Division of Research

2024 Research Achievement Awardees

Every year, distinguished Brown scholars are nominated for Research Achievement Awards by their colleagues for conducting exceptional and transformative research. The 2024 selection includes eight awardees from four categories: humanities and social sciences, life sciences and public health, physical sciences, and hospital-based research.

Early Career Achievement Awards

Humanities and Social Sciences

Kevin Escudero
American Studies

Kevin Escudero specializes in the comparative study of race/ethnicity and Indigeneity, immigration, social movements, and law. A central thread of his research is the potential for cross-group coalition building as part of communities’ participation in social movement activism. His award-winning book, “Organizing While Undocumented,” examined Asian and Latinx undocumented immigrant youth activism. He is currently researching two book-length projects, one that explores immigrant student experiences in graduate school, particularly those with undocumented status in the U.S., and the other that focuses on immigrant and Indigenous communities’ efforts to decolonize Guam. He received the Association for Asian American Studies’ Early Career Achievement Award, and his research has been supported by an NSF CAREER Award, Mellon/ACLS Scholars and Society Fellowship and Institute for Citizens and Scholars’ Mellon Emerging Faculty Leaders Award.

View Kevin Escudero's research profile

Hospital-Based Research Faculty 

Morganne A. Kraines
Psychiatry and Human Behavior

Morganne Kraines’ work focuses on affective-cognitive factors that act as mechanisms and predictors of change in mood disorders and health behaviors such as depression, anxiety, smoking cessation, and alcohol use disorder. Her research also focuses on adapting evidence-based mindfulness interventions for at-risk populations. She is the principal investigator of a Career Development Award (K23) from the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health, which involves testing whether affective executive functioning serves as a mechanism of Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy. She is also a primary faculty member within the Mindfulness Center at Brown University and is a member of the Legorreta Cancer Center. Alongside her scholarship, she practices as a clinical psychologist, seeing patients at Brown-affiliated Butler Hospital.

View Morganne A. Kraines research profile

Physical Sciences

Ellie Pavlick
Computer Science, Linguistics

Ellie Pavlick researches Natural Language Processing (NLP), the subfield of AI that aims to build systems capable of understanding and communicating with humans through speech and text. She works on computational models of semantics and pragmatics, which mimic human inferences. Recently, her work has been centered on understanding how and why neural networks succeed and fail. She is one of the leading researchers investigating these important questions. Her research has been supported by $8.5 million in federal grants from DARPA, IARPA, and NSF, the majority of which she leads as the principal investigator. She collaborates with the Department of Cognitive, Linguistic, and Psychological Sciences to support fundamental research that links artificial and natural intelligence. She also works as a research scientist at Google Deepmind.

View Ellie Pavlick's research profile

Life Sciences and Public Health

Maricruz Rivera-Hernandez
Health Services, Policy and Practice

Maricruz Rivera-Hernandez is a gerontologist and health services researcher dedicated to improving health and health care for vulnerable older adults. She has secured external grants totaling nearly $4.5 million and is the principal investigator on two NIH-funded R01 grants. Her research examines the quality of care and healthcare disparities for older adults living in Puerto Rico. Until her work, fundamental questions about healthcare and outcomes in Puerto Rico, particularly for patients with chronic health conditions, largely went unaddressed. Her research sheds light on the healthcare needs of Puerto Rico’s older adults and highlights the healthcare system’s disparities. She is considered one of the nation’s most innovative and impactful early-career researchers in health disparities among older adults.

View Maricruz Rivera-Hernandez's research profile

Mid-Career Achievement Awards

Physical Sciences

Caroline J. Klivans
Applied Mathematics

Caroline Klivans specializes in algebraic, geometric and topological combinatorics. She is a leading expert in the field and has made significant advances to our understanding of discrete structures, including matroids. Her research is known for its great breadth of application and connection to other fields. Klivans’ work is also praised for exhibiting simplicity and elegance both in exposition and insight. Her recent book, the Mathematics of Chip-Firing, has been widely adopted in the field. She currently serves as deputy director of the NSF-funded Institute for Computational and Experimental Research in Mathematics (ICERM), and on the Executive Committee of the Association for Women in Mathematics.

View Caroline J. Klivans's research profile

Humanities and Social Sciences

Felipe Martínez-Pinzón
Hispanic Studies

Felipe Martínez-Pinzón specializes in research on Latin American literary and cultural studies, particularly during the 19th and early 20th centuries. He has published two influential monographs, one focusing on elite representations of tropical climates in 19th-century Colombia and its relationship to the country’s history of violence. The second monograph examines the political uses of the sketch of manners in the print cultures of Colombia, Ecuador, and Venezuela after their independence. On an international scale, he is considered one of the leading scholars of 19th-century Latin American literature and is one of the most visible, prolific, and cited scholars of our generation in 19th-century Latin American studies. He has received numerous awards, including an honorable mention for the Modern Language Association’s Katherine Kovacs Singer Prize.

View Felipe Martínez-Pinzón's research profile

Life Sciences and Public Health

Thomas Serre
Cognitive, Linguistic and Psychological Sciences, Computer Science

Thomas Serre is widely recognized as a world leader in AI, computational neuroscience, and computer vision. He is one of the few experts who can effectively connect AI, neuroscience, and cognitive science, making a significant impact on our understanding of brain function and the growth of AI algorithms. His neural network model of vision, introduced in the past, has contributed to the AI revolution of the last decade. More recently, his lab has developed interpretability tools to guide the field of AI and build real-world computer vision applications. His computational vision research and collaborative research projects have received funding from prestigious organizations such as the NSF, NIH, ONR, and DARPA. He has also played a vital role in establishing a strong presence for computational neuroscience at Brown.

View Thomas Serre's research profile

Hospital-Based Research Faculty

Corey E. Ventetuolo
Medicine, Health Services, Policy and Practice

Corey Ventetuolo is a practicing pulmonary/critical care physician at Rhode Island Hospital and has dedicated her career to improving care for patients suffering from pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), right heart failure, and requiring extracorporeal life support. She has investigated the longstanding observation that PAH is a fatal disease of predominantly women. Her groundbreaking work has led to hormonal modulation as a treatment strategy in PAH, and she has led two NHLBI-funded clinical trials in this area. She is a nationally recognized leader in the field who has addressed barriers to translational research and advanced precision medicine approaches. She has also received numerous teaching awards recognizing her dedication to education and inclusive mentoring of emerging investigators.

View Corey E. Ventetuolo's research profile