Francisco Gonzalez-Lima's lab focuses on the mission to prevent neurocognitive and emotional disorders, understand the underlying brain mechanisms, and advance innovative non-invasive treatments. Areas of research interest include transcranial infrared brain stimulation, near infrared spectroscopy, neurocognitive enhancement, mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase, dementia, bipolar disorder and neurotherapeutics.
Benjamin Gregg's research focuses on social and political theory, bioethics of human genetic engineering, politics of artificial intelligence, and human rights.
Joe Kileel's research includes mathematics of data science, tensor decomposition, applied algebraic geometry, computational imaging, cryo-electron microscopy, and computer vision.
Tatjana Lichtenstein's research focuses on minorities, nationalism, and state-building, and war and genocide in Eastern Europe. One project focuses on the experiences of so-called "racially mixed" families during the German occupation of the Bohemian Lands. She has written about minority activism in interwar Eastern Europe, about Zionists in Czechoslovakia, and about Czech film and the memory of the Holocaust.
Christopher Long's research interests center on modern architectural history, with a particular emphasis on Central Europe between 1880 and the present. His approach borrows from cultural and intellectual history, as well as political and economic history. Long's interests also include modern design in Austria, the Czech lands, and the U.S.
Participate in the Prague's Texas Exes International Chapter to stay connected to UT, meet fellow alumni, participate in a variety of activities and programs, cultivate professional relationships, and find opportunities to engage in the local community.