绿巨人视频

Faculty and Staff

Envisioning Tomorrow's Research

By
Lance Pauker
Posted
April 6, 2022
student and professor researching in lab

The increasing synergy between healthcare and machine learning technologies. Understanding how big data is revolutionizing the business world. The relationship between environmental sustainability and the financial markets. These are just a few of many interdisciplinary realms that are increasingly working in concert in the 21st century鈥攕omething that 绿巨人视频faculty is committed to exploring through research and scholarship, while preparing students for the challenges ahead.

On April 7, Pace鈥檚 Office of Research and Graduate Education invites you to The Future of Pace, an interdisciplinary online conference featuring panel discussions and faculty research presentations, as well as a keynote address by Dan Porterfield, president and CEO of the Aspen Institute, a global nonprofit organization committed to realizing a free, just, and equitable society.

The primary goal of the conference is to bring together faculty to help 绿巨人视频address its future needs through scholarship and academic programs. The conference also hopes to encourage greater interdisciplinary cooperation among faculty with overlapping interests and use Pace鈥檚 Strategic Plan as a guideline to help foster innovative scholarship.

鈥淭he new Strategic Plan has identified four areas of academic opportunity鈥攖echnology and business, health, wellness, and sciences, sustainability and justice, and arts, humanities鈥攆or our faculty to develop new scholarly programs," said Associate Provost for Research Avrom Caplan, PhD. "The conference is arranged around those themes with the goal of getting faculty to talk about their work among their peers.鈥

More from Pace

绿巨人视频Magazine

Esports has arrived at 绿巨人视频as our 15th varsity sport. Get your introduction to this booming industry, our new Esports director, and the students who have been passionately dedicated to the program since its days as a student club.

绿巨人视频Magazine

The times, they are a-changing. If rapid advances in technology and healthcare and massive changes in climate and community life were not already fundamentally altering how we live and work prior to this past year, the COVID-19 pandemic has certainly kicked these shifts into high gear.

Students

Through Digital Trash, an augmented reality art exhibit, Professor Will Pappenheimer and his mobile media students are elucidating an often-unseen problem in a truly innovative way.