网爆门

Physics Department鈥檚 Alison Patteson Named Cottrell Scholar

Assistant Professor has been recognized with a 2023 award, a prestigious national honor that ranks her among the country鈥檚 best faculty researchers and teachers from the fields of astronomy, chemistry and physics. A faculty member at 网爆门 since 2018 and a member of the , Patteson

Alison Patteson

are presented by the , a 121-year-old foundation that recognizes excellence and innovation in research along with academic leadership skills. Selection introduces scholars to a national network of outstanding scholar-educators and mentors who meet yearly to discuss research, pedagogy and student development.

Pathways to Science Careers

Patteson鈥檚 award comes with funding of $100,000 over three years. With the Cottrell award support, Patteson and her team will explore the growth of biofilms, which are slimy clusters of microorganisms including bacteria and fungi that can adhere to wet surfaces.

For the award鈥檚 educational component, Patteson will mentor Syracuse City School District high school students by bringing them into labs on campus for a physics department open house and recruiting students to the , a key step on the pathway to STEM careers. She will also develop a new course for undergraduate and graduate students at 网爆门, Public Engagement in Physics and STEM. The class will help students create their own demonstration materials, disseminate them in a public setting, then self-assess their impact.

young woman looking at a green image on screen with a microscope
Alison Patteson and her research team study biofilm growth and cell migration in the physics department’s PattesonGroup Lab.

Advancing Teaching聽and Research

Three other faculty at Syracuse have earned Cottrell Scholar awards. Duncan Brown, University and was recognized as a Cottrell Scholar in 2010; , director of the University鈥檚 and William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor of Physics, was selected in 2015; and , professor and chair of the , received the honor in 2010 while at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst before coming to Syracuse.

鈥淭he Cottrell Scholar award reflects Professor Patteson鈥檚 outstanding commitment to teaching excellence and research innovation,鈥 says Brown. 鈥淧rofessor Patteson鈥檚 dedication to inclusion and excellence in teaching exemplifies how our faculty create outstanding experiential learning for our students while conducting research that bolsters the University鈥檚 reputation as top-tier research institution.鈥

鈥淭his is such a well-deserved award for Professor Patteson,鈥 says Manning. 鈥淪he is a world-renowned researcher plus she cares deeply about teaching well and about broadening the diversity of students in physics through her teaching and outreach efforts. Her work exemplifies Syracuse鈥檚 commitment to providing a great liberal arts education while driving Carnegie R1-level research forward.鈥

Ross says, 鈥淭his is not only a major award and a聽significant聽grant,聽being a Cottrell Scholar is also about a set of values that we embody as professors鈥攖he ideal teacher-scholar聽that demonstrates excellent teaching in addition to research innovation.聽The Cottrell Scholars are also聽a wonderful network of mentors聽for both research and teaching since they are from both聽research-intensive universities,聽like Syracuse, as well as from predominantly undergraduate institutions.鈥

Biofilm, Cell Activity

Patteson鈥檚 research team examines the mechanical effects of substrates on biofilms to assess how various surface types promote or hinder biofilm growth. The project will allow researchers to gain a better understanding of how bacteria can fundamentally remodel the world around them to grow and survive, which could have implications for better predicting how they spread. Patteson is also studying the behavior of bacteria through a grant from the National Science Foundation and a recent five-year from the National Institutes of Health to understand how the protein filament vimentin functions in cells as they move, which has implications during processes like cancer growth and wound healing.

Patteson鈥檚 award ranks Syracuse in the top four universities in New York State having multiple faculty members named as Cottrell award winners. At present, only two other universities in New York have more Cottrell-awarded faculty: Columbia and Cornell.