Table of Contents • Notable • Arkansas food scientists in top 10 for 'scholarly productivity'
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Arkansas food scientists in top 10 for 'scholarly productivity' The University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture’s department of food science was ranked in the top 10 nationally for “faculty scholarly productivity” by Academic Analytics, which recently released its ranking of doctoral research programs at 357 universities and colleges. Doctoral research programs in all agricultural sciences in the U of A Division of Agriculture were ranked No. 22. Only two other Southeastern Conference schools, Florida and Kentucky, were ranked ahead of Arkansas in the top 25. The index, partly financed by the State University of New York at Stony Brook, objectively rates scholarly output based on the number of book and journal articles published by faculty members, journal citations, awards, honors, and grants received. Rankings are published online at http://chronicle.com/stats/productivity. This is the third year of what Academic Analytics says is a purely objective measure of doctoral research programs in contrast to other rankings that rely heavily on reputation, says founder Lawrence Martin of Stony Brook. The company also provides a variety of studies to help institutions evaluate programs. At No. 10, the Arkansas food science program, with 12 faculty members who conduct doctoral research, is in the company of larger universities with double or triple the number of faculty members. Wisconsin was ranked No. 1, the University of California at Davis No. 9, and Florida No. 8, which is the only other Southeastern Conference school in the top 10 for food science. Twelve faculty members direct Division of Agriculture research and extension programs and teach courses for B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in food science awarded by the Fayetteville campus. Ron Buescher, food science department head, said there are 45 undergraduate food science majors this fall and 38 students working on M.S. or Ph.D. degrees. “Exciting and rewarding careers for our graduates are plentiful in Arkansas and the global food industry,” Buescher said. “Our graduates are hired to design and test new products and processing technologies, assure food quality and safety, and improve human nutrition and health. “The high regard for our faculty in the food industry and research community assists with recruiting high quality students and placement of graduates in national competitive positions. The high rank serves to document that our faculty are among the best in the nation,” Buescher added. Research Programs. Buescher said Arkansas is nationally known for research in functionality and health benefits of foods; food microbiology and safety; food processing and packaging; rheology and sensory analysis; food carbohydrate, lipid (fat and oil) and protein chemistry; and developing value-added products using cereal, oil seed, fruit, vegetable and meat commodities important to Arkansas. Areas of faculty expertise include the following.
Each program area includes a staff of supporting scientists and graduate students who contribute to the nationally ranked scholarly productivity of the faculty, Buescher said. Top |