptive Buffering Model"
Natural Sciences
Winner: Frank Garcea, Brain and Cognitive Sciences, "The Organization of Manipulable Object Concepts in the Human Brain"
Engineering and Applied Sciences
Winner: Chitraleema Chakraborty, Material Sciences, "Flatland Nanophotonics: A Study of Quantum Confined Excitons in 2D Materials"
Commendation: Joseph Izraelevitz, Computer Science, "Concurrency Implications of Nonvolatile Byte-Addressable Memory"
2016-2017
Humanities and Humanistic Social Sciences
Winner: Matthew Bayne, English, “Tarrying with Useless Things: Reparative Readings of Victorian Social Inequality” (Advisors: Bette London and Supritha Rajan)
Commendation: Mitchell Gruber, History, “The Degration of the Food Retail Landscape” (Advisor: Thomas Slaughter)
Social Sciences
Winner: Michael Gibilisco, Political Science, “Three Essays on Political Economy” (Advisor: Anastassios Kalandrakis)
Commendation: Marc Jambon, Clinical and Social Sciences in Psychology, “Moral Judgements and Aggression in Young Children: A Social Domain Approach to Conceptualizing Individual Differences in Early Moral Understanding” (Advisor: Judi Smetana)
Natural Sciences
Winner: Xiao Tian, Biology, “Identification of Longevity and Cancer Resistance Mechanisms in Long Lived Rodent Species” (Advisor: Vera Gorbunova)
Commendation: Dave Kleinschmidt, Brain and Cognitive Sciences, “Perception in a Variable but Structured World: The Case of Speech Perception” (Advisor: Florian Jaeger)
Engineering and Applied Sciences
Winner: Justin Schultz, Optics, “Singular Atom Optics Via Stimulated Raman Interactions in Spinor Bose-Einstein Condensates” (Advisor: Nicholas Bigelow)
Commendation: Andrew Shubin, Biomedical Engineering, “Poly (Ethylene Glycol) Hyrdogels for Salivary Gland Regeneration” (Advisor: Danielle Benoit)
2015-2016
Humanities and Humanistic Social Sciences
Winner: Ryan Cranmer Conrath, Visual and Cultural Studies, “Bodies in Between: The Corporeal Poetics of Montage” (Advisor: Rachel Haidu)
Commendation: Nikolaus Wasmoen, English, “Editorial Modernism: Eliot, Moore, Pound” (Advisors: Morris Eaves and Bette London)
Social Sciences
Winner: William Spaniel, Political Science, “Bargaining over the Bomb: The Successes and Failures of Nuclear Negotiations”(Advisor: Randall Stone)
Commendation: Rochelle F. Hentges, Clinical and Social Sciences in Psychology, “Toward Greater Specificity in Identifying the Developmental Consequences of a Risky Temperamental Phenotype: An Evolutionary Perspective” (Advisor: Patrick Davies)
Natural Sciences
Winner: Anthony Geneva, Biology, “Integrative Analyses of Speciation in Anolis Lizards” (Advisors: Richard Glor and Daniel Garrigan)
Engineering and Applied Sciences
Winner: Jonathan Langdon, Biomedical Engineering, “Development of Single Track Location Shear Wave Viscoelasticity Imaging for Real-Time Characterization of Biological Tissues” (Advisor: Stephen McAleavey)
Commendation: Naim Iftekhar, Computer Science, “Unsupervised Alignment of Natural Language with Video” (Advisor: Daniel Gildea)
Commendation: Robin Sharma, Optics, “In vivo Two Photon Ophthalmoscopy” (Advisors David Williams and Jennifer Hunter)
2014-2015
Humanities and Humanistic Social Sciences
Winner: Kyoung-Lae Kang, Visual and Cultural Studies, “Guilt Cinema: Memory, Boundaries, and Ethical Criticism in Postcolonial Korea” (Advisor: Sharon Willis)
Commendation: Jeffrey R. Ludwig, History, “Christopher Lasch: A Life, Volume One: History as Social Criticism” (Advisor: Robert Westbrook)
Social Sciences
Winner: Miguel Rueda, Political Science, “Three Essays on Electoral Manipulation” (Advisor: Gretchen Helmke)
Commendation: Heng Liu, Economics, “Essays on Dynamic Mechanism Design” (Advisors: Paulo Barelli and Srihari Govindan)
Commendation: Meredith J. Martin, Psychology, “Delineating the Functions of Attachment and Affiliation in Early Adolescents’ Internal Working Models of their Best Friendship” (Advisor: Patrick T. Davies)
Natural Sciences
Winner: James E. Baker, Physics, “Development of a Two-Dimensional Photonic Crystal Biosensing Platform” (Advisor: Benjamin L. Miller)
Commendation: Ilker Yildirim, Brain and Cognitive Sciences, “From Perception to Conception: Learning Multisensory Representations” (Advisors: Robert A. Jacobs and Daniel Gildea)
Engineering and Applied Sciences
Winner: Kyle Fuerschbach, Optics, “Freeform, φ-Polynomial Optical Surfaces: Optical Design, Fabrication and Assembly” (Advisor: Jannick Rolland)
Commendation: Li Chen, Electrical and Computer Engineering, “Increasing Coverage and Improving Efficiency for RFID Systems and Wireless Sensor Networks” (Advisor: Wendi Heinzelman)
Commendation: Walter S. Lasecki, Computer Science, “Crowd Agents: Interactive Intelligent Systems Powered by the Crowd” (Advisors: Jeffrey P. Bigham and James F. Allen)
Commendation: Amy H. Van Hove, Biomedical Engineering, “Enzymatically-responsive Poly(ethylene glycol) Hydrogels for the Controlled Delivery of Therapeutic Peptides” (Advisor: Danielle S.W. Benoit)
2013-2014
Humanities and Humanistic Social Sciences
Winner: Rebecca Burditt, Visual and Cultural Studies, “Commercial Moments: Cinema, Capital, and the Formation of Postwar American Identity” (Advisor: A. Joan Saab)
Commendation: Esther Arnold, English, “Entertaining Reformers: Social Reform and Recreation in American Literature and Silent Film, 1840-1915” (Advisor: John Michael)
Commendation: Michael J. Brown, History, “Experts, Eggheads, and Elites: Debating the Role of Intellectuals in American Political Culture, 1952-2008” (Advisor: Robert B. Westbrook)
Social Sciences
Winner: Jordan Silberman, Clinical and Social Sciences in Psychology, “Using Source-Localized EEG Operant Conditioning to Up-Regulate Neural Mechanisms Underlying Self-Control and Improve Self-Control Ability” (Advisor: Miron Zuckerman)
Commendation: Peter Haschke, Political Science, “Democracy and the Human Right to the Physical Integrity of the Person” (Advisor: G. Bingham Powell, Jr.)
Natural Sciences
Winner: Daniel A. Everson, Chemistry, “Nickel-Catalyzed Electrophile Cross-coupling of Aryl Halides with Alkyl Halides” (Advisor: Daniel J. Weix)
Commendation: Zhihuan Li, Biology, “The Role of Lipid Droplets in Regulating Histone Metabolism” (Advisor: Michael Welte)
Commendation: Kyoung Hee Kim, Physics, “Evolution of Protoplanetary Disks in the Orion A Star-Forming Region” (Advisor: Dan M. Watson)
Engineering and Applied Sciences
Winner: Luke K. Dalessandro, Computer Science, “Preserving the Appeal of Transactional Programming” (Advisor: Michael Scott)
Commendation: Ryan Beams, Optics, “Graphene Nanophotonics” (Advisor: Lukas Novotny)
Commendation: Mahesh B. Nagarajan, Biomedical Engineering, “A Framework for Computer-Aided Diagnosis with Novel Computational Methods for Characterizing Healthy and Pathological Soft Tissue Patterns on Medical Images” (Advisor: Axel Wismuller)
2012-2013
Humanities and Humanistic Social Sciences
Winner: Lucy Mulroney, Visual and Cultural Studies, "Andy Warhol, Publisher" (Advisors: Douglas Crimp and Rachel Haidu)
Commendation: Russell Sbriglia, English, "Dissensus Communis: Conservatism, Skepticism, and Sympathy in the American Renaissance" (Advisor: John Michael)
Social Sciences
Winner: Sonnette M. Bascoe, Clinical and Social Sciences in Psychology, “Beyond Phenotypical Forms of Family Behaviors: The Developmental Utility of a Boundary Conceptualization of Triadic Relationship Processes" (Advisor: Professor Patrick T. Davies)
Natural Sciences
Winner: Jesse Chvojka, Physics, “Anti-Neutrino Charged Current Quasi-Elastic Scattering in MINERνA” (Advisor: Kevin McFarland)
Commendation: Ruja Shrestha, Chemistry, “Transition-Metal-Catalyzed Cross-Coupling of Organic Halides With Enones” (Advisor: Daniel Weix)
Engineering and Applied Sciences
Winner: Kelley A. Garvin, Biomedical Engineering, “Ultrasound Technologies for the Spatial Patterning of Cells and Extracellular Matrix Proteins and the Vascularization of Engineered Tissue” (Advisors: Professor Diane Dalecki and Professor Denise C. Hocking)
Commendation: Curtis Menton, Computer Science, “Attacking and Defending Popular Election Systems” (Advisor: Lane A. Hemaspaandra)
2011-2012
Humanities and Humanistic Social Sciences
Winner: Kathryn Van Wert, English, "Wars of Inflection: Imperial Violence and the Modern Voice" (Advisor: James Longenbach)
Commendation: Kevin McCain, Philosophy, "Inference to the Best Explanation and the External World: A Defense of the Explanationist Response to Skepticism" (Advisors: Earl Conlee and Richard Feldman)
Social Sciences
Winner: Nicole Asmussen, Political Science, "Parties and Polarization in Congress: Causes and Consequences" (Advisor: Lawrence Rothenberg)
Natural Sciences
Winner: David Walker Loehlin, Biology, "Genetics of Size and Shape Evolution in Nasonia" (Advisor: John Werren)
Commendation: Manahloh Belachew Yihun, Earth and Environmental Sciences, "Dynamics of Dike Intrusions and 3D Velocity Structure Beneath an Incipient Seafloor Spreading Center in Afar, Ethiopia" (Advisor: Cindy Ebinger)
Commendation: Mayukh Lahiri, Physics, "Contributions to the Theories of Coherence and Polarization of Light” (Advisor: Emil Wolf)
Engineering and Applied Sciences
Winner: Berkehan Ciftcioglu, Electrical and Computer Engineering, "Intra-Chip Free-Space Optical Interconnect: System, Device, Integration and Prototyping" (Advisor: Hui Wu)
Winner: Ramkumar Sabesan, Optics, "Interaction Between Optical and Neural Factors Affecting Visual Performance" (Advisor: Geunyoung Yoon)
Commendation: Hsin-I Peng, Biomedical Engineering, "Engineering a Microfluidic DNA Biosensor on Nanostructured Ag Surfaces" (Advisor: Benjamin Miller)
2010-2011
Humanities and Humanistic Social Sciences
Winner: Leah Haught, English, “Toward an Aesthetics of Failure: Generic Expectation and Identity Formation in Middle English Arthuriana” (Advisor: Thomas Hahn)
Commendation: Nicola Mann, Visual and Cultural Studies, "The Death and Resurrection of Chicago's Public Housing in the American Visual Imagination" (Advisor: A. Joan Saab)
Social Sciences
Winner: Christian Houle, Political Science, “Inequality, Economic Development and Democracy” (Advisor: Randall Stone)
Commendation: Cheryl Carmichael, Clinical and Social Sciences in Psychology, "With a Little Help From My Friends: Long-term Self-perceived Health, Neuroendocrine, and Well-being Correlates of Early Adult Social Activity" (Advisor: Harry Reis)
Commendation: Vikram Manjunath, Economics, "Strategic and Normative Analysis of Resource Allocation Problems" (Advisor: William Thomson)
Natural Sciences
Winner: Curtis Broadbent, Physics, “Applications of High-Dimensional Photonic Entanglement” (Advisor: John C. Howell)
Commendation: Jeremy Rabinowitz, Biology, "Centrosome-Mediated RNA Segregation: a Novel Patterning Mechanism in Ilyanassa" (Advisor: J. David Lambert)
Engineering and Applied Sciences
Winner: Phil Brune, Mechanical Engineering, "The Mechanics of Imperial Roman Concrete and the Structural Design of Vaulted Monuments" (Advisor: Renato Perucchio)
Winner: Manuel Guizar, Optics, “Methods for Coherent Lensless Imaging and X-Ray Wavefront Measurement” (Advisor: James R. Fienup)
2009-2010
Humanities and Humanistic Social Sciences
Winner: Jeremy K. Saucier, History, “Mobilizing the Imagination: Army Advertising and the Politics of Culture in Post-Vietnam America” (Advisor: Robert B. Westbrook)
Social Sciences
Winner: Martin C. Steinwand, Political Science, “The Political Economy of Foreign Aid” (Advisor: Randall Stone)
Natural Sciences
Winner: Lisa Carlson, Chemistry, “Photophysics of Individual Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes” (Advisor: Todd D. Krauss)
Commendation: Zhiyong Mao, Biology, “Roles of Cancer, Aging, Cell Cycle and Telomere Associated Proteins in Mammalian DNA Double Strand Break Repair” (Advisor: Todd D. Krauss)
Engineering and Applied Sciences
Winner: Anand Jha, Optics, “Coherence Properties of the Entangled Two-Photon Field Produced by Parametric Down-Conversion” (Advisor: Robert W. Boyd)
Winner: Michael F. Spear, Computer Science, “Fast Software Transactions” (Advisor: Michael L. Scott)
2008-2009
Humanities and Humanistic Social Sciences
Winner: Emily Huber, English, "For Y am sorwe, and sorwe ys Y": Melancholy, Despair, and Pathology in Middle English Literature" (Advisor: Thomas Hahn)
Social Sciences
Winner: Matthew Platt, Political Science, "The Normalization of Black Politics" (Advisor: Richard Niemi)
Natural Sciences
Winner: Benjamin A. Sargent, Physics, "Spitzer IRS Spectroscopic Studies of Dust Composition of Protoplanetary Disks" (Advisor: William J. Forrest)
Winner: Nitin Phadnis, Biology, "The Molecular Basis of Dominance and The Role of Genetic Conflict in Speciation in Drosophila" (Advisors: H. Allen Orr and James D. Fry)
Engineering and Applied Sciences
Winner: Dongxia Liu, Chemical Engineering, "Engineering Particle Morphology and Assembly for Proton Conducting Fuel Cell Membrane Applications" (Advisor: Matthew Z. Yates)