Odilon Camara
Associate Professor of Finance and Business Economics, Marshall School of Business
Odilon Camara is an economist who specializes in microeconomics and political economy. He studies how individuals strategically use information to persuade decision makers. He also studies the extent to which voters can use re-elections to create political accountability and discipline elected officials. Before receiving his Ph.D. from the University of Illinois, Professor Camara worked in the banking industry.
Rosella Cappella
Assistant Professor, Political Science Department
Visiting Fellow, Dickey Center for International Understanding, Dartmouth College
Rosella Cappella is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Boston University and is currently on leave as a Visiting Fellow at the Dickey Center for International Understanding at Dartmouth College. Her research interests lie at the intersection of political economy and national security.
Peter Cardon
Warren Bennis Chair in Teaching Excellence, Marshall School of Business
Professor of Clinical Business Communication
Peter Cardon is a professor of clinical business communication at USC Marshall School of Business, where he studies team communication and the role of technology in workplace communication.
Shani Carter
Professor, Management and Marketing
Special Assistant to the Vice President for Academic Affairs for Outcomes Assessment, Academic Affairs
Dr. Carter is a Professor of Management and has been at Rhode Island College since the fall 2001. Dr. Carter teaches Human Resources, Compensation, Labor Relations, Foundations of Management, Organizational Theory, and Business, Government, and Society.
Amber Caulkins
Program Director, The College & University Research Collaborative
Amber Caulkins is the Program Director of the College & University Research Collaborative, an initiative that connects Rhode Island academics and policymakers. She was previously Communications Coordinator for the Rhode Island Technology Enhanced Science Project. She holds a B.A. in journalism from the University of Rhode Island.
Dana Cernigliaro
Ph.D. Candidate, Bloomberg School of Public Health
Dana Cernigliaro is a doctoral candidate at Johns Hopkins School of Public Health and has a masters degree in Public Health from Brown University. Dana has worked for over 10 years on both domestic and international research projects on a range of health issues, with a particular focus on HIV prevention and access to care for vulnerable populations. Her current research focuses on sexually transmitted disease and reproductive health of sex workers living with HIV in the Dominican Republic.
JaeMin Cha
Associate Professor of Foodservice Management, The School of Hospitality Business
JaeMin Cha, PhD. is an associate professor of foodservice management in The School of Hospitality Business, Michigan State University.
Hitendra Chaturvedi
Professor, W. P. Carey School of Business Department of Supply Chain Management
Hitendra Chaturvedi is an expert in supply chain strategy, global logistics, entrepreneurship, sustainable supply chains and digitizing supply chains. He has extensive experience as a global business professional and subsequently as a successful entrepreneur and sits on advisory committees of many start-ups and incubators, speaker at numerous conferences. He is a professor of practice at the Arizona State University W. P. Carey School of Business.
Murphy Cheatham
Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Program Manager, CBRE
Murphy Cheatham is the Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Program Manager at the commercial real estate firm CBRE, a preeminent provider of end-to-end real estate services in the Dallas-Fort Worth region. He is an alum of Grambling State University in Louisiana, and now serves on their board.
Lauren Chenarides
Assistant Professor, W. P. Carey Morrison School of Agribusiness
Senior Global Futures Scholar, Global Futures Scientists and Scholars
Lauren Chenarides is an Assistant Professor at the Morrison School of Agribusiness in the W. P. Carey School of Business at Arizona State University. Her research background is in food economics, studying the nexus between food choice, retailer competition, and public policy.
Kathleen Cho
Postdoctoral Fellow, Center for Integrative Neuroscience
Kathleen received her B.S. with Honors in Neuroscience and a B.A. in History at Brown University. At MIT, she studied learning and memory mechanisms in the visual cortex in Mark Bears laboratory and earned a Ph.D. in the Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences. She joined Vikaas Sohals laboratory at UCSF as a postdoctoral fellow, to study the mechanisms of functional circuits in the context of mental illness.
Sung Hun (Brian) Chung
Jones Graduate School of Business, Ph.D. candidate
Sung Hun (Brian) Chung is a Ph.D. candidate at the Jones Graduate School of Business at Rice University.
Michael Connell
Cofounder and CEO
Dr. Connell is CEO of the educational technology company Native Brain, which produces adaptive learning technologies to support every childs success in math. He has been a Software Design Engineer at Microsoft Corporation, Sunburst Communications, Inc., and Lexia Learning Systems, Inc.; a faculty member at the Harvard Graduate School of Education and Dartmouth College (Educational Neuroscience program); and an educational consultant to schools, non-profit organizations, the federal government, and corporations.
Andrew Corbett
Paul T. Babson Chair, Entrepreneurial Studies
Andrew Corbett is the Paul T. Babson Chair of Entrepreneurship at Babson College and an instructor at Babson Executive Education. The Journal of Business Management recently named him one of the Top 25 Entrepreneurship Researchers in the World. Dr. Corbetts primary areas of study are corporate entrepreneurship, entrepreneurial learning and cognition, and entrepreneurship education. He is the co-author of Beyond the Champion: Institutionalizing Innovation Innovation Through People (2018).
Sandra Cortesi
Fellow, Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society
Director, Youth and Media
Sandra Cortesi is a Fellow at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University and the Director of Youth and Media. She is responsible for coordinating the Youth and Media’s policy, research, and educational initiatives, and is leading the collaboration between the Berkman Klein Center and UNICEF.
Rob Cross
Edward A. Madden Professor of Global Leadership
Rob Cross is the Edward A. Madden Professor of Global Leadership at Babson College. For almost twenty years, his research, teaching and consulting have focused on applying social network analysis ideas to critical business issues for actionable insights and bottom-line results. He has worked with over 300 leading companies, government agencies, and non-profit organizations. He is the director of Connected Commons, a consortium dedicated to developing research, relationships, and resources exploring the link between personal networks and professional success.
Kathryn Dickerson
Assistant Professor in Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences
Member of the Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Faculty Network Member of the Duke Institute for Brain Sciences
Kathryn Dickerson, Ph.D., is a professor in psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Duke University. She also co-directs the Workforce Development Core at Duke’s Clinical and Translational Science Institute.
Kristen Diehl
Professor of Marketing , Marshall School of Business
Kristin Diehl is a professor of marketing at USC Marshall School of Business. She studies how people anticipate, experience and remember events that unfold over time, particularly through taking photos.
Anil Doshi
Doctoral Candidate, Harvard Business School
Anil Doshi is a doctoral candidate in the Technology and Operations Management unit at Harvard Business School, where he researches the impact of digitization and information revelation on firm strategy, particularly on platforms. He has over ten years of experience in finance and startups. Doshi received his A.B. from Dartmouth College, where he studied Economics and Government.
Kimon Drakopoulos
Assistant Professor, Marshall School of Business
Kimon Drakopoulos is an Assistant Professor in the Data Sciences and Operations department at USC Marshall School of Business. His research focuses on the operations of complex networked systems, social networks, stochastic modeling, game theory and information economics. Kimon completed his Ph.D. at the Laboratory for Information and Decision systems at MIT, focusing on the analysis and control of contagion processes on networks.