Şüheda Köse | HR Technology and Digital Transformation | Research Excellence Award

Dr. Şüheda Köse | HR Technology and Digital Transformation | Research Excellence Award

Research Assistant (PhD) | The University of İzmir Institute of Technology | Turkey

Dr. Şüheda Köse is an urban studies researcher whose work focuses on urban innovation, spatial dynamics, and socio-institutional transformation in metropolitan and non-metropolitan contexts. Her engages with themes such as urban agglomeration, location preferences of creative and knowledge-based industries, social innovation, participatory planning, and the Triple Helix model. She adopts interdisciplinary and mixed method approaches, combining spatial analysis, econometric modeling, and qualitative policy evaluation to examine how innovation ecosystems shape urban and regional development. Her scholarly contributions advance theoretical and empirical discussions on innovation spaces, governance models, and citizen-driven urban transformation, with particular attention to Turkish and European urban contexts. Dr. Köse has authored 6 peer reviewed scientific documents, which have received 5 citations, resulting in an h-index of 1.

Citation Metrics (Scopus)

8

6

4

2

0

Citations
5

Documents
6

h-index
1

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Yijng Zhang | HR Technology and Digital Transformation | Excellence in Research Award

Dr. Yijng Zhang | HR Technology and Digital Transformation | Excellence in Research Award

Postdoctoral Researcher | The University of Capital Normal University | China

Dr. Yijng Zhang  the gendered characteristics of writing media in women’s calligraphic practices during the Song Dynasty from the perspective of material culture. It explores how writing tools and material carriers were embedded with gender coding and social norms, shaping stylistic form, emotional expression, spatial organization, and identity construction in female calligraphy. The study analyzes differences in media selection and innovation among women of varying social classes, revealing how material choices functioned as both cultural resources and symbolic constraints. It further investigates gendered power dynamics in the circulation and evaluation of calligraphic works, including the intervention of male critics and the resistance strategies adopted by female calligraphers. By examining the reproduction and consumption of writing media, the research exposes mechanisms of gender discipline and the structural limits of media transformation. Overall, the study demonstrates how material media enabled women to accumulate cultural capital while simultaneously reinforcing gender boundaries, contributing a nuanced framework for understanding gender, materiality, and artistic identity in Chinese art history.

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