You can contact Shan Wang at swa...@lmu.edu.
Shan Wang is an associate professor of accounting at Loyola Marymount University. She primarily teaches management accounting and data analytics courses at both undergraduate and graduate levels at LMU. Shan received her Ph.D. in accounting from the University of Oregon. Her primary research interests lie in understanding how top management team and board of directors affect accounting policies such as financial reporting, voluntary disclosure, and tax avoidance. Her research has been published in Accounting Horizons, Journal of Accounting and Public Policy, Journal of Management Accounting Research, and Accounting Historians Journal.
Her research interests lie primarily in the area of cognitive psychology and extend across a range of subjects related to perception and action, individual differences and life span development. More specifically, her research work focuses on visual perception, pain and attention, and age-related changes in motor cognition. Recently, she has expanded her research to study the movement coordination of children with neuro-developmental disorders.
She has published in a number of leading academic journals and serves as a reviewer for PAIN, European Journal of Pain, Research in Developmental Disabilities, Psychology and Aging. She is also a member of the American Psychological Association, British Psychological Society, International Association for the Study of Pain and International Society for DCD Research.
Wang has a B.Sc. and a postgraduate diploma in psychology from Tianjin Normal University, China, and Loughborough University, U.K. She has an M.Sc. in psychology from the University of Edinburgh and completed clinical training at the Western General Hospital, Edinburgh, with a focus on cognitive impairment; and has a Ph.D. in psychology from the University of Bath, U.K, and completed her work based in the Centre for Pain Research, Bath.
Before joining Duke Kunshan, she was a postdoctoral researcher at Oxford Brookes University, U.K.
Ph.D., 2004 - Cornell University
Electrical Engineering
M.S. - University of Electronic Science and Technology of China
Electrical and Computer Engineering
B.S. - University of Electronic Science and Technology of China
Electrical Engineering
Contact Information
Office: 335 Fluor Daniel Building
Office Phone: 864.656.2117
Fax: 864.656.5910
Email: pw...@clemson.edu
This work was supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China (31670811, 81302811 and 31500646), NSFC-Shandong Joint Fund (U1406402), National Key Technology R&D Program of the Ministry of Science and Technology (2013BAB01B02), Taishan Scholar Project Special Funds, Shandong Province Science and Technology Major Projects (2015ZDJS04002), and the Promotive Research Fund for Excellent Young and Middle-aged Scientists of Shandong Province (BS2015YY040). We thank Dr. David Steinhauer from Emory University School of Medicine for providing influenza H1N1 virus (A/Texas/15/2009; TX09), (A/California/04/2009; Cal09) and H3N2 virus (A/swine/Minnesota/02719/2009; Minnesota); Drs. Xin Qi and Yunzhang Liu from School of Medicine and Pharmacy, Ocean University of China, for their excellent technical assistance.
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