Enterprise Magazine Charging Up That Hill Ninety-Second Battery Fill-Ups. All-Day Range. Unparalleled Safety. UMD Researchers Are Working to Power Up TVs and Save the Planet. In This Issue Frontiers 2 New Institute to Focus on Ethical AI Development 3 With AI, Geographers Map Unexploded Ordnance on UkraineÕs Front Lines 3 Math Class Gets a Machine Learning Boost 4 Up in the AirÑWithout Leaving the Ground 4 Major Federal Research Partnerships 5 PhilanthropyÕs Role Grows in Journalism 5 Cold Facts About Warm Fuzzies 6 In the Shadow of History 7 Researchers Help Minor Leaguers Swing for the Fences 7 UMD Research Enterprise Smashes Funding Record in FY23 8 Growing the Future of Fertilizer 8 UMD Leads New Transportation-Focused Research Centers 9 NeurotoxinsÕ Unequal Toll 9 Grant Launches Multistate Environmental Justice Initiative 10 QLab Opens as Quantum Research Hub 10 Letting the Hot Air Out of Climate Change Misinformation 11 Unpacking Anxiety-Fueled Alcohol Misuse 11 Apples, Adapted 12 Research in Action Builds Climate Shield for State Residents 13 $1.4M Mellon Foundation Grant Expands Black Digital Humanities 13 UMD Analysis: Cut Methane Emissions Now to Slow Climate Change Deep Dive 14 Hair, Hair for Equity in Neuroscience Research 16 Deep in a South Dakota Gold Mine, UMD Physicists Prospect for Dark Matter MPowering Maryland 18 Roads to Recovery 19 Seed Grant Sparks Project on Domestic Terrorism Policies 19 UMDÕs SAFE Center Expands Training Program for Human Trafficking Survivors Groundbreakers 30 Accolades 32 Moving Beyond ÒGetting ToughÓ 35 Bookshelf 37 Archives of Science Features 20 // Charging Up That Hill Ninety-second battery fill-ups. All-day range. Unparalleled safety. UMD researchers are powering up EVs to save the planet. 26 // Growing Resilience From the Ground, Up Ugandan-born geographer Catherine Nakalembe links satellites and on-the-ground monitoring to help African farmers weather extreme events. 26 Learn more about the University of MarylandÕs diverse, dynamic research enterprise at research.umd.edu. 14 New Institute to Focus on Ethical AI Development UMD to Lead Interdisciplinary Research and Education, Prepare Future Workforce he University of Maryland this spring announced the launch of a new institute dedicated to devel.oping the next generation of artificial intelligence education, technology and leaders. Its new AI Interdisciplinary Institute at Maryland will be a hub for AI, supporting faculty research, offering hands-on learning experiences and focusing on responsible, ethical development and use of a technology expected to be revolutionaryÑall to advance the public good across industry, government and society. ÒArtificial intelligence continues to grow exponentially, creating opportunities to solve the grand challenges of our time. With this institute, our experts will work together to globally lead responsible AI development that spurs economic growth and promotes human well-being,Ó says UMD President Darryll J. Pines. ÒWeÕre not just adapting to the AI age but shaping its future.Ó The new institute will be funded by the university, research grants and industry gifts. It builds on existing research and centers, including the Center for Machine Learning, the National Science Foundation-funded Institute for Trustworthy AI in Law & Society (TRAILS), the Value-Centered AI Initiative and the Social Data Science Center. These centers will be an integral part of the institute, as will faculty members across campus who teach and study AI. ÒFrom the start, collaboration across disciplines will drive our AI instituteÕs success,Ó says UMD Senior Vice President and Provost Jennifer King Rice. ÒWeÕre fortunate to have AI experts in fields rangingÊfrom computer science and engineering, to journalism, education and the artsÑa unique breadth of expertise that Maryland brings to the table. By uniting our efforts under one institute, we will not only become a magnet for AI development and research but a global leader in preparing students and the workforce for an AI-infused world.Ó Through the institute, UMD students across all majors will learn the principles of AI and how they apply to their fields of study, preparing them for an AI-infused workforce. The institute will also coordinate the development of new degrees and expanded courses in the subject, a professional certificate and other workforce devel.opment programs, and AI partnerships and community events. In addition to the current 100-plus faculty members who conduct a broad range of AI research, the university expects to hire additional faculty and staff to work within the institute. Hal DaumŽ III, a Volpi-Cupal Family Endowed Professor in the Department of Computer Science, will serve as the inaugural institute director. AI-infused systems have the potential to enhance human capacity and creativity, mitigate complex societal challenges, and foster innovation, DaumŽ says. ÒAchieving this requires a joint effort between those pushing the boundaries of new AI technologies, those who innovate AI appli.cations, and those who study human values and how people and society interact with AI,Ó he says. ÒThe University of Maryland is drawing together faculty experts, researchers and students from across campus to lead the responsible development and implemen.tation of this world-changing technology.Ó T PHOTO VIA ISTOCK With AI, Geographers Map Unexploded Ordnance on UkraineÕs Front Lines INDISCRIMINATE SHELLING during RussiaÕs ongoing invasion of Ukraine seeded farm fields and towns with untold numbers of unexploded munitions. University of Maryland geographical sciences researchers have combined satellite imagery with deep learning artificial intelligence (AI) to find them and prevent a deadly harvest. Their system has mapped about 2.5 million artillery strike craters in a 500-mile arc to prioritize areas for cleanup when the tides of battle allow. Up to an estimated 30% of the Soviet-era artillery shells land without exploding, says Associate Professor Sergii Skakun, co-author of a paper on the system published in June 2023 in Science of Remote Sensing. Farmers face a choice between bankruptcy and the risk of hitting one with their tractors, says the Ukrainian scientist who studies agricultural and environmental conditions. He and co-author Erik Duncan, a Department of Geographical Sciences faculty specialist, trained a deep learning AI system to pinpoint artillery impacts visible in high-resolution satellite imagery. Then, using commercial data from Planet LabsÕ SkySat and MaxarÕs WorldView satellitesÑwhich resolve details as small as 30 centimetersÑit quickly identifies areas likely bristling with unexploded ordnance. ÒWe can provide this valuable information to the (demining) operators and the government they couldnÕt get by themselves, and help save lives,Ó Skakun says.ÑCC Math Class Gets a Machine Learning Boost ALONG WITH the traditional ingredients of a good lesson planÑteacher preparation and an effective curriculumÑsupport from artificial intelligence (AI) is part of the mix in a new project funded by a $1.5 million grant from the National Science Foundation that includes UMD researchers. The multi-institutional team is using machine learning AI to assess the quality of mathematics lesson plans in the middle grades, freeing up teachers to do what they do best. ÒA big promise of AI is that it will help relieve teachers from many routine tasks, including lesson planning, so they can spend more time working with students,Ó says Jing Liu, UMD assistant professor of education policy. Other collaborators include College of Information Studies Assistant Professor Wei Ai and faculty from the University of Washington, the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Duquesne University.ÑCC ILLUSTRATION BY CHARLENE PROSSER CASTILLO; PHOTO VIA ISTOCK Major Federal Research Partnerships Two large cooperative agreements created or renewed U.S. government collaborations with UMD in science and technology: DRIVEN BY DATA The Army Research Lab (ARL) has tapped the University of Maryland for an ambitious effort to integrate data science and engineering on a sweeping array of projects, ranging from a Òsmart noseÓ to sniff out hazardous materials to lightning-quick ÒfingerprintingÓ of cell phones and other radio-emitting devices. ARL awarded the A. James Clark School of Engineering a five-year, $78.2 million cooperative agreement to spearhead the Data Driven Engineering Research program.ÑCB REGULATORY MUSCLE The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has renewed its funding for the University of Maryland Center of Excellence in Regulatory Science and Innovation (M-CERSI) under a new five-year, $50 million cooperative agreement. M-CERSI, a partnership between the University of Maryland, College Park and the University of Maryland, Baltimore, focuses on improving the evaluation of medical devices. The center collaborates with the FDA on approximately 30 research projects, including those for drugs, biologics, devices and tobacco. Up in the AirÑWithout Leaving the Ground LabÕs New Immersive Flight Simulator Will Test the Rigors of Flight for Safer Skies N A RECENT DAY in College Park, a Sikorsky S-76 sheared the golden arches clean off a McDonaldÕs. But no harm was doneÑto Big Macs, bystanders or the $20 million helicopter. This crash-and-burn scenario took place only in virtual reality (VR), enabled by the Extended Reality Flight Simulation and Control Lab launched at UMD in Spring 2023. ItÕs the first U.S. university-based facility to reproduce flight in various aircraft through motion-based VR simulation and haptics, which provide tactile feedback like rumbling and vibrations. ÒOur objective is to increase immersion and recreate scenarios that are difficult to simulate otherwise,Ó says aerospace engineering Assistant Professor Umberto Saetti, who founded and directs the lab, Òand ultimately, increase flight safety.Ó Unlike conventional flight simulators, which train users for a single type or class of aircraft, the skyÕs the limit here, from Black Hawk helicopters to an F-18 fighter jet. Sights and sounds of flight are fed through VR goggles and headphones; the team is also testing a full-body haptic feedback suit to explore new methods for providing sensory cues to help navigate low-visibility situations, hostile flight scenarios, or to assist visually impaired pilots. SaettiÕs team is conducting research for the U.S. Defense Department, NASA and Lockheed Martin, which together provided the lab with $2.19 million in funding in 2023. In the future, the researchers plan to monitor brain activity and track stress and other human responses to flight. Someday, the labÕs innovations could enable more difficult missions without compromising safety. ÒOur job is to come up with and demonstrate new ideas, then the companies can do the rest,Ó says Saetti.ÑMH O PHOTO BY JOHN T. CONSOLI PhilanthropyÕs Role Grows in Journalism Study Suggests More Funding Heightens Ethical Considerations PHILANTHROPIC FUNDING of American journalism has grown substantially in the past five years, particularly for outlets serving communities of color, according to an August 2023 study co-authored by a University of Maryland professor. At the same time, the survey of grantmaking institutions and newsrooms found the need for more newsrooms to disclose donors and adopt clear policies to protect editorial independence and public confidence. ÒTo earn and keep the publicÕs trust, funders and news organizations should agree on clear and universal guidelines to protect against conflicts of interest,Ó says Tom Rosenstiel, the Eleanor Merrill Professor on the Future of Journalism at UMDÕs Philip Merrill College of Journalism and a senior fellow at NORC at the University of Chicago. The NORC survey, conducted in partnership with Media Impact Funders and the Lenfest Institute for Journalism, found about 70% of nonprofit newsrooms have policies to disclose funders, up from 40% in 2015. On the funder side, 74% focus on specific topics, and 65% said they prefer to support nonprofit journalism over for-profit news. Cold Facts About Warm Fuzzies Researchers Examine Power of Responses to Social Media ÔÕCutenessÕÕ COULD A KITTEN in your Instagram feed sway your cereal choice? If the cat has saucer-sized eyes and teeters on a wobbling box of frosted carbs, you might just add it to your shopping list, say UMD researchers aiming to understand why a social media post makes us go Òawwww,Ó and how that influences actions and beliefs. ItÕs part of UMDÕs Applied Research Laboratory for Intelligence and SecurityÕs (ARLIS) Emotions in Social Media Project, a multidisciplinary effort examining how emotions influence the spread of information cam.paigns. The project received funding from the U.S. Department of Defense Minerva Research Initiative and the Office of Naval Research. ÒAs enjoyable as it is to discover in your Twitter feed, we know cuteness is also used to deliberately manipulate your feelingsÑand it works,Ó says Susannah Paletz, associate professor in the College of Information Studies and principal investigator. The study, published in March 2023 in Frontiers in Psychology, offers 15 quantifiable attributes, including visual characteristics, behavior and linguistic cues, to create what researchers call a Cuteness Attributes Taxonomy (CAT). Annotators used it to code over 1,800 social posts, and their emotional responses were also measured. The team, including lead author Associate Research Scientist Ewa Golonka, is digging deeper into the implications of CAT-related findings, as well as those resulting from newly developed measures of emotional reactions to media. The questions have potentially far larger implications than cereal choice: Can an online cuteness onslaught get you to click ÒlikeÓ or ÒshareÓ even if the underlying message isnÕt cute at all?ÑMH TOP PHOTO: ALEKSANDAR GEORGIEV, GETTY IMAGES; BOTTOM PHOTO: AUSTIN WILCOX VIA UNSPLASH In the Shadow of History At Robert E. LeeÕs Former Residence, Researcher Opens the Door to Overlooked Legacies HE VIEW FROM Arlington House, Robert E. LeeÕs former home perched atop Arlington National Cemetery, is both majestic and mournful: D.C.Õs monumental skyline stands in the distance, while a sea of Union and Confederate Army gravestones just steps from the Southern generalÕs front door serves as a reckoning and reminder of the Civil WarÕs human cost. But itÕs whatÕs hidden from view that occupies Associate Research Professor Cheryl LaRoche Ph.D. Õ04. The archae.ologist and historic preservationist is piecing together the stories of Arlington HouseÕs enslaved workers, whose contri.butions to the wealth of a nation are often overlooked. ÒYou canÕt talk about this house without talking about enslavement,Ó she says. ÒThere is not a space among this mansion that an enslaved person did not touch.Ó Arlington House was built on VirginiaÕs side of the Potomac River in 1802 to memorialize George Washington and house a collection of his artifacts. The first example of Greek Revival architecture in America, it was passed down to LeeÕs wife, Mary, four years before Virginia seceded from the United States. After the war, the U.S. government took ownership of Arlington House; the National Park Service (NPS) received jurisdiction in 1933. NPS and Arlington House descendants hired LaRoche and her team in 2022 to lead an ethnographic history of the mansion. Uncovering the lives of the enslaved is a fraught process, says LaRoche, who has consulted on dozens of projects around the 19th-century Black experience. In the chaos of the Civil War, records were often destroyed or scattered, if they ever existed. Some enslaved bore no last names, and families were frequently broken up as owners died, acquired more land or sold the individuals as chattel. ÒItÕs the perfect crime scene because theyÕve wiped the murder weapon clean,Ó she says. ÒThereÕs no pathway for what weÕre doing here.Ó LaRoche and her team are tenacious, though, using oral histories, tombstones, photographs, written documentation and landscape mappingÑa protocol for ethnography she developed for her disser.tation at UMDÑto tell a broader, more inclusive story. That story might help spur major changes at the house. In recent years, descendants of Robert E. Lee, as well as the Parks, Grays and SyphaxesÑenslaved people who worked thereÑhave come together to petition a name change from Arlington House, The Robert E. Lee Memorial to simply Arlington House. ÒI think when you call it the Arlington House, youÕre just opening it up to more of the families who lived there,Ó Rob Lee, Robert E. LeeÕs great-great-grandson, told NPR last April. ÑMH T PHOTO VIA WIKI COMMONS MEDIA Researchers Help Minor Leaguers Swing for the Fences New AI-Powered Analytical Model Tracks Baseball PlayersÕ Path to the Big Show MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL teams draft roughly 1,500 prospects annually, but less than 20% eventually make the jump to the majors. Building on statistical ideas and methods popularized in the 2003 book ÒMoneyball,Ó University of Maryland researchers may help more of them get there. Their study in the 2023 edition of Analytics Enabled Decision Making provides a tool for minor leaguers to identify aspects of their game they must improve to boost their shot at the big leagues. Sharing a passion for baseball, Chung-Hao Lee M.S. Õ22, MBA Õ22 and Adam Lee, associate clinical professor of information systems in the Robert H. Smith School of Business, used machine learning artificial intelligence to analyze performance stats and other data of players drafted from 2001-10 and test models predicting their likelihood of reaching the majors. The researchers determined four significant factors contributing to playersÕ devel.opment: batting average, slugging percentage, draft position and overall time spent in the minors. ÒÔMoneyballÕ taught us that the important factor in deciding whether a player can be called up to the major leagues is their on-base percentage,Ó says Chung-Hao Lee, now an arti.ficial intelligence and machine learning project manager at Winstron in Taiwan. ÒBut based on our model, we found that the batting average is way more important to decide whether the player can be called up.ÓÑPS UMD Research Enterprise Smashes Funding Record in FY23 MAJOR AWARDS from NASA and the Department of Defense headlined a 23% surge in funding to $834 million for research and related activities last year, but no single factor fueled the record growth, says Gregory F. Ball, vice president for research at UMD. The topline number, he suggests, reflects the energy and innovation of UMDÕs faculty and staff researchers in their drive to solve major societal issues and uncover new knowledge, along with continued work to strengthen ties with major sponsors. $800M $700M $600M $500M $400M $300M $200M $100M $0M FY14 FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY22 FY23 PHOTO VIA AP PHOTO/DAVID J. PHILLIP Growing the Future of Fertilizer Scientists Explore Transforming Poultry Waste to Prevent Aquatic ÒDead ZonesÓ BACKED BY A $4.8 million grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), University of Maryland agriculture researchers are working with partners to develop a more sustainable fertilizerÑone thatÕs safer for aquatic ecosystems than traditional alternatives and could even help fight climate change. Standard fertilizers like poultry litter, a nutrient-rich mixture of chicken waste, feathers and bedding, boost crop growth but cause excess phosphorus and nitrogen runoff into streams. That leads to algal blooms and oxygen-poor Òdead zonesÓ in the Chesapeake Bay and other water bodies worldwide. The new research focuses on converting the poultry litter into a material known as ÒbiocharÓ through a process called pyrolysis: a slow, controlled burn at extremely high temperatures in the absence of any oxygen, result.ing in a powdery end product high in carbon and other nutrients essential to crop growth while cutting excess nutrient runoff. The four-year project, which includes scientists from Florida A&M University, the University of Florida and the University of California, Davis, will focus on optimizing the process and determin.ing how to best apply it to soils. ÒThe technology is there, and companies are already commercially producing biochar, so we want to improve the science, make definitive recommen.dations for farmers, and make its use more prevalent than it is now,Ó says Rohan Tikekar, an associate professor and extension specialist in the Department of Nutrition and Food Science who is leading UMDÕs team.ÑLW UMD Leads New Transportation-Focused Research Centers EXPERTS IN THE Maryland Transportation Institute and the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and their partners at UMD and worldwide are working to address some of the greatest transportation-related challenges of our time: The U.S. Department of Transportation chose the University of Maryland to lead a multi-institu.tional center aimed at improving the mobility of people and goods across the country as part of a growing federal focus on transportation safety and equity. UMD and partner institutions will receive $10 million over five years for the Center for Multi-Modal Mobility in Urban, Rural, and Tribal Areas through the U.S. Department of TransportationÕs SDOT University Transportation Centers (UTCs) Program. The university and its partners at JapanÕs University of Tsukuba and Delft University, Netherlands launched the new Digital and Cyber Railway Engineering and Operations Center based at UMD to help the rail industry bring high-tech tools, including quantum technology, to bear to secure this crucial part of the nationÕs transportation system. The center aims to fight ransomware and other cyberattacks aimed at rail infrastructure of the type that have snarled operations in recent yearsÑand prevent even more serious catastrophic ones. TOP PHOTO BY EDWIN REMSBERG; BOTTOM PHOTO VIA ISTOCK Grant Launches Multistate Environmental Justice Initiative A $2.2 MILLION GRANT is supporting a University of Maryland-led effort to address the effects of environmental racism and climate change. The Mid-Atlantic Climate Action Hub (MATCH) builds connections across Washington, D.C., Maryland, Virginia, Delaware and Pennsylvania, targeting communities disproportionately experiencing the negative effects of climate change because of historic disenfranchisement, coupled with proximity to environmental hazards. Funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, MATCH is led by the Center for Community Engagement, Environmental Justice and Health, directed by Professor Sacoby Wilson in the School of Public Health. Organizing partners include the University of Maryland Environmental Finance Center; Namati, an environmental organization Òdedicated to putting the power of law in the hands of people;Ó and the Mid-Atlantic Justice Coalition.ÑKB NeurotoxinsÕ Unequal Toll Sweeping UMD-Led Review Finds Greater Disparities in Environmental Harm Across Racial, Class Lines HILDREN OF COLOR and those from low-income families are disproportionately exposed to neurotoxic chemicals, resulting in greater harm to brain development and more developmental delays, according to a review of five decades of studies co-led by a University of Maryland researcher. The expansive review, covering more than 200 studies of children up to age 18 in the United States, showed how discriminatory practices and policies have exposed families to chemical hazards Òwhere they live, work, play, pray and learn,Ó says environmental health Associate Professor Devon Payne-Sturges, one of the lead authors of the September 2023 publication in Environmental Health Perspectives. ÒTheir neighborhoods are more likely to be located near factories, chemical plants, Superfund sites, highways and more vehicle traffic or by agricultural fields where pesticides are applied.Ó The review also found that when these exposures are reduced, health disparities fall. Among key findings from the environmental health studies spanning 1974 to 2022: ¥ Low-income and Black children had higher exposures to lead than children from higher-income families and white children. ¥ Children in communities of color and low-income communities were dispropor.tionately exposed to air pollution. ¥ Black and Hispanic children were exposed to higher levels of organophosphate pesticides widely used in agriculture. ¥ Black and Hispanic mothers had higher levels of phthalates, chemicals used in food packaging, personal care products and elsewhere that suffuse our environment. ¥ Babies living in economically disinvested neighborhoods and exposed to air pollution in their first year of life were more likely to be diagnosed with autism than those in higher-income neighborhoods. The review co-authors are all affiliates of Project TENDR (Targeting Environmental Neuro-Development Risks), an alliance of more than 50 scientists, health professionals and advocates working to protect children from toxic chemicals and pollutants that harm brain development.ÑAE C PHOTO AND ILLUSTRATION VIA ISTOCK Frontiers QLab Opens as Quantum Research Hub Partnership With IonQ Offers Researchers, Students, Professionals Access to Cutting-Edge Hardware THE UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND in September announced the grand opening of the National Quantum Laboratory (QLab), a groundbreaking research center developed in partnership with College Park-based IonQ, a leader in the quantum computing industry. The QLab enables people from across the nation and around the globe to work with one of the worldÕs most powerful quantum computers alongside leading experts in efforts to address some of the most complex challenges of our time. Located at the companyÕs headquarters in UMDÕs Discovery District, this workspace aims to build the next generation of quantum talent and innovations and further establish the region as the Capital of Quantum. U.S. Sen. Ben Cardin of Maryland told attendees that the university-company partnership is a step toward building quan.tum computing as a necessary societal tool. ÒThis is important for Maryland and the University of Maryland, but what youÕre doing here today is critically important to AmericaÕs future and quite frankly, the global future,Ó Cardin says. Thanks to a nearly $20 million UMD investment that fueled the facilityÕs opening, the QLab collaboration enables exploration of quantum computingÕs role in improving AI, materials discovery, supply chain logistics, climate modeling, cybersecurity and more. ÒWe cannot fully imagine where quantum computing will take us in the future, but we do know the collaborations made possible through the QLab will be essential to moving the field forward and reaching the life-alter.ing discoveries we seek,Ó says UMD President Darryll J. Pines (below, center). Letting the Hot Air Out of Climate Change Misinformation UMD Researchers Partner With Teachers to Develop KidsÕ Critical and Scientific Thinking Skills DEMONSTRABLY FALSE online claims about climate change are as common as melting glaciers, starting with, ÒClimate change canÕt be realÑitÕs cold out today!Ó How can young people in particular learn to separate credible, evidence-based information from claims that are biased, intentionally misleading or just plain wrong? Funded by the National Science Foundation, University of Maryland researchers are partnering with teachers in three states to answer that question. TheyÕre developing classroom materials that help students cultivate skillsÑincluding the ability to evaluate evidence and sources, make reasoned claims and collaborate respect.fullyÑthat are key to finding solutions to issues like the climate crisis. The work represents a third phase in the $5.7 million project, which launched 11 years ago. ÒWe hope to help stu.dents become better informed citizens and give them tools they can use to engage in critical and scientific thinking,Ó says Doug Lombardi, associate professor in the College of Education and project leader. Lombardi and Sarah McGrew, an assistant professor in the College of Education, are leading a national team of five master teachers to create materials for middle and high schools, and began testing the materials during the 2023-24 school year.ÑES PHOTO BY STEPHANIE S. CORDLE; ILLUSTRATION BY VALERIE MORGAN Unpacking Anxiety-Fueled Alcohol Misuse $3.1M NIH Award Focuses Neuroimaging, Computational Tools on Daily Lives of Heavy Drinkers ITH ABOUT HALF of middle-aged adults reporting they sometimes drink for stress relief, a UMD psychology researcher is delving into the factors governing anxiety-fueled drinking with support from a five-year, $3.1 million award from the National Insti.tute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA). Led by Alexander Shackman, an associate professor of psychology, the study uses a combination of brain imaging tools and data gathered via smartphone surveys to clarify the neurobiological mechanisms of the phenomenon in a racially diverse sample of participants. Social anxiety is a strong predictor of alcohol use disorder, but how this relates to drinking in daily life is not fully understood, says Shackman. ÒThe new grant from NIAAA will allow us to study the neural circuits that orchestrate states of fear and anxiety in the lab and the everyday experiences of heavy drinkers as they navigate their daily lives,Ó he says. ÒFusing the brain imaging and smartphone data streams will enable us to test the relevance of the brain circuits we identify in the scanner to stress- and relief- motivated drinking in the real world.Ó Alcohol misuse is a leading cause of human misery, morbidity and mortality. Approximately 14% of deaths worldwide among 20- to 39-year- olds are attributable to alcohol, according to the World Health Organization. Past work by the Shackman lab has assessed what takes place in the brain given the danger or risk posed by a threat. Now, the team will render a fuller picture of anxiety by isolating the neural circuits activated by ambiguous threats. ShackmanÕs co-investigators include Senior Faculty Specialist Kathryn DeYoung and Research Associate Jason Smith, along with collaborators from the University of California, Davis, University of Wisconsin-Madison and the California National Primate Center.ÑNU W Apples, Adapted New Fruit From UMD Could Weather Changing Climate, Labor Shortages to Boost Grower Profits HEREÕS A CRISP rejoinder to climate change: Through careful crossbreeding and selection, University of Maryland researchers have developed what might be the perfect apples for American growers. The two new apples, a yellow and a red one, are heat- tolerant, blight-tolerant, low-maintenance, easy to harvest and not least, delicious-tasting. Both received final patent grants from the U.S. Patent Office in late 2023. They address a growing suite of problems for the apple industry. While the fruit has always been labor-intensive, apple farming has been among the hardest-hit parts of the agriculture sector, with severe labor shortages and unusual weather conditions increasing as climate change progresses. The UMD teamÕs new apple trees could help farmers sidestep these obstacles, with hardier apples that grow on shorter trees to facilitate harvest. ÒThese trees require a lot less hand labor compared to apples that are available to growers now,Ò says Chris Walsh, profes.sor emeritus in the Department of Plant Science and Landscape Architecture who developed the new apples with colleagues Julia Harshman and Kathleen Hunt.ÑKC ILLUSTRATIONS VIA ISTOCK Research in Action Builds Climate Shield for State Residents New Mesonet System Funded by State, UMD Grand Challenges Grant NIVERSITY OF MARYLAND researchers and state and federal government officials gathered in late October to hoist a 30-foot tower into place in a central Maryland farm field, activating the first piece of a statewide system to speed early warnings of dangerous weather. The Maryland Mesonet, a partnership between UMD and the state Department of Emergency Management (MDEM), will feature more than 70 towers at approxi.mately 10-mile intervals. The system is scheduled for completion in fiscal 2025, with approximately two towers per week being installed as of spring 2024. Every minute, they send data on temperature, wind, precipitation, soil moisture and more, augmenting National Weather Service data collection and allowing state emergency personnel to stay abreast of rapidly developing storms. The project was funded with a $4 million state investment announced in 2022 at UMD. The inaugural tower was erected at UMDÕs Central Maryland Research and Education Center, located a few miles west of Ellicott CityÕs historic downtown. Heavy rains twice in recent years caused violent flash floods that took lives and destroyed buildings in the city. ÒThe Mesonet will protect Marylanders from extreme wind and water harm by advancing emergency preparedness and the accuracy of regional weather forecasts,Ó says Sumant Nigam, the projectÕs leader and atmospheric and oceanic science chair. ÒThe University of Maryland will provide Marylanders insightful information on severe weather and climate variability and change that will benefit the stateÕs agriculture, tourism and transportation sectors, among others.Ó Beyond allowing communities to respond more quickly to impending wind and water dangers, the system enables farmers to make better decisions on planting and other activities, providing increased information about metrics like soil moisture to State Climatologist Alfredo Ruiz-Barradas, an associate research professor in atmospheric and oceanic science at UMD who provides regular agriculture reports. The Mesonet is part of a project supported by a $3 million Grand Challenges Institutional Grant from UMD. The overall initiative works to leverage the latest scientific tools and discoveries in various fields to meet the existential threats of climate change in Maryland. Like the $30 million Grand Challenges Grants program, the Maryland Mesonet is taking proactive steps to solving difficult societal problemsÑand doing it in the interdisciplinary way demanded by the complexity of those problems. ÒAs EarthÕs climate undergoes accelerating changes, weather forecasting only gets tougher. Getting it right quickly is crucial to the safety of people in this region as well as farmersÕ ability to feed the world,Ó says UMD President Darryll J. Pines. ÒThis state-of-the-art system, coupled with our work with local, state and federal officials, makes our state a better place to live for all Marylanders.ÓÑCC U PHOTO BY JOHN T. CONSOLI $1.4M Mellon Foundation Grant Expands Black Digital Humanities New Round of Funding Supports Scholarship, Training and Community Building A THREE-YEAR, $1.4 million grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation is sparking an expansion of research at the intersection of digital studies, digital humanities and Black studiesÑall part of the next phase of the African American Digital and Experimental Humanities Initiative (AADHum) at the University of Maryland. The grant allows the College of Arts and Humanities (ARHU) and UMDÕs Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities to offer a range of programs for scholars and artists studying Black life and digital and experimental storytelling and design. Mellon previously awarded $1.25 million in 2015 and $2 million in 2019 for the initiative. ÒGiven that Black studies is so inter.disciplinary, AADHum has become a space where many different kinds of energy can converge to produce truly exciting new work,Ó says Marisa Parham, a professor of English and the initiativeÕs principal investigator. With a focus on hands-on practice as a path to humanities inquiry, AADHum affiliates and grantees have produced websites, podcasts, social media storytelling, digital essays, games, digital publications and more since its 2017 launch. The initiativeÕs offerings include microgrants for students, workshops and humanities/design programs. ÒThis work really is in the service of a larger vision for more dynamic, inclusive and just approaches to knowledge production, which is more important than ever,Ó says ARHU Dean Stephanie Shonekan.ÑJW UMD Analysis: Cut Methane Emissions Now to Slow Climate Change 30% Reduction Would Limit Global Temperature Rise in Coming Decades REDUCING METHANE EMISSIONS over the next 12 yearsÑparticularly from oil and gasÑis the most quickly deployable mitigation strat.egy available to reduce climate risk, a analysis from the Center for Global Sustainability (CGS) at the University of Maryland reveals. Released near the start of the United Nations Climate Change Conference in November 2023, the analysis supported by Bloomberg Philanthropies demonstrates that methane can make up nearly half of the needed emissions progress until 2030. However, if governments fail to slash methane emissions by 30% by 2030, then the world will reach a 1.5¡C increase sooner than it would otherwise, experience a more prolonged period above that threshold, and increase the risk of tipping-point disruptions of sea level rise or oceanic temperatures. Unlike CO2 emissions that linger for centuries, methaneÕs 10-year lifespan means reducing it can rapidly curb the short-term rate of global temperature warming, which is a crucial factor. ÒOur research shows that the maximum and immediate methane abatement is crucial to limiting global temperature increases and achieving global climate goals over the next 15 years,Ó says Nathan Hultman, CGS director and co-author of the report.ÑSK TOP PHOTOS COURTESY OF THE AFRICAN AMERICAN DIGITAL AND EXPERIMENTAL HUMANITIES INITIATIVE; BOTTOM ILLUSTRATION VIA ISTOCK ACHEL ROMEO, a UMD assis.tant professor of education, shines a light on kidsÕ early developmentÑliterally. Using a technique called Functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS), she beams light into the brain from sensors on a stretchy black cap, pinpointing blood flow to measure brain activity. That light, she knows, canÕt easily pene.trate Afro-textured hair, which is dark and densely curled. Yet her focus is on socioeco.nomic disparities in learning and develop.ment, so she had to find a way to work with kids from all backgrounds to conduct her study. ÒMost of the time in neuroscience research, if you canÕt get a good signal from a participant, you just exclude them or you throw that data away,Ó says Romeo, who directs the Language, Experience, and Development (LEAD) Lab. ÒThis contributes to underrepresentation.Ó More than 70% of research participants in the U.S. are white, and as a white woman, Romeo didnÕt know where to turn to learn how to change that dynamic. So she put out an ad for a lab assistant to braid Black hairÑand serendipitously, Abria Simmons Õ25 had just declared a human development minor and enrolled in one of RomeoÕs classes. She wasnÕt a professional, but had learned from generations of women in her family and was eager to help increase Black representation in neuroscience. ÒThereÕs a lot of distrust in African American communities of medical research because of the neglect of African American bodies in earlier research studies, so itÕs really important that they feel comfortable enough to be included today,Ó says Sim.mons (below, left), an aspiring counseling psychologist for kids and teens. Now, sheÕs heading the effort to develop best practices for braiding and styling Afro-textured hair for fNIRS neuroimaging. She initially conducted a literature review but only found a few recommendations for EEG caps, which work differently than fNIRS. So she turned to Black barbers and hairstylists for tips, then started recruiting volunteers so she could experiment on their hair before the start of RomeoÕs trials with 3- and 4-year-olds. ÒThis has been a real friends-and-family project for me,Ó Simmons says. Through.out the summer of 2023, she brought five participants, including her brother and best friend. She first tried cornrows, which sheÕs most familiar with, braiding them in differ.ent patterns to avoid the optodes (sensors) on the cap. She soon determined that the most successful braiding style involves creating a middle part, then braiding from the center of the scalp down toward the ears. With different curl and hair-growth patterns, however, itÕs not a one-size-fits-all solution. ThatÕs why Romeo (below, right) gave the go-ahead for Simmons to purchase a cart full of barbershop products, including clips and combs, tubs of edge control and gel, and a hair dryer and diffuser, so that people with dreadlocks or shorter hair also have options. ItÕs already proven useful: Romeo brought in her first 4-year-old Black participant, and since his hair wasnÕt long enough to be braided, his mom used the gel to slick his hair up and out of the way. Simmons knows how much effort it takes to care for and style Afro-textured hair, so she schedules times in the lab based on participantsÕ wash days and prioritizes the health of the hair as she works. Some of her earliest memories involve three- to four-hour braiding sessions with her mom as she fell asleep in her lap as a toddler, with Disney princess movies playing in the background. ÒIt was definitely a bonding experience,Ó says Simmons, who took what she learned and combined it with YouTube tutorials to develop her own style as a teenager. In September, she traveled to the Flux Society conference for developmental cognitive neuroscience with Romeo and other LEAD Lab members, where Simmons won best poster out of more than 130 pre.sentations. Having tenured professors and longtime researchers seek her advice on data collection challenges was surprising but validating. ÒThereÕs not many Black women in our research field, so I really want to represent my community,Ó Simmons says. SheÕs plan.ning to expand on her poster presentation and write a paper this summer, and hopes her findings can give scientists the tools to conduct more equitable studies. Romeo says, ÒI needed someone who was creative and willing to take the plunge with us. IÕm just really grateful to have a partner who is willing to flip institutions on their head and figure out how to make neurosci.ence more inclusive.ÓÑKS Hair, Hair for Equity in Neuroscience Research Lab Expands African AmericansÕ Participation in Studies With a Scientific Approach to Styling R PHOTOS BY STEPHANIE S. CORDLE ThereÕs not many Black women in our research field, so I really want to represent my community.Ó ÑAbria Simmons Õ25 Deep in a South Dakota Gold Mine, UMD Physicists Prospect for Dark Matter A ÒEurekaÓ Moment Could Revise Basic Understanding of Forces in Universe N ESTLED IN THE MOUNTAINS of western South Dakota is the little town of Lead, which bills itself as ÒquaintÓ and Òrough around the edges.Ó Vis.itors driving past the hair salon or dog park may never guess that an unusualÑeven otherworldlyÑexperiment is happening a mile below the surface. A research team that includes University of Maryland physics faculty members and graduate students hopes to lure a hypothe.sized particle from outer space to the townÕs Sanford Underground Research Facility, housed in a former gold mine that operated at the height of the 1870s gold rush. TheyÕre prospecting for WIMPsÑnot 98-pound weaklings, but Òweakly interact.ing massive particles,Ó which are thought to have formed when the universe was just a microsecond old and which may exist unseen all around us. The research facility suits this type of search because the depth prevents the intrusion of cosmic rays, which would otherwise interfere with experiments. If WIMPs are observed, they could hold clues to some of the most perplexing problems in physics: the nature of the mysterious, hypothetical substance called Òdark matterÓ and the very structure of the universe itself. The UMD team is led by physics Profes.sor Carter Hall, who has been looking for dark matter for 15 years. Excited by the pos.sibility of observing unexplained physical phenomena, Hall had previously joined the Large Underground Xenon (LUX) experi.ment at the Sanford Lab. LUX was the most sensitive WIMP dark matter detector in the world until 2018; the current LUX-ZEPLIN (LZ) experiment launched in 2022. LZ, which was specifically designed to search for WIMPs and has a significantly larger target, has even better odds of detect.ing or ruling them out as a dark matter candidate. The discovery of WIMPs could help account for the missing 85% of the uni.verseÕs massÑwhich calculations predict must exist, but canÕt be seen. Unlike experiments conducted at parti.cle smashers like the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in Switzerland, the LZ attempts to directly observeÑrather than manufac.tureÑdark matter. Anwar Bhatti, a research professor in UMDÕs Department of Physics, says both approaches have pros and cons. He worked at the LHC from 2005 to 2013 and is now part of the LZ team at UMD. ÒThereÕs a chance we will see hints of dark matter, but whether itÕs conclusive remains to be seen,Ó Bhatti says. UMD physics graduate students John Silk, Eli Mizrachi and John Armstrong are also part of this experiment, and the team published its first set of results in July 2022 following a few months of data collection. No dark matter was detected, but the results show that the experiment is running smoothly. Researchers expect to continue collecting data for up to five years. ÒThat was just a little taste of the data,Ó Hall says. ÒIt convinced us that the exper.iment is working well, and we were able to rule out certain types of WIMPs that had not been explored before.Ó Direct searches for dark matter can only be conducted underground because surface-level cosmic radiation can muddle dark matter signals and make them easier to miss. ÒHere, on the surface of the Earth, weÕre constantly being bathed in cosmic parti.cles that are raining down upon us. Some of them have come from across the galaxy and some of them have come across the universe,Ó Hall says. ÒOur experiment is about a mile underground, and that mile of rock absorbs almost all of those conven.tional cosmic rays. That means that we can look for some exotic component which doesnÕt interact very much and would not be absorbed by the rock.Ó In the LZ experiment, bursts of light are produced by particle collisions. Researchers then work backward, using the characteris.tics of these flashes of light to determine the type of particle. The UMD research group calibrates the instrument that powers the LZ experiment, which involves preparing and injecting tritiumÑa radioactive form of hydrogenÑinto a liquefied form of xenon, an extremely dense gas. Once mixed, the radioactive mix.ture is pumped throughout the instrument, which is where the particle collisions can be observed. The researchers then analyze the mix.tureÕs decay to determine how the instru.ment responds to background events that are not dark matter. By process of elimina.tion, the researchers learn the types of inter.actions that areÑand arenÕtÑimportant. Learning whether they found dark matter could take at least a year, because they want the sensitivity of the second data set to significantly exceed that of the first, which requires a larger amount of data overall. If detected, these WIMP particles would prompt a massive overhaul of the Standard Model of particle physics, which explains the fundamental forces of the universe. While this experiment could answer press.ing questions about the universe, there is a good chance it will also spark new ones. ÒIt would mean that a lot of our basic ideas about the fundamental constituents of nature would need to be revised in one way or another,Ó Hall says. ÒUnderstanding how that would fit into particle physics as we know it would immediately become the big challenge for the next generation of particle physicists.ÓÑEN In the LZ experiment, bursts of light are produced by particle collisions. Researchers then work backward, using the characteristics of these flashes of light to determine the type of particle as they search for a type known as a WIMP (weakly interacting massive particle), a candidate for dark matter. PHOTO BY MATTHEW KAPUST, SANFORD UNDERGROUND RESEARCH FACILITY DIAGRAM COURTESY OF THE LUX-ZEPLIN COLLABORATION Jessica Anthony, below, is a peer recovery specialist with a UMD project offering help for people with opioid use disorder in Caroline County, Md. N THE PARKING LOT outside the First Church of God in Federalsburg, Md., a 38-foot van carries what many people in rural parts of Maryland desperately need but often canÕt get: treatmentÑand genuine understandingÑfor opioid use disorder. The Mobile Treatment Unit (MTU) operated by the Caroline County Health Department is part doctorÕs office, part counseling center and part support group meeting. Clients board, meet with a registered nurse in the back, enter a booth to virtually visit a doctor from the University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM) in Baltimore, stop by a restroom for a urine sample, and wrap up by chatting with a substance use counselor in her office in the RV. A patientÕs guide through the process, though, is a peerÑsomeone whoÕs experienced the ravages of addiction and can listen without judgment to the stories people may be too ashamed to tell a doctor or nurse. On this afternoon, Jessica Anthony is observing how the MTUÕs staff handles patient visits, but it wasnÕt long ago that she was on the other side, climbing the vanÕs steps for help with an addiction to metham.phetamine and prescription opiates. SheÕs part of a University of Maryland, College Park study examining how peer treatment can be a bulwark for recoveryÑa project with sweeping possibilities that stretch from this rural hamlet to struggling neigh.borhoods in Baltimore to impoverished shantytowns on the other side of the world. The study is led by the director of UMDÕs Center for Substance Use, Addiction and Health Research (CESAR), Jessica Magidson Ph.D. Õ13 (right), with UMSOM Associate Professor of Medicine Dr. Sarah Kattakuzhy as part of the MPowering the State initiative, a strategic partnership between the two campuses, and funded by a nearly $4 million grant from the National Institutes of Health. ÒItÕs essential to get community buy-in,Ó says Magidson, an associate professor of psychology. ÒThe peer model of having someone whoÕs from your community, whoÕs been a patient of the serviceÑitÕs so important to establish that trust and lived expertise.Ó As the opioid epidemic sank its claws into Maryland and the nation over the last several years, there was no physician trained in addiction who served Caroline County, and the closest rehab centers could be an hour away in Cambridge or Chestertown. Dr. Eric Weintraub Õ80, an UMSOM professor of psychiatry, proposed to the local government in 2018 that they work together to pursue a federal grant for a telemedicine vehicle to reach people in their neigh.borhoods. Now operating out of two RVs with a team of five doctors, a registered nurse, a social worker, two coordinators and two peer recovery specialists, the MTU provides an opportunity for Magidson to examine the impact of peer counseling in hard-to-reach areasÑa methodology sheÕs been focused on since seeing it in action in South Africa as a graduate student. Magidson, who has been awarded $14 million in combined NIH funding since joining UMDÕs faculty in 2018, leads seven clinical trials across South Africa, Detroit, Baltimore and MarylandÕs Eastern Shore. In each location, she and her team train peers in evidence-based techniques to support recovery, including behavioral activationÑa treatment originally developed for depression that emphasizes engaging in fulfilling substance-free activities. Peers also learn problem-solving strategies to address barriers to taking medication and staying in care, and how to share their own stories in a way that will resonate with patients. ÒIt fits me perfect,Ó says Anthony. ÒI can use my personal experience to help others create a path to recovery and build a more hopeful future. ItÕs almost too good to be true.ÓÑ.SL Roads to Recovery In Rural Maryland, a New ÒBeen-There-Done-ThatÓ Approach to the Opioid Crisis Offers Hope on Four Wheels I PHOTOS BY JOHN T. CONSOLI UMDÕs SAFE Center Expands Training Program for Human Trafficking Survivors THE UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND Support, Advocacy, Freedom, and Empowerment (SAFE) Center for Human Trafficking Survivors and Marriott International will expand a program to prepare survivors for hospitality careers. Trafficking survivors face many barriers in their search for education and employment, prompting Marriott to develop the FiT Curriculum in collabora.tion with the Global Fund to End Modern Slavery in 2018. Designed with input from survivor consultants and field experts, the FiT Curriculum provides trauma-informed job readiness training. The FiT Curriculum was piloted by the SAFE CenterÑa signature initiative of the University of Maryland Strategic Partnership: MPowering the StateÑin 2022, with more than 60 survivors trained. I can use my personal experience to help others create a path to recovery and build a more hopeful future. Ñ Jessica Anthony Peer Recovery Coach Seed Grant Sparks Project on Domestic Terrorism Policies DOMESTIC TERRORISM IS on the rise, as is the call for ways to combat it. Are new laws or stiffer penalties the answer? A $64,133 seed grant in 2022 from the MPowering the State Initiative to a UMCP-UMB team led to 2023 funding of $762,533 from the National Institute of Justice for a study to answer that question. Michael Jensen, a senior researcher at the National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START) at UMCP, and Michael Vesely, academic program director and senior law and policy analyst at UMBÕs Center for Health and Homeland Security, will expand their work reviewing hundreds of terrorism prosecutions to determine if current legislation is sufficient to reduce the threat. ILLUSTRATION BY LAUREN BIAGINI; PHOTO BY WILLIAM PERRY / ADOBE STOCK BY CHRIS CARROLL ILLUSTRATIONS BY DENIS FRIETAS Charging Up That Hill Ninety-second battery fill-ups. All-day range. Unparalleled safety. UMD researchers are powering up EVs to save the planet. WESTWARD-BOUND PIONEERS of an earlier era packed their wagons, hitched up the oxen and set out. Before his own trailblaz.ing cross-country journey, Mark Eakin first tested his wheels at a D.C.-area drag strip. There, his Ford F-150 LightningÑa battery-powered version of AmericaÕs most popular vehicleÑposted acceleration times that would rival a FerrariÕs, while emitting no greenhouse gases. The Òfrunk,Ó however, is Conestoga-esque in the storage gained from ditching the traditional internal combustion engine. His new truck seemed the perfect vehicle to help Eakin, a retired coral reef scientist for the federal government and occasional University of Maryland research collaborator, forge a new Oregon Trail of climate-friendly travel. In early 2023, he and his wife, June, became the first peopleÑas far as anyone in the electric vehicle enthusiast community can tell, anywayÑto pull a travel trailer coast to coast and back with an EV. Make that the almost-perfect vehicle. The trailerÕs weight and wind drag shrank the truckÕs range, requiring half-hour stops at fast-charging stations about every 110 miles. Those breaks became all-day affairs in remote areas like rural Idaho and the Texas plains with scarce charging infrastructure, where the truck had to sip electrons from regular outlets. None of this surprised the couple, who planned on short hops between friends, family and sightseeing. ÒIt was a bit of an experiment,Ó Eakin says. ÒThe idea wasnÕt to get anywhere as fast as possible.Ó Beyond committed environmentalists and hardy early adopters, the rest of the nation may be less tolerant of battery-related EV inconveniences. At least thatÕs the fear of government agencies and nonprofits behind a sweeping plan to ÒdecarbonizeÓ the U.S. economy to save the planet from global warmingÑand itÕs why UMD researchers are at the forefront of developing EVs that can charge faster than you can fill a gas tank, have the range to cruise to the horizon and beyond without a stop, and boast unprecedented safety and performance in even the most extreme conditions. The clock is ticking. Limiting U.S. greenhouse gas emissions to head off the worst effects of climate change means getting as many butts in electric vehicle seats as possible and moving to a power grid based on renewable energy sources, including wind, solar and hydrogen fuel. ÒWe have to accelerate the societal shift to electric vehicles,Ó says Distinguished University Professor Eric Wachsman, a globally recognized expert in next-gen battery technologies and director of the Maryland Energy Innovation Institute. ÒAnd that means you have to overcome the resistance some people have to these kinds of vehicles.Ó Maintaining Momentum? EVs in 2023 accounted for 7.6% of the U.S. new vehicle market, up from 5.9% in 2022, but beyond the coasts and big cities, the lure of swoopy Teslas, burly Rivian trucks and an increasing selection of cars from traditional manufacturers is in question. For instance, a January 2024 Deloitte survey of 27,000 global consumers showed concerns about charging speeds and vehicle range were causing people to avoid EV purchases. At almost the same time, Ford slashed F-150 Lightning production by two-thirds, citing weak demand, while other manufacturers also retrenched with plans to sell fewer EVs and more traditional vehicles. WhatÕs needed, say UMD researchers, is a self-perpetuating virtuous circle where every advance expands the user base, leading to greater support and infrastructure, and making EVs appealing to ever-broader swaths of society. That will include marginalized and low-income groups who bear much of the brunt of pollutants from conventional vehicles, and who are most vulnerable to climate-related harm as fossil fuel use continues to heat up the earth. Beyond the upper-income groups that make up most of the EV market today, switching to an EV in 2024 is a tall, if not impossible, order, contributing to growing tech disparities and hampering societyÕs ability to head off environ.mental catastrophe. ÒWe shouldnÕt be na•ve about how hard it is for people from disadvantaged groups to enter these kinds of markets,Ó says Deb Niemeier, Clark Distinguished Chair in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering (who is not part of the A. James Clark School of EngineeringÕs battery design efforts). ÒFirst and foremost, you have to have affordability and there has to be a viable used car market, and public charging must be available in places where it barely exists now.Ó To address such challenges, UMD battery researchers are among the most active in the nation working to meet the performance requirements of the EVs4ALL program overseen by the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E), a federal agency that deals in cutting-edge energy projects. To those ends, Wachsman and others plan to bring batteries to market in coming years that last through many thousands of charge cycles, enabling used car markets; batteries that use cheaper, more readily available components than traditional ones like lithium; batteries that charge up in minutes rather than hours, even in low temperatures that stymie current technology. ÒAt UMD we have a large number of faculty and students on these projects compared with other academic institutions,Ó says Paul Albertus, an assistant professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering who in his previous job was the program manager for over $60 million of mostly battery projects for ARPA-E. ÒWhat really sets us apart is that we have research groups working on so many of these different aspectsÑsolid electrolytes, liquid electrolytes, people doing basic science and people doing technological innovationÑand that portfolio of work is complementary.Ó Replacing the Batteries Current lithium rechargeables have fueled technological leaps in mobile computing, medical devices and e-bikes and -scooters; theyÕre tucked into an ever-increasing number of our cars and light trucksÑfrom an International Energy Agency figure of around 26 million EVs globally in 2022 to recent Bloomberg forecasts of 77 million next year. More than 200 million electric vehicles are expected to be on the road worldwide by the end of the decadeÑbut powered by what? As anyone knows whoÕs seen surveillance videos of exploding scooters and terrorized vape pen users dropping and fleeing their devices, or discovered their phone bulging and nonfunctional with a swollen battery, lithium-ion cells have a dark side that stems from their chemistry. They use a flammable liquid electrolyte, the part of the battery that carries electric current between the positively and negatively charged internal components of cells, made of lithium salts dissolved in an organic solvent. ÒLiquid lithium electrolytes are very volatile. If you have a short or damage to the battery, you can have whatÕs called a thermal runaway reaction where the batteryÕs energy heats up the battery uncontrollably and can start a fire,Ó says Professor Chunsheng Wang, director of UMDÕs Center for Research in Extreme BatteriesÑa collaboration with the U.S. Army Research LabÑand like Wachsman (left), a faculty member in chemical and biomolecular engineering as well as in materials science and engineering. (For perspective, EVs donÕt burn often, although they get a lot of press when they do. ÒTheyÕre very safe, safer than a typical car, in fact,Ó says Ron Kaltenbaugh, president of the Electric Vehicle Association of Greater Washington. His claim echoes recent data from both Tesla and an Australian government study showing that EV batteries, frequently bundles of hundreds of smaller battery cells, are an order of magnitude less likely to ignite than petroleum-powered engines. ÒBut they can be pretty hard to put outÓ once fully engulfed, Kaltenbaugh says.) Managing conventional lithium-ion batteriesÕ safety issues comes at a heavy costÑliterally. Their various added layers and separators, along with extra circuitry and other protection measures on the outside, make current EV battery systems far bulkier and less Òenergy-denseÓ than they would be with inherently safer chemistry. ÒEvery layer of material you add to the battery is that much less energy the battery can hold,Ó Wachsman says. According to ARPA-E, the current generation of lithium-ion batteries suffer from Òperformance limitations that incremental progress cannot address,Ó hampering a full transition away from the 1.7 billion conventional light vehicles on the road globally, along with a similar number of heavy trucks, buses and the like. A new path lies in solid-state battery technology. It replaces lithium-ion batteriesÕ problematic liquid electrolytes with safer, nonflammable alternatives. This is at the heart of research in the Maryland Energy Innovation Institute, which in recent years has helped launch dozens of companies, filed for well over 100 patents and secured around $150 million in funding for the startups, several of which focus on technology directly applicable to vehicles. WachsmanÕs solid-state design replaces the liquid electrolyte with a rigid ceramic known as garnet that conducts ions about as well as a conventional lithium-ion electrolyte, while being nonflammable and tough enough to endure thousands of charges. The technology is being developed in WachsmanÕs spinoff company, Ion Storage Systems, with the help of recent $40 million investment rounds. Access Issues As the Eakins wended their way across the coun.try, the frequent stops for fast charging along major interstates werenÕt what bothered them. ÒPeople talk about the 400-mile batteryÑwhoÕs got a 400-mile bladder?Ó Mark Eakin says. The lack of charging spots in the nationÕs interior was what made it impractical to visit the house in the Texas Panhandle where MarkÕs grandparents had lived; the Eakins also had to carefully manage their approach to Big Bend National Park in the western end of the state to avail themselves of the few available charging opportunities and driving slower than normal to extend their range along certain stretches of interstate. Issues of vehicle range, charging rates and infrastructure are interrelated; one way to incen.tivize building more charging infrastructure is to make more people wantÑand buyÑelectric cars by addressing the issues in a holistic manner rather than individually. UMDÕs battery experts plan to do that in part by rendering obsolete one of the loudest complaints against EVs: They take too long to charge. While ÒslowÓ is relative, so-called Level 1 charging with regular outlets is painfully poky, adding less than five miles of driving range for every hour plugged in. Level 2, available at around 54,000 public charging stations in the U.S. and at many EV driversÕ homes, uses 240-volt power to add 20 or more miles of range an hour. Level 3, known as DC fast charging, or Supercharging in the Tesla universe, can boost a carÕs battery to 80% in 20 minutes to an hour. The catch? Only about 9,400 such charging stations exist in the United States, according to research by UMDÕs Center for Global Sustainability (CGS), and per mile they rival gasoline in cost, negating one of the draws of EVs. That scarcity leaves vast swaths of the population without a practical way to drive an EV,contributing to sluggish sales even as average prices have been plummeting. CGSÕs work found that access to charging is far from equal in U.S. society, with members of racial and ethnic minority groups and low-income people on average traveling farther to find an EV charger, says Jiehong Lou, a CGS assistant research professor who studies equitable access to EV technology. Likewise, African Americans have less potential to reap the cost savings of home charging because of significantly lower homeown.ership rates than white people, she says. To be broadly popular, EVs canÕt require a hobbyist level of commitment and a spacious suburban home, Wachsman says. ÒSomeone like me can drive home at night, close the garage door when itÕs cold outside (because EVs donÕt charge well in the cold), plug into a Level 2 charger, and youÕre ready to drive the next day,Ó says Wachsman, whoÕs driven a Tesla since 2013. ÒBut there are a lot of people who live in apartments, live in a city environment, who just donÕt have home charging. Then it gets a lot harder to drive an EV.Ó In a Flash TodayÕs half-hour fast charging sessions offer drivers a chance to play a few rounds of Candy Crush and read emails, welcome or not. In the future, theyÕll race to wash their windshield before the charge is finished. In recent work, Wachsman showed that by modifying the composition of his patented ceramic architecture, he could charge or discharge lithium metal batteries at rates up to 100 milliamperes per cubic centimeter, enabling EV battery charging in about 90 seconds and exceeding the U.S. Department of EnergyÕs fast-charging goal for EVs by a factor of 10. The new approach would also result in batteries with a lifespan far longer than typical cars need. Meanwhile, Wang and colleagues showed a way to stop Òdendrites,Ó tiny branch-like structures that grow in the microscopic confines of an advanced solid-state cell during fast charging and other intense usage, causing short circuits. A new interlayer in the battery can stop lithium dendrites that develop in the batteryÕs negative electrode, piercing the solid electrolyte and destroying the battery. Wang also presented battery technology recently that overcomes another major hurdle for lithium-ion batteries: rapidly declining efficiency and chargeability as the temperature gets closer to the freezing point. In 2023, he demonstrated a battery that operates down to minus 60 degrees Celsius. HeÕs commercializing the technology through his battery spinoff company, Wh-Power. In research not directly related to EVs, Wang has produced batteries that use saltwater as an electrolyte and with previously unheard-of voltage levels; heÕs working to boost the energy a bit higher to create batteries that are intrin.sically safe and cheapÑÒjust go get some water from the ocean,Ó he jokesÑthat can be used to store excess wind or solar energy generated on a renewable power grid. Such batteries could provide carbon-free vehicle charging in the most remote locations. UMD engineers and chemists are working on a wide range of other battery technology as well that could one day power electric vehicles and other technology of the future. Some focus on finding Òearth-abundantÓ replacements for lithium, which is toxic, relatively rare and vulnerable to supply line delays caused by geopolitical disruptions. Another line of research, led by Distinguished University Professor Gary Rubloff in materials science and engineering, uses nanotechnology to precisely design microbatteries with huge power output for their size; they could be constructed much like microprocessors on outdated assembly lines for silicon chips. ÒThe more of these problems we solve, the more electric vehicles people will be driving, and the better for the environment,Ó Wang (right) says. Accelerating Acceptance On a back road near Frederick, Md., Kaltenbaugh, head of the D.C. EV ownersÕ network, presses the accelerator on his Tesla Model 3; the dual motors kick in almost silently, squishing a passenger back into his seat as barns and a farm animal or two fly by. ÒWeÕre still in ÔChillÕ mode,Ó he points out, indicating the possibility of several higher levels of squish. Although Kaltenbaugh says he rarely tests the carÕs performance potential, the acceleration has at least once helped him avoid a potential collision with an erratic driver while he was merging onto a highway. A massive dashboard screen displays miles remaining on his batteryÑabout 170Ñand when Kaltenbaugh pulls over, he activates a map showing every available charger in the region. It looks like a cornucopia, but the density of options thins toward the edges. ÒElectric vehicle technology is never going to Ôget thereÕ if that means a stage where itÕs fully developed,Ó says Kaltenbaugh, whose family has transitioned entirely to battery-powered cars. An avid skier, heÕs seen the impact of climate change in mountain environments around the country, where subtle temperature changes can have outsize impacts on snowpacks. ÒItÕs going to keep developing. ItÕs a matter of whether the price-to-performance ratio works for you. If it does, you get an EV.Ó For those who can afford a new car now and have a place to charge it, EVsÕ efficiency and performance advantages combined with lower regular maintenance requirements already make them a logical choice over fossil fuel-powered vehicles, says Wachsman. With their revolutionary battery advances, Maryland researchers plan to soon push it over the hump for everyone else. An estimated EVs will be on the roads globally by 2030. ÑINTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY 200M 200M In early 2024, new EVs cost than the average car. ÑKELLEY BLUE BOOK 17% more 17% more We have to accelerate the societal shift to electric vehicles.Ó ÑEric Wachsman Director, Maryland Energy Innovation Institute; Distinguished University Professor, Departments of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering and Materials Science and Engineering ItÕs a matter of whether the price-to-performance ratio works for you. If it does, you get an EV.Ó ÑRon Kaltenburgh President, Electric Venicle Association of Greater Washington D.C. Public charging stations around the U.S.: ÑUMD CENTER FOR GLOBAL SUSTAINABILITY 62,000 62,000 The more of these problems we solve, the more electric vehicles people will be driving, and the better for the environment.Ó ÑChunsheng Wang Director, Center for Research in Extreme Batteries; Professor, Departments of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering and Materials Science and Engineering PORTRAIT BY JOHN T. CONSOLI Ugandan-born geographer Catherine Nakalembe links satellites and on-the-ground monitoring to help African farmers weather extreme events. BY MAGGIE HASLAM PORTRAIT BY JOHN T. CONSOLI Growing Resilience From the Ground, Up RESEARCH.UMD.EDU 26 A lot of the things that have happened in my life are by chance. But maybe the chances just add up.Ó CATHERINE NAKALEMBE STOOD shin-deep in the middle of an Eastern Ugandan river on a sweltering, blue-sky day in 2014, peering out from beneath her wide-brimmed hat as she surveyed the farmland before her. A geographical sciences assistant professor and expert in satellite remote sensing, sheÕd seen this field beforeÑfrom space. Approximately 350 miles up, satellites could capture the patchwork tapestry of browns and greens that make up AfricaÕs agricultural landscape. But the images they beamed back couldnÕt tell Nakalembe if the crop in front of her was maize or wheat. As the Africa program lead for NASA Harvest, an international consortium commissioned by the space agency and led by the University of Maryland, those details were critical to her work. Without knowing the crop type, computer models couldnÕt monitor how it will fare against a spike in temperature or a projected wet season, or inventory whatÕs growing in the region. So Nakalembe tromped across Eastern AfricaÕs small farmsÑoften no more than three acres eachÑevery July and August from 2010 to 2016 to document its fields. ÒI walked so many miles, I was in such great shape,Ó she says. ÒIt was time-consuming and so hard, but itÕs what was needed.Ó Much of NakalembeÕs own orbit, she says, has been shaped by fateful encounters, people and timing: from her journey to UMD to her path home to fight AfricaÕs food crisis. And as earth-circling satellites piled up growing moun.tains of data, she knew she couldnÕt singlehand.edly teach them to ÒseeÓ African agriculture with her cross-country treks. It would take another chance eventÑand on a truly global scaleÑto literally drive her team to a solution. ÒA lot of the things that have happened in my life are by chance,Ó she said. ÒBut maybe the chances just add up.Ó TWO YEARS BEFORE THAT WOULD HAPPEN, in 2018, two cyclones drenched the desert sands of the ÒEmpty Quarter,Ó a barren expanse straddling Saudi Arabia, Yemen and Oman, awakening gen.erations of locusts to breed and wage a ravenous campaign. Deafening swarms stretching to the horizon laid waste to crops and pastureland over six countries in East Africa, plunging the already food-insecure region into crisis. Locust plagues and other extreme events, from floods to drought, have battered AfricaÕs agriculture industry for centuries, exacerbated its high rate of hunger and fueled economic and political instability. But this crop of airborne pestilence, which lasted until 2022, stemmed from irregular circulation and temperature patterns in the Indian Ocean likely caused by climate change. Extreme events, which are expected to increase as global warming continues, deliver profound socioeconomic blows. According to the consulting group McKinsey and Co., agriculture is AfricaÕs largest economic sector, accounting for more than $100 billion annually and employing over half the continentÕs workers. Meanwhile, nearly 800 million AfricansÑroughly 60% of the populationÑare food-inse.cure. In 2022, a person died every 36 seconds in drought-stricken East Africa. NakalembeÕs work is central to UMDÕs effort to advance the use of remote sensing and artificial intelligence (AI) to monitor and protect global food security. In Africa, she has established herself as a trailblazer: Over the past 14 years she has combined her geographical expertise with the demanding, often improvisational nature of field work to provide governments with the tools to know whatÕs growing where, and the ability to respond to and head off crises on a continent where deadly food shortages occur with numbing regularity. ÒThis research is about getting out in front of some of the worst events,Ó says geographical sciences Professor Emeritus Christopher Justice, who has worked with Nakalembe since 2010. ÒAnd itÕs about get.ting quick, actionable information to those who need it to minimize the impacts on the population. In this respect, CatherineÕs grabbing the bull by the horns.Ó TWO DECADES BEFORE Nakalembe was pointing satellites toward Africa, she was taking an interest in its diverse ecology while walking each day between school and her familyÕs tidy, plastered mud house out.side Kampala, UgandaÕs capital. A chance conversation with a family friend who worked at Makerere University in Kam.palaÑand her knack for geography and mathÑhelped her win a fully funded spot in its new environmental science program. After her undergraduate degree, her sister encouraged her to apply to graduate school in the U.S. Each week, she made the four-mile trek from her home to the local U.S. EmbassyÕs library to research schools and take practice tests. With help from family, friends, acquain.tances and university administrators, she pursued a masterÕs at Johns Hopkins University, then went on to get her Ph.D. at Maryland. At a faculty event in her first semester she met Justice; he had just launched UMDÕs Group on Earth Observa.tions Global Agricultural Monitoring Initia.tive (GEOGLAM) in Africa, which preceded NASA Harvest in applying remote sensing to develop policy around agriculture and global food security. At the time, Nakalem.beÕs knowledge of agriculture was limited to growing maize outside her parentsÕ house, but her geographical expertise, cou.pled with knowledge of her home country, was the missing piece the initiative needed. Three sentences into their first con.versation, Justice, who would become her doctoral adviser, asked her, ÒHow would you like to go back to Uganda?Ó Nakalembe began work on her disserta.tion in Uganda and projects for GEOGLAM in countries including Mali, Ethiopia and Kenya in 2010. With funding from organiza.tions including the Gates Family Founda.tion, she collaborated with government ministries to develop agricultural risk anal.yses and a framework for crop monitoring systems. She quickly learned, however, that what worked in Kenya might not in Tanza.nia; beyond what was growing in the fields, government structures varied wildly. But it was less about reinventing the wheel and more about rearranging the spokes. With the launch of NASA Harvest in 2018, Nakalembe synthesized all the work and lessons learned during her years in the field to begin developing a catalog of tools, computer models and data already avail.able through public and private organiza.tions that, in different combinations, could meet each countryÕs specific needs. Nakalembe worked with ministries across Eastern Africa to give them critical information, from land use to rainfall amounts. For the first time, they had unprecedented views of the health of AfricaÕs agricultural industryÑbut not a complete picture. WHAT GAVE NAKALEMBE the visibility she needed was the event that shuttered the world: COVID-19. Unable to travel or conduct in-person research, the extensive, on-the-ground network of people she devel.oped through her years in the fieldÑinclud.ing farmers, field agents, humanitarian groups and ministry stakeholdersÑproved to be the linchpin to secure a grant to pur.chase and distribute GoPro cameras, free to any African farmer or field agent willing to send back the pictures they capture. Canvassing the landscape at around 40 mph, the cameras, which are affixed to cars and motorbikes, can rapidly generate pictures of crops and record each location. The images are fed to machine learning systems to turn the data from Òstreet to sat,Ó creating satellite-ready labels that can allow artificial intelligence to eventually recognize crops from space. When her team ran the first trial in December 2020, it was able to cover 30-40% of Western Kenya in two weeks. Across the continent, it has so far generated over 5 million imagesÑdata integral to tracking crop types and growing condi.tions, while warning of potential droughts, flooding and diseases. The team is now working to perfect yield predictions. ÒThis real-time information enables ministries to prioritize response efforts early enough before it becomes a crisis,Ó says Kenneth Mwangi, an agriculture mon.itoring and early-warning expert with the Intergovernmental Authority on Develop.ment in Eastern Africa, who has worked with Nakalembe for six years. ÒAnd thatÕs how we really benefit from some of the work being done by UMD, Cath.erine and NASA Harvest.Ó ASK NAKALEMBE what success looks like, and she eschews the recognition sheÕs earned on the international stage, including the $1 million Al-Sumait Prize for African Development in 2022 that she split with a co-awardee and the Africa Food Prize in 2020. Instead, sheÕll point to a recent conversation she read on WhatsApp among a crop monitoring team in Kenya. A news article had announced that the min.istry was going to dispatch fertilizer to an area that had a measured reduction in production. ÒThis is to let you know that all the work youÕre doing is leading to these types of decisions,Ó read a comment from a ministry official. Having countries in charge of their own destiny, says Nakalembe, is the key to reversing the food crisis. She sees Har.vestÕs role as setting up and supporting the systems, but it is up to the governments to provide the human capacity to run them, generate the communications that lead to policy and collaborate across their borders. ÒThis is more powerful than any remote sensing,Ó she says. ÒItÕs a seed that then yields this connectivity, and having a place where they can show, ÔThis is whatÕs happening.ÕÓ Grants helped Nakalembe and her team collect the initial data; but collecting it over multiple years will help them build better models, which will lead to better outcomes for Africa. That will require more money. In the meantime, she will cart another box of GoPros home from her officeÑwhere boxes of them cover every surfaceÑfor her twin sons to assemble. She will keep delivering whatÕs needed. ÒThe fact that sheÕs utilizing her skills to impact her home country is particularly meaningful, but for her I think it brings some responsibility,Ó says Justice. ÒYou have to find good people who want to make a difference, and CatherineÕs one of them.Ó ItÕs about getting quick, actionable information to those who need it to minimize the impacts on the population. In this respect, CatherineÕs grabbing the bull by the horns.Ó Ð.Christopher Justice Professor Emeritus, Geographical Sciences RESEARCH.UMD.EDU PHOTOS COURTESY OF CATHERINE NAKALEMBE Accolades Quantum Physicist Joins American Academy of Arts and Sciences A University of Maryland quantum scientist was among the 269 artists, scholars, business leaders and others elected in 2023 to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, one of the nationÕs oldest and most prestigious honorary societies. Wendell T. Hill III, a professor in the Institute for Physical Science and Technology and a fellow of the Joint Quantum Institute, was recognized for his groundbreaking research focused on laser-matter interaction under extreme conditionsÑultra-fast, ultra-intense and ultra-cold. He is a fellow of the American Physical Society and a member of the National AcademiesÕ Board on Physics and Astronomy and the Scientific Advisory Committee for the Centro de Lasers Pulsados in Spain. He also served as director of the NSFÕs Atomic, Molecular and Optical Program from 2010 to 2012. Awards and Honors Earned by Faculty and Staff Researchers in 2023 Gun Violence Expert Elected to National Academy of Medicine A PROFESSOR BEST known for his work studying the effect of urban gun violence on Black youths and young men was elected to the National Academy of Medicine. Joseph Richardson Jr., the MPower Professor of African American Studies, Medical Anthropology and Epidemiology, was cited by the academy for his pioneering work Òtranslating science into the develop.ment of innovative interventions to reduce gun violence and firearm-related morbidity and mortality.Ó Richardson, who holds a secondary appointment in the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, was one of 90 new members and 10 international members to receive the honor. Though UMD does not have a medical school, he is its second faculty member elected in the past two years, joining Ruth Enid Zambrana, a Distinguished University Professor in the Harriet Tubman Department of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. Richardson has interviewed dozens of victims of gun violence and connected them to the hospital- based programs heÕs led in an effort to reduce trauma, criminal recidivism and the likelihood of victims becoming offenders. He also founded and directs the Transformative Research and Applied Violence Intervention Lab (TRAVAIL). PHOTOS BY JOHN T. CONSOLI; ILLUSTRATED PORTRAIT BY VALERIE MORGAN Criminologist Awarded DisciplineÕs Top Prize Distinguished University Professor Gary LaFree, an expert on terrorism and the causes and consequences of crime, was selected to receive the Stockholm Prize in Criminology from the Swedish Ministry of Justice. It is the third time a UMD researcher has received the fieldÕs highest honor since its inception in 2006. LaFree will be recognized in June with the award, based on his research on procedural justice and legitimacy, including the 1998 book ÒLosing Legitimacy: Street Crime and the Decline of Social Institutions in America.Ó 7 Researchers Named AAAS Fellows SEVEN UMD FACULTY members were named fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the worldÕs largest general scientific society. The honor brings the universityÕs total to 102 fellows, and recognizes the outstanding contributions of: SONALDE DESAI, Distinguished University Professor in the Department of Sociology; SAMUEL GRAHAM, JR., dean of the A. James Clark School of Engineering and Nariman Farvardin Professor; ABBA GUMEL, the Michael and Eugenia Brin Endowed Chair in Mathematics; MOHAMMAD HAJIAGHAYI, the Jack and Rita G. Minker Professor of Computer Science; WOLFGANG LOSERT, physics professor; DANA NAU, computer science professor; and JI-CHENG ÒJCÓ ZHAO, chair of the Department of Materials Science and Engineering and Minta Martin Professor. 3 Faculty Members Welcomed to National Academy of Engineering THREE UMD PROFESSORS were among the 124 engineers elected to the 2023 Class of the National Academy of Engineering (NAE), one of the highest professional distinctions accorded to an engineer. All were peer-selected for pioneering new technologies, advancing engineering education, outstanding business and government leadership, and contributions to engineering research and practice. The academy hailed Inderjit Chopra, Distinguished University Professor and director of the Alfred Gessow Rotorcraft Center, Òfor advancing rotorcraft aeromechanics/aeroelastic analysis, enhancing bearingless rotors, active control, and human-powered helicopters.Ó Chopra is a fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, VFS (the Vertical Flight Society, formerly the AHS/American Helicopter Society) and American Society of Mechanical Engineers, and an honorary fellow of AHS. Among other honors, he was awarded AIAAÕs 2023 Walter J. and Angeline H. Crichlow Trust Prize, which includes a $100,000 prize. Ji-Cheng ÒJCÓ Zhao, chair of the Department of Materials Science and Engineering and Minta Martin Professor, is a pioneer in the development of accelerated methodologies for discovery and rapid screening for metals as well as a renowned expert on computational design of materials. He is a fellow of ASM International, the Materials Research Society, the National Academy of Inventors, the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the Minerals, Metals and Materials Society. Rama Chellappa, College Park Professor and professor emeritus at UMD and Bloomberg Distinguished Professor at Johns Hopkins University, is a groundbreaker in the area of artificial intelligence. His work in computer vision, pattern recognition, and machine learn.ing has had profound impact on areas including biometrics, smart cars, forensics, and 2D and 3D modeling of faces, objects and terrain. He is the 2020 recipient of the Jack S. Kilby Signal Processing MedalÑa top honor from the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), where Chellappa is a life fellow. He has also been honored by the IEEE Computer Society and IEEE Signal Processing Society. Faculty Q+A ROD BRUNSON Moving Beyond ÒGetting ToughÓ Amid Spiraling Violence, Criminologist Studies New Approaches to Gun Crime WHILE STUDYING STREET GANGS as part of his Ph.D. in Chicago in the late Õ90s, an inter.view with a non-gang teen helped change Rod BrunsonÕs thinking about what his research could accomplish. ÒSheÕd figured out how to navigate going to school or the corner store without being victimized,Ó says Brunson, a professor of criminology and criminal justice. ÒBut then this young person said very somberly, ÔCan you do something about the police?ÕÓ In his research today, which broadly tackles gun violence, Brunson focuses on answering questionsÑlike how police officersÕ enforcement decisions can be affected by their racialized perceptions of placesÑthat interest not just criminologists, but people in the often-underserved communities he studies.ÑCC WhatÕs the common thread between mass shootings we see on the news and the daily killings we usually donÕt? TheyÕre different issues in many ways, but tied together by the attraction guns have for young males. We have many more guns per citizen than any country youÕd normally compare us to. Will simply reducing the number of guns help solve the violence problems? Discussions of laws keeping guns out of the hands of people who should not have them are well-intended, but the sheer number of guns means people are going to obtain guns for the foreseeable future. And just telling people who are high-risk or prohibited from carrying guns to stop doing so is ineffective. In areas plagued by violence, what prevents people from just walking away from guns? Not all, but many people feel, whether itÕs reasonable or exaggerated, everyone around them is carryingÑincluding people out to do them harm. When my collaborator, (UMD Assistant Professor) Brooklynn Hitchens, and I analyzed data from people in New York, where there are high penalties for illegally carrying a gun, we were struck by the quip, ÒIÕd rather be judged by 12 than carried by six.Ó So weÕre awash in guns, and laws are hard to pass or maybe wonÕt work. Do we throw up our hands? No, we need to hold people accountable, but maybe we also should pivot and learn from the failures of the past. I think one thing most people can agree on is that Òget tough on (insert whatever issue here)Ó has not worked out well, whether itÕs drugs or other criminal activity. It doesnÕt solve problems, but it does have unintended consequences like mass incarceration or further disenfranchisement. Instead of coming at it simply from the standpoint of law enforcement, we examined a public health approach in this new study and found it could help. What would that entail? A surprisingly high number of people we surveyed in at-risk neighborhoods got instruction in handling guns from movies or video games. Many people do not store guns safelyÑunlocked under the bed where children can find it, for instance, or outdoors. What weÕre suggesting is that grounding people in gun safety could solve some of these issues. It is a little bit similar to immunization: Immunize everyone you know with safety practices, so it will hopefully protect those people who are most in need, or at highest risk. PHOTO BY JOHN T. CONSOLI Groundbreakers Quantum Physicist Elected to National Academy of Sciences A GROUNDBREAKING QUANTUM physics researcher who has long been affiliated with the Joint Quantum Institute (JQI) at the University of Maryland was elected a member of the National Academy of Sciences. Paul Julienne, an emeritus fellow at JQI and an adjunct professor of physics at UMD, joined 142 other U.S. and international members recognized in 2023 for their exceptional, ongoing achievements in original research. Julienne helped establish the research field of ultracold matter, which investigates atoms and molecules near absolute zero. He joined JQI in 2007, soon after its founding as a joint research institute combining the scientific strengths of the University of Maryland with the National Institute of Standards and Technology. He received the 2015 William F. Meggers Award of the Optical Society of America and the 2004 Davisson-Germer Prize of the American Physical Society and is a fellow of the division of Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics of the American Physical Society. Researchers Seek PROGRESS on Gun Violence A new UMD research initiative is taking on rising violence against a grim backdrop of Washington, D.C., homicide totals that jumped by more than one-third in 2023 and more than 650 mass shootings nationwide the same year. PROGRESS (Prevent Gun Violence: Research, Empowerment, Strategies and Solutions) launched in November to study gun violence, offer educational programs on gun safety and issue policy recommendations. It is led by Joseph Richardson Jr., the MPower Professor of African American Studies, Medical Anthropology and Epidemiology, and Woodie Kessel, a pediatrician and professor of the practice of family science. Partners across campus and at the University of Maryland, Baltimore will contribute. ItÕs part of the 120 Initiative co-created in 2022 by UMD President Darryll J. Pines to take on gun violence, and will address a range of issues including suicide, domestic violence, safe gun storage and gun trafficking. The team will collect and analyze data, offer a speaker series and engage community members to create solutions.ÑSL ILLUSTRATED PORTRAIT BY VALERIE MORGAN Communications Pioneer Receives National Medal of Technology and Innovation Alum, Faculty Member Lauded for Boosting National Security, Creating Successful Tech Firms President Joe Biden in October awarded Jeong H. Kim Ph.D. Õ91, namesake of an A. James Clark School of Engineering building and a professor of the practice in mechanical engineering, the nationÕs highest honor for technological achievement. A longtime UMD benefactor, Kim received the National Medal of Technology and Innovation for his advances in broadband optical systems, data communications and wireless technologies that have made communication faster and clearer, including improvements in battlefield communications that strengthen national security. Kim, who immigrated to the U.S. at 14 speaking little English, today is chairman and co-founder of Kiswe Mobile, an interactive mobile video company; he previously founded Yurie Systems, even.tually selling it for $1.1 billion to Lucent Technologies. He is a member of the National Academy of Engineering and was recognized by the U.S. Pan-Asian American Chamber as one of the Top 10 Most Influential Asian Americans in Business. ÒJeong KimÕs contributions in the field of communications, national security and wide area networks have made an incred.ible technological impact on a global scale,Ó says UMD President Darryll J. Pines. ÒHe exemplifies the power of American spirit, entrepre.neurship and innovation.Ó Engineer Receives Franklin InstituteÕs 2023 Bower Award Deb Niemeier, Clark Distinguished Chair of Energy and Sustainability in the A. James Clark School of Engineering, received the Franklin InstituteÕs 2023 Bower Award and Prize for Achievement in Science, which came with a $250,000 prize. Niemeier has helped spur policy and regulatory changes through groundbreaking research in the areas of vehicle emissions, air quality, affordable housing, and infrastructure funding both nationally and internationally. More recently, she has focused on aspects of the built environment that give rise to structural inequality, particularly relating to climate change. She is a Guggenheim and AAAS fellow, and a member of the National Academy of Engineering and American Philosophical Society. Sociologist Receives $1M Berggruen Philosophy Prize Patricia Hill Collins, a Distinguished University Professor emerita of sociology known for her pioneering research on the intersections of race, gender, social class and sexuality, received the Berggruen Prize for Philosophy, a $1 million award for advancing powerful ideas that help shape our world. The winner of the prize, established in 2016 by philanthropist Nicolas Berggruen, is selected from a list of nominees by a jury of internationally recognized authors, philosophers, economists and Nobel Prize laureates. Collins, best known for her groundbreaking book, ÒBlack Feminist Thought,Ó has focused on how intersectionality creates unique experiences and perspectives for individualsÑespecially Black womenÑas well as shared experiences and perspectives on the human condition. NIEMEIER PHOTO COURTESY OF THE A. JAMES CLARK SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING; ILLUSTRATED PORTRAIT BY VALERIE MORGAN Bookshelf Books Written by UMD Faculty in 2023 FUNDAMENTALS OF AERODYNAMICS, 7TH EDITION MCGRAW HILL John Anderson, Professor Emeritus of Aerospace Engineering, and Christopher Cadou, Professor of Aerospace Engineering WAVE HOUSE SMALL PRESS DISTRIBUTION/FLOOD EDITIONS Elizabeth Arnold, Professor of English SHAKESPEARE ON CONSENT ROUTLEDGE Amanda Bailey, Professor and Chair, Department of English SMALL PARTICLE RING ACCELERATORS AND PAUL TRAPS: CASE STUDIES AND PROSPECTS INSTITUTE OF PHYSICS PUBLISHING Santiago Bernal, Associate Research Scientist, Institute for Research in Electronics and Applied Physics NEGATIVE MONEY SOFT SKULL PRESS Lillian-Yvonne Bertram, Associate Professor of English THE AVENGERS ASSEMBLED: THE ORIGIN STORY OF EARTHÕS MIGHTIEST HEROES PENGUIN RANDOM HOUSE David Betancourt, Lecturer of Journalism BETWEEN MEMORY AND POWER: THE SYRIAN SPACE UNDER THE LATE UMAYYADS AND EARLY ABBASIDS (C. 72-193/692-809) BRILL Antoine Borrut, Associate Professor of History MANAGEMENT: AN INTERACTIVE APPROACH PEARSON HIGHER EDUCATION Kelly Mollica and Nicole Coomber, Clinical Professor of Management and Organization IN THIS PLACE CALLED PRISON: WOMENÕS RELIGIOUS LIFE IN THE SHADOW OF PUNISHMENT UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS Rachel Ellis, Assistant Professor of Criminology and Criminal Justice TEACHING BEYOND THE MUSIC: TOOLS FOR ADDRESSING SOCIETAL CHANGES THROUGH THE ARTS GIA PUBLISHING Jason Max Ferdinand D.M.A. Õ15, Director of Choral Activities, School of Music MALLPARKS: BASEBALL STADIUMS AND THE CULTURE OF CONSUMPTION CORNELL UNIVERSITY PRESS Michael T. Friedman, Assistant Research Professor of Kinesiology MURDER AT AMAPAS BEACH ATMOSPHERE PRESS James Gilbert, Distinguished University Professor of American History Emeritus THE PUREST BOND: UNDERSTANDING THE HUMAN-CANINE CONNECTION ATRIA BOOKS Jen Golbeck, Professor of Information Studies; and Stacey Colino THE EVOLUTION OF THE VEHICLE ROUTING PROBLEM SPRINGER Bruce Golden, France-Merrick Chair in Management Science; Xingyin Wang and Edward Wasil THE POWER OF HOPE: HOW THE SCIENCE OF WELL-BEING CAN SAVE US FROM DESPAIR PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS Carol Graham, College Park Professor in the School of Public Policy INTERSECTIONALITY IN HEALTH EDUCATION HUMAN KINETICS Cara D. Grant, Kinesiology Lecturer; and Troy E. Boddy METAREASONING FOR ROBOTS: ADAPTING IN DYNAMIC AND UNCERTAIN ENVIRONMENTS SPRINGER Jeffrey Herrmann, Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Director of Graduate Education Programs, Institute for Systems Research WHEN WE WERE TWINS PLAMEN PRESS Danuta Hinc, Principal Lecturer of English FOUNDATIONS OF INFORMATION LAW ALA NEAL-SCHUMAN Paul Jaeger, Professor of Information Studies; Jonathan Lazar, Professor of Information Studies; Ursula Gorham, Senior Lecturer of Information Studies; and Natalie Greene Taylor Ph.D. Õ15 THE STUDY OF BILINGUAL LANGUAGE PROCESSING OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS Nan Jiang, Professor of Second Language Acquisition TEACHING YOUNG MULTILINGUAL LEARNERS: KEY ISSUES AND NEW INSIGHTS CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS Loren Jones, Associate Clinical Professor of Education, and Luciana C de Oliveira THE TWO-PARENT PRIVILEGE: HOW AMERICANS STOPPED GETTING MARRIED AND STARTED FALLING BEHIND THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS Melissa S. Kearney, Neil Moskowitz Professor of Economics LANGUAGE AND ANTIRACISM: AN ANTIRACIST APPROACH TO TEACHING (SPANISH) LANGUAGE IN THE USA MULTILINGUAL MATTERS JosŽ L. Magro, Lecturer, School of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures WHAT EVERY ENGINEER SHOULD KNOW ABOUT RELIABILITY AND RISK ANALYSIS ROUTLEDGE Mohammad Modarres, Nicole Y. Kim Eminent Professor, and Katrina Groth, Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering HILLARY CLINTONÕS CAREER IN SPEECHES: THE PROMISES AND PERILS OF WOMENÕS RHETORICAL ADAPTIVITY MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS Shawn Parry-Giles, Professor and Chair, Department of Communication; David S Kaufer and Xizhen Cai THE STATE AND CAPITALISM IN CHINA CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS Margaret M. Pearson, Professor of Government and Politics; Meg Rithmire and Kellee Tsai THE POWER OF PARTISANSHIP OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS Joshua J. Dyck and Shanna Pearson-Merkowitz, Professor of Public Policy CORE PRACTICES FOR TEACHING MULTILINGUAL STUDENTS: HUMANIZING PEDAGOGIES FOR EQUITY TEACHERS COLLEGE PRESS Megan Madigan Peercy, Professor of Teacher Learning and Development; Johanna M. Tigert and Daisy E. Fredricks ITALIAN POLITICAL CINEMA: FIGURES OF THE LONG Õ68 UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA PRESS Mauro Resmini, Associate Professor of Italian and of Cinema and Media Studies THE LAST HONEST MAN: THE CIA, THE FBI, THE MAFIA, AND THE KENNEDYS AND ONE SENATORÕS FIGHT TO SAVE DEMOCRACY LITTLE, BROWN AND CO. James Risen, Visiting Professor of Journalism ON MINIMALISM: DOCUMENTING A MUSICAL MOVEMENT UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS Kerry OÕBrien and Will Robin, Associate Professor of Musicology THE PROCESS OF RELIABILITY ENGINEERING: CREATING RELIABILITY PLANS THAT ADD VALUE FMS RELIABILITY PUBLISHING Fred Schenkelberg, Lecturer, Center for Risk and Reliability, A. James Clark School of Engineering; and Carl S. Carlson A IS FOR ARSON: A HISTORY OF VANDALISM IN AMERICAN EDUCATION CORNELL UNIVERSITY PRESS Campbell F. Scribner, Associate Professor of Education Policy THE RUINED ANTHRACITE: HISTORICAL TRAUMA IN COAL-MINING COMMUNITIES UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS PRESS Paul Shackel, Professor of Anthropology DANCING IN THE WORLD: REVEALING CULTURAL CONFLUENCES ROUTLEDGE Kathleen A. Spanos Ph.D. Õ16, Assistant Director of Communications in the Honors College, and Sinclair Ogaga Emoghene M.F.A. Õ16 DOING BLACK DIGITAL HUMANITIES WITH RADICAL INTENTIONALITY: A PRACTICAL GUIDE ROUTLEDGE TAYLOR & FRANCIS GROUP Catherine Knight Steele, Associate Professor of Communication; Jessica H. Lu Ph.D. Õ18; and Kevin C. Winstead Ph.D. Õ19 ROOTED AND RADIANT: WOMENÕS NARRATIVES OF LEADERSHIP INFORMATION AGE PUBLISHING Trisha Teig, Teaching Assistant Professor of Leadership Studies; Brittany Devies, Program Manager for Leadership Studies and Development; and Rebecca Shetty TECHNOLOGY AND DISABILITY: 50 YEARS OF TRACE R&D CENTER CONTRIBUTIONS AND LESSONS LEARNED SPRINGER Gregg Vanderheiden, Professor and Director Emeritus of the Trace R&D Center; Jonathan Lazar, Professor; Amanda Lazar, Assistant Professor; Hernisa Kacorri, Associate Professor; and J. Bern Jordan, Assistant Research Scientist, all in the College of Information Studies ADVERTISEMENT