Welcoming new faculty to UW Tacoma for 2024-25
The University of Washington Tacoma is pleased to welcome 10 new faculty members during the 2024-25 academic year. These include faculty teaching and doing research in computer science, engineering, nursing, biomedical sciences, statistics and corporate finance.
Yoiu'll see most of them on campus and in classroom this fall. Dr. Cheng and Dr. Chivese will start teaching in winter quarter 2025.
David Arthur
arrow_drop_down_circleDavid Arthur, PhD
Assistant Professor, School of Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences
Ph.D. in Statistics, Purdue University
David Arthur’s main area of expertise involves developed new statistical and machine learning methods for improving estimation and inference for high-dimensional models, particularly in small sample settings. Most recently, his work has focused on developing new methods for parameter estimation and model selection for high-dimensional latent class models known as Cognitive Diagnostic Models (CDMs), which are commonly used for educational measurement purposes. Other areas of expertise include Bayesian inference, applied Markov-chain Monte Carlo techniques, computational statistics, and development of statistical software.
Wei Cai
arrow_drop_down_circleWei Cai, PhD
Assistant Professor, School of Engineering & Technology
Ph.D. in Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of British Columbia
Wei Cai teaches computer science and systems at the School of Engineering and Technology. Dr. Cai has co-authored over 100 peer-reviewed journal and conference papers and has received six Best Paper Awards. His research focuses on decentralized computing, with emphasis on mechanism design, social computing, multimedia, and applications. Dr. Cai is now leading the UW Decentralized Computing Laboratory.
He serves as an associate editor for ACM Transactions on Multimedia Computing, Communications, and Applications (TOMM) and IEEE Transactions on Computational Social Systems (TCSS), and previously for IEEE Transactions on Cloud Computing (TCC). Dr. Cai is a steering committee member for ACM NOSSDAV, where he served as TPC co-chair in 2023, and has been an area chair for ACM MM since 2023. He is a senior member of IEEE and a member of ACM.
Ben Chen
arrow_drop_down_circleBen Chen, PhD, CFA
Assistant Professor, Milgard School of Business
Ph.D. in Finance, University of Texas at Dallas
Ben Chen teaches in the area of introductory corporate finance, intermediate financial management, and financial derivatives at the undergraduate level. His research interests lie in at the intersection of investment and corporate finance and recently focus on ESG, seasoned offering, crash risk, mergers and acquisitions, bond market, and corporate hedging practice. Dr. Chen’s research has been published or accepted by highly-esteemed journals including the Accounting Review and Journal of Corporate Finance.
Zhi-Qi Cheng
arrow_drop_down_circleZhi-Qi Cheng, PhD
Assistant Professor, School of Engineering & Technology
Starts Winter Quarter 2025
Ph.D. in Computer Science, Southwest Jiaotong University
During his doctoral studies, Zhi-Qi Cheng was a research assistant at City University of Hong Kong and later a visiting Ph.D. student at Carnegie Mellon University. After completing his Ph.D., Dr. Cheng continued at CMU as a postdoctoral research associate and project scientist at the Language Technologies Institute, contributing to key projects such as DARPA’s KAIROS, AIDA, IARPA’s DIVA, and NIST’s PSIAP. His work was instrumental in The Washington Post’s Pulitzer Prize-winning coverage of the Capitol riots.
Zhi-Qi has been honored with the Intel Ph.D. Fellowship and the IBM Outstanding Student Scholarship. He has also gained industry experience through internships at top tech companies like Alibaba DAMO Academy, Google Brain, and Microsoft Research.
As an educator, Zhi-Qi has received excellent feedback from students at Carnegie Mellon University, where he has co-taught courses such as Large-Scale Multimedia Analytics and Multimodal AI with Pretrained Vison-Language Models.
Tawanda Chivese
arrow_drop_down_circleTawanda Chivese, PhD
Assistant Professor, School of Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences
Starts Winter Quarter 2025
Ph.D. in Medicine, University of Capetown
Tawanda Chivese is an epidemiologist, who has experience teaching biomedical research, biostatistics and epidemiology. Dr Chivese is a multi-disciplinary researcher, whose research focuses mainly on the developmental origins of health and non-communicable diseases, with an emphasis on gestational diabetes and its impact on the cardiometabolic health of both the mother and her offspring. He has also worked on many other health related topics including HIV, hepatitis, inflammatory bowel disease, TB.
He has experience in different types of research including randomized controlled trials, systematic reviews and meta-analyses, and observational studies. He has published more than 50 research papers in reputable mostly Q1, international, peer-reviewed journals. He serves on the editorial board of the BMC Public Health, peer reviews for several high impact journals including The Lancet. He is a committee member of several international bodies including the International Diabetes Federation (IDF) Diabetes Atlas Committee Hyperglycaemia in Pregnancy Special Interest Group.
Cassandra Donatelli
arrow_drop_down_circleCassandra Donatelli, PhD
Assistant Professor, School of Engineering & Technology
Ph.D. in Biology, Tufts University
Cassandra Donatelli's research focuses on biomechanics and bio-inspired design using fishes as a model group. Specific projects include investigating the multi-functional role of armor in fishes, such as protection, performance, and hydrodynamics, locomotion in elongate fishes, and bio-inspired devices such as protective equipment and robots.
Jodi Erickson
arrow_drop_down_circleJodi Erickson, PhD, RN, CNL, CNE
Assistant Professor, School of Nursing & Healthcare Leadership
Ph.D. in Nursing Science, Villanova University
Jodi Erickson has been an RN since 2011 and worked for 12 years in the acute care setting, initially as an ICU RN and later as a hospital supervisor. Currently she works clinically in home health nursing. She earned her PhD in Nursing from Villanova University in 2021. Dr. Erickson’s research focuses on older adults and end-of-life decision making. Additionally, she has conducted some research focused on pandemic preparedness as well as clinical evaluation.
Leodoro Labrague
arrow_drop_down_circleLeodoro Labrague, PhD, DM, RN, CNE
Assistant Professor, School of Nursing & Healthcare Leadership
Ph.D. in Nursing, St. Paul University Philippines
With nearly 20 years of combined clinical, teaching, and management experience spanning the Philippines, the Sultanate of Oman, and the United States, Leodoro Labrague brings significant expertise to his new role. His nursing background includes experience in acute and long-term care settings, while his teaching career covers pre-licensure nursing, RN to BSN, master, and PhD programs. With academic qualifications in both nursing and management, Dr. Labrague is well-equipped to teach courses in nursing management and leadership, nursing research, advanced clinical nursing, and organizational and human resource management.
His research focuses on leadership structures and processes that influence patient care, safety, and outcomes, as well as the migration and integration challenges faced by culturally diverse nurses in the U.S., with the goal of developing strategies to enhance their acculturation and retention.
Hengshuo (Winston) Liang
arrow_drop_down_circleHengshuo (Winston) Liang, PhD
Assistant Professor, School of Engineering & Technology
Ph.D. in Information Technology with Computer Science Track, Towson University
Hengshuo (Winston) Liang is a doctoral candidate at Towson University. His research focuses on deep learning applications in IoT systems, with specific emphasis on security, networking, and disaster recovery. Dr. Liang’s work, including notable publications and conference papers (some were part of his advisors’ research projects funded by NSF, NIST and AFOSR), emphasizes innovative solutions such as using generative adversarial networks for data insufficiency and machine learning for IoT security. His technical skills include programming languages such as C/C++ and Python, as well as familiarity with various simulation tools and frameworks, which are essential for his research.
Damiano Torre
arrow_drop_down_circleDamiano Torre, PhD
Assistant Professor, School of Engineering & Technology
Ph.D. in Electrical and Computer Engineering, Carleton University, Canada
Damiano Torre’s research focuses on software engineering, with particular emphasis on artificial intelligence, model-driven engineering, cybersecurity, and empirical software engineering. Before joining UW Tacoma, Dr. Torre held academic positions as an assistant professor at St. Mary's University in San Antonio, Texas, and as an associate research scientist at Texas A&M University-Central Texas, where he led significant research efforts, including securing an equipment grant from the U.S. DoD and being recognized as a DARPA Riser. His earlier work at the University of Luxembourg explored GDPR compliance and AI-assisted approaches to privacy policies.
Dr. Torre earned his B.Sc. from the University of Bari (Italy), an M.Sc. from the University of Castilla-La Mancha (Spain), and a Ph.D. from Carleton University (Canada) in 2009, 2011, and 2018, respectively. He regularly serves on the organizing and program committees of the International Symposium on Software Reliability Engineering (ISSRE) and the International Conference on Software Quality, Reliability, and Security (QRS), as well as satellite events for the Empirical Software Engineering and Measurement Conference (ESEM), the International Conference on Software Engineering (ICSE), and the Automated Software Engineering Conference (ASE). He is also an IEEE member.