Save the Date: Vice President for Student Affairs/Dean of Students Finalist Interviews
The Vice President for Student Affairs/Dean of Students search committee will host on-campus candidate interviews starting Thursday (April 15). The finalists were selected as the result of a nationwide search that began in January.
The campus community is invited to attend a campus forum for each candidate via Zoom. The presentations will be approximately 30 minutes with a 15 minute Q&A to follow.
Specific dates and candidate information will be released tomorrow (April 13).
10-digit Dialing Requirement
by Michigan Tech IT
Effective Oct. 24, 2021, all local calls from campus phones will require full 10-digit dialing (8 + 1 + 906-XXX-XXXX).
Researchers evaluate how masks disrupt facial perception ANI | Updated: Dec 21, 2020 20:55 IST
Beer-Sheva [Israel], December 21 (ANI): The identification of people wearing masks has often presented a unique challenge during the pandemic. A new study by researchers from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) in Israel and York University in Canada reveals the impact of this predicament and its potentially significant repercussions.
The findings were just published in the journal Scientific Reports. For those of you who don t always recognize a friend or acquaintance wearing a mask, you are not alone, according to the researchers Prof. Tzvi Ganel, head of the Laboratory for Visual Perception and Action at the BGU Department of Psychology, and Prof. Erez Freud, who earned his PhD at BGU and is now a faculty member at York University in Toronto, Ontario.
Study examines how masks disrupt facial perception
The identification of people wearing masks has often presented a unique challenge during the pandemic. A new study by researchers from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) in Israel and York University in Canada reveals the impact of this predicament and its potentially significant repercussions.
The findings were just published in the journal
Scientific Reports. For those of you who don t always recognize a friend or acquaintance wearing a mask, you are not alone, according to the researchers Prof. Tzvi Ganel, head of the Laboratory for Visual Perception and Action at the BGU Department of Psychology, and Prof. Erez Freud, who earned his Ph.D. at BGU and is now a faculty member at York University in Toronto, Ontario.
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IMAGE: The identification of people wearing masks has often presented a unique challenge during the pandemic. A new study by researchers from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) in Israel and. view more
Credit: Chicago Face Database (Ma et al., 2015)
BEER-SHEVA, Israel.December 21, 2020 - The identification of people wearing masks has often presented a unique challenge during the pandemic. A new study by researchers from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) in Israel and York University in Canada reveals the impact of this predicament and its potentially significant repercussions.
The findings were just published in the journal
Scientific Reports.