Mustapha Mouloua, PhD Principle Investigator
Dr. Mouloua is Professor of Psychology and Director of the Transportation Research Group (TRG) Lab at the University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida. His research interests include human performance and workload assessment, cognitive aging, human-automation interaction, as they apply to both surface and aerospace transportation systems.
Jiannan (Nick) Chen, PhD Co-Investigator
Dr. Chen is an assistant professor in the Department of Civil, Environmental, and Construction Engineering at the University of Central Florida. His research expertise includes environmental containment systems, sensing technology for environmental monitoring, and environmental management optimization. Dr. Chen and his team is in charge of sensor installation in the In-Vehicle Driving Project.
Elizabeth V. Kinchen, PhD, RN, AHN-BC, SGAHN Co-Investigator
Dr. Kinchen is a board-certified Advanced Holistic Nurse and international scholar; Assistant Professor Elizabeth “Lisa” Kinchen focuses her research on holistic nursing as a philosophy and mode of care that considers all aspects of a person’s existence (body, mind, and spirit) in promoting health and healing, and that honors the importance of patient-centered, relationship-based and comprehensive care.
Mert Gokgoz, Engineering
Mert Gokgoz is a Ph.D. student conducting research on life cycle assessments of solid waste disposal, currently working on the sensor installment portion of this project.
Poyu Zhang, Engineering
Poyu Zhang, Ph.D. student in Civil Engineering, Installation engineer for the In-Vehicle Driving Project.
Lilly Tran, Neuropsychology
Lilly Tran is a Neuropsychology research assistant and project manager for the In-Vehicle Driving Project. Her role within the Neurolinguistics team of the project is to perform memory evaluations on older drivers.
RESEARCH ASSISTANTS
Isabella Garrard
Veyda Shakabi
Mariya Bendus
Alexandra Ruggiero
Mazzarina Succarotte
Nadlyne Morvan
Yaeha Park
Cameron Marano
Alicia Sprague
Emily Briceno
Kelsey Cashin