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CoB New Faculty


2017-2018

Mohammad Delasay | Stacey Finkelstein

2017-2018

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Mohammad Delasay

Assistant Professor

PhD, 2014, Operations Management, University of Alberta School of Business

MSc, 2006, Industrial Engineering, University of Tehran, Iran

BSc, 2003, Industrial Engineering, Azad University of Tehran

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Stacey Finkelstein

Associate Professor

PhD, 2011, Business, The University of Chicago, Booth School of Business

MBA, 2011, The University of Chicago, Booth School of Business

BA, 2006, Psychology and Economics, University of California at San Diego

Mohammad Delasay is an Assistant Professor of Operations Management at the College of Business, Stony Brook University. Prior to joining the College of Business, he was a Visiting Assistant Professor of Operations Management at Tepper School of Business, Carnegie Mellon University, for three years. He received a PhD in Operations Management from the University of Alberta School of Business in Canada. His research interests focus on operations management in the service and healthcare systems, including emergency medical systems and organ transplant center. He develops queueing and stochastic modeling methodologies to evaluate and improve the congestion management policies in such systems. He has published papers on these topics in Operations Research, the European journal of Operational Research, and various other journals. He has taught courses on operations management, stochastic modeling and simulations, data analytics, and statistics.

Stacey Finkelstein received her PhD and MBA from the University of Chicago, Booth School of Business (2011). Broadly speaking, she conducts research on consumer welfare. In one line of work, she focuses on processes related to self-regulation – how individuals prioritize short term goals (e.g., eating tasty food; wasting resources) and long-term goals (e.g., eating healthy; conserving resources). For instance, she has explored when healthy food labels make people hungry (Finkelstein & Fishbach, 2010), when negative feedback is motivating as a function of expertise (Finkelstein & Fishbach, 2012), and how relationship depth impacts the provision of negative feedback (Finkelstein, Fishbach, & Tu, 2017). She’s also explored how risk attitudes impact medical appointment scheduling behavior (Liu et al., 2017; Finkelstein et al., 2017), how changes to vaccination policy impacts parent's vaccination behaviors for their children (Finkelstein et al., in progress), and the impact of choice architecture on consumer’s savings, organ donation, eating, and shopping decisions (McKenzie, Liersch, & Finkelstein, 2006; Cravener et al., 2015; Newman, Finkelstein, & Cho, in progress; Finkelstein et al., in progress).

She is currently on the Editorial Review Board of the Journal of Consumer Research and the Journal of Public Policy and Marketing.

2016-2017

Danling Jiang | Zhifeng Yang

2016-2017

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Danling Jiang

Associate Professor

PhD, 2006, Finance, Ohio State University

MA, 2001, Economics, Ohio State University

BA, 1999, Finance, Nanjing University, China

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Zhifeng Yang

Associate Professor

PhD, 2006, Finance, University of Alberta, Canada

MA, 1999, Accounting, Xiamen University, China

BA, 1996, MIS, Xiamen University, China

Danling Jiang is an Associate Professor of Finance at the College of Business, Stony Brook University. She was an Associate Professor of Finance from 2012 to 2016 and an Assistant Professor of Finance from 2006 to 2012 at the College of Business, Florida State University. She held the title of Dean L. Cash Professor from 2010 to 2014, and the title of SunTrust Professor from 2015 to 2016. Her research involves studying investments, corporate finance, and financial decision-making from behavioral approaches. Her research typically integrates economics, psychology, political science, and sociology into finance. Professor Jiang’s work has been published in leading journals spanning the fields of finance, management, accounting, and judgment and decision-making, including the Review of Financial Studies, Management Science, Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, Review of Finance, and Review of Accounting Studies, among others. She has served as a reviewer for many journals in finance, economics, management, and psychology as well as various publishers and international funding agencies. She serves on the Advisory Council for the Financial Analysts Journal and in various roles for many conferences and associations. Professor Jiang received a PhD in finance from The Ohio State University.

Zhifeng Yang, Ph.D., CFA, earned his Ph.D. from University of Alberta. His teaching interests cover corporate governance, financial accounting, and financial statement analysis. The foci of Dr. Yang’s research have been on corporate governance, finance, and auditing issues in emerging markets. Dr. Yang has published in all top four accounting journals - Journal of Accounting Research, Journal of Accounting and Economics, The Accounting Review, and Contemporary Accounting Research. Dr. Yang is an associate editor of China Journal of Accounting Research and he is a member of the editorial board of China Journal of Accounting Studies.