caroline lundquist noblet orcid 0000-0002-3122-9268 google ... · 2016 outstanding teaching award,...

29
1 Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google Scholar: Caroline L. Noblet 5782 Winslow Hall ph: (207) 581-3172 University of Maine fax: (207) 581-4278 Orono, Maine 04469 [email protected] Education Ph.D. Economic Psychology, University of Maine. 2012. Dissertation Title: Information Processing and Environmental Behavior M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, University of Maine. 2005. Thesis Title: Factors Affecting Consumer Assessment of Green Labeled Traditional Fuel Passenger Vehicles. B.A. Economics and Environmental Studies, Boston College. 1999. Professional Work Experience Assistant Professor School of Economics, University of Maine; September 2013 - present Lecturer School of Economics, University of Maine; August 2007 – September 2013 Instructor/Research Associate Department of Resource Economics and Policy, and the Margaret Chase Smith Policy Center, University of Maine May 2005- August 2007 Graduate Research Assistant Department of Resource Economics and Policy, University of Maine; August 2003- May 2005 High School Teacher Weymouth High School Science Department, Weymouth, MA August 2001- August 2003 Case Assistant Goodwin, Proctor & Hoar, LLC, Boston, MA May 1999-August 2001 Affiliations Cooperating Faculty (at University of Maine) Senator George J. Mitchell Center for Sustainability Solutions Margaret Chase Smith Policy Center Ecology and Environmental Sciences Program Maine Agricultural Center Honors and Awards 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member per year (from each college) by a committee of their peers. My award committee noted “She brings her research program to the classroom, infecting her students with understanding that economics is a discipline alive, not just chapters in a textbook”. 2015-2017 University of Maine Faculty Fellow 2012 Outstanding Graduate Mentor Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one graduate faculty member per year (from each college within the University) by the Graduate Student Government of the University of Maine for “going above and beyond the teaching of courses, or academic and research advising. Graduate mentors offer their time, advice, encouragement and resources that aid graduate students in their professional development and goals beyond their graduate coursework and completion of their graduate program”. 1999 Omicron Delta Epsilon (Economics Honor Society) and Order of the Cross and Crown, College of Arts and Sciences honor society (GPA > 3.67 and significant public service)

Upload: others

Post on 10-Oct-2020

2 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

1

Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268

Google Scholar: Caroline L. Noblet

5782 Winslow Hall ph: (207) 581-3172 University of Maine fax: (207) 581-4278 Orono, Maine 04469

[email protected] Education Ph.D. Economic Psychology, University of Maine. 2012. Dissertation Title: Information

Processing and Environmental Behavior M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, University of Maine. 2005. Thesis Title: Factors

Affecting Consumer Assessment of Green Labeled Traditional Fuel Passenger Vehicles. B.A. Economics and Environmental Studies, Boston College. 1999. Professional Work Experience Assistant Professor School of Economics, University of Maine;

September 2013 - present Lecturer School of Economics, University of Maine; August 2007 – September 2013 Instructor/Research Associate Department of Resource Economics and Policy, and the

Margaret Chase Smith Policy Center, University of Maine May 2005- August 2007

Graduate Research Assistant Department of Resource Economics and Policy, University of Maine; August 2003- May 2005

High School Teacher Weymouth High School Science Department, Weymouth, MA August 2001- August 2003

Case Assistant Goodwin, Proctor & Hoar, LLC, Boston, MA May 1999-August 2001 Affiliations Cooperating Faculty (at University of Maine) Senator George J. Mitchell Center for Sustainability Solutions Margaret Chase Smith Policy Center Ecology and Environmental Sciences Program Maine Agricultural Center Honors and Awards 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and

Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member per year (from each college) by a committee of their peers. My award committee noted “She brings her research program to the classroom, infecting her students with understanding that economics is a discipline alive, not just chapters in a textbook”.

2015-2017 University of Maine Faculty Fellow 2012 Outstanding Graduate Mentor Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and

Agriculture. Awarded to one graduate faculty member per year (from each college within the University) by the Graduate Student Government of the University of Maine for “going above and beyond the teaching of courses, or academic and research advising. Graduate mentors offer their time, advice, encouragement and resources that aid graduate students in their professional development and goals beyond their graduate coursework and completion of their graduate program”.

1999 Omicron Delta Epsilon (Economics Honor Society) and Order of the Cross and Crown, College of Arts and Sciences honor society (GPA > 3.67 and significant public service)

Page 2: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

2

PUBLICATIONS Journal Articles, Published (34) ᶲ Indicates graduate student author; §indicates undergraduate student author

34. Goff, S. H. and C.L. Noblet. (Accepted May 2018) Efficient, but immoral?: Assessing Market Attitudes as Multidimensional. Economic Letters.

33. Rickard, L., C.L. Noblet, K. Duffyᶲ and W.C. Braydenᶲ. (Accepted May 2018) Cultivating benefit and risk: Aquaculture representation and interpretation in New England. Society & Natural Resources.

32. Brayden ᶲ, W.C., C.L. Noblet. K.S. Evans and L. Rickard. (2018) Assessing Consumer Preferences for Seafood Labels: Consumer Preferences for Seafood Attributes of Wild Harvested and Farm-Raised Products. Aquaculture Economics and Management

31. Noblet, C.L. and McCoy, S.K. (2017) Does one good turn deserve another? : Evidence of domain specific licensing in energy behavior. Environment and Behavior. Available online as of July 2017.

*Featured publication of September 2017 SCORAI Newsletter (Sustainable Consumption Research and Action Initiative)

30. Goffᶲ, S.H., Waring, T.M. and C.L. Noblet (2017) Does Pricing Nature Reduce Support for Conservation?: Evidence from Donation Behavior in an Online Experiment. Ecological Economics, 141, 119-126

29. Huffᶲ, E. S., Leahy, J. E., Kittredge, D. B., Noblet, C. L., & Weiskittel, A. R. (2017). Psychological distance of timber harvesting for private woodland owners. Forest Policy and Economics, 81, 48-56.

28. Klein, SJW and Noblet, CL (2017), Exploring Sustainable Energy Economics: Net Metering, Rate Designs and Consumer Behavior, Current Sustainable/Renewable Energy Reports, 4(2), 23-32(Invited). 1-10. DOI: 10.1007/s40518-017-0073-5

27. Noblet, C.L., Evans, K.S., Foxᶲ, E.L., Bell, K.P., Kaminskiᶲ, A. (2017). Public acceptance of coastal zone management efforts1: The role of citizen preferences in allocation of funds. Agricultural and Resource Economics Review,46(2), 268-295

26. Kaminskiᶲ, A., Bell, K.P., Noblet, C.L., and Evans, K.S. (2017) An Economic Evaluation of Coastal Beach Safety Information Seeking Behavior. Agricultural and Resource Economics Review 46(2), 365-387.

25. Anderson, M.W., Teisl, M.F. and Noblet, C.L. (2016) Whose Values Count: Is a Theory of Social Choice for Sustainability Science Possible? Sustainability Science. 11(3), 373-383.

24. Teisl, M.F., Lando, A.M, Levy,A.S., Noblet, C.L. (2016). Importance of cohorts in analyzing trends in safe at-home food-handling practices. Food Control, 62 (381-389).

23. Noblet, C.L., Teisl, M.F., Evans, K., Anderson, M.W., McCoy, S.K., and Cervone, E. (2015). Public Preferences for Investments in Renewable Energy Production and Energy Efficiency. Energy Policy 87 (December), 177-186

1 First two authors (Noblet and Evans) agreed to equal contribution and credit.

Page 3: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

3

22. Noblet, C.L., Anderson, M. W., and Teisl, M. F. (2015) Thinking Past, Thinking Future: An Empirical Test of the Effects of Retrospective Assessment on Future Preferences. Ecological Economics 114, 180-187.

21. Silver, E. J.ᶲ, Leahy, J. E., Noblet, C.L., & Weiskittel, A. R. (2015). Maine woodland owner perceptions of long rotation woody biomass harvesting and bioenergy. Biomass and Bioenergy, 76, 69-78.

20. Silver, E.J. ᶲ, Leahy, J.E., Kittredge, D.B., Noblet, C.L., Weiskittel, A.W. (2015). An evidence-based review of timber harvesting behavior among personal woodland owners. Journal of Forestry 113 (5). 490-499.

19. Huff (Silver), E.Jᶲ., Leahy, J.E., Hiebeler, D., Weiskittel, A.R., and Noblet, C.L. (2015). An agent-based model of private forest owner management behavior using social interactions, information flow, and peer-to-peer networks. PLoS ONE 10(11): e0142453.

18. Teisl, M. F., McCoy, S., Marrinan, Sᶲ., Noblet, C. L., Johnson, T., Wibberly, Mᶲ., Roper, R. and & Klein, S. (2015). Will offshore energy face “fair winds and following seas”?: Understanding the factors influencing offshore wind acceptance. Estuaries and Coasts, 38(1), 279-286.Available online: http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12237-014-9777-6

*Article was featured by the European Commission’s Science for Environmental Policy European Commission DG Environment News Alert Service, edited by SCU, University of the West of England, Bristol.

17. Anderson, M.W., M. F. Teisl, C.L Noblet and S. Klein. (2015). The Incompatibility of Benefit-Cost Analysis with Sustainability Science Sustainability Science, 10: 33-41 online:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11625-014-0266-4

16. Owen, D. and Noblet, C.L. (2014), Interdisciplinary Research and Environmental Law. Ecology Law Quarterly. Available at SSRN 2387860: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2387860 (January 29, 2014)

15. Noblet, C.L., Thøgersen, J. and Teisl, M.F. (2014). Who attempts to drive less in New England? Transportation Research Part F: Psychology and Behaviour 23C, pp. 69-80. doi: 10.1016/j.trf.2013.12.016

14. Noblet, C.L., M.W. Anderson and L. Lindenfeld. (2013). Environmental Worldviews: A point of common contact, or barrier? Sustainability, 5, 4825-4842. doi:10.3390/su5114825. Available online at: http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/5/11/4825

13. Noblet, C.L., Anderson, M.W., & Teisl, M. F. (2013). An empirical test of anchoring the NEP scale in environmental ethics. Environmental Education Research, 19(4), 540–551. doi:10.1080/13504622.2012.704899

12. Noblet, C.L., M.F. Teisl, K. Hassett (Farrow)ᶲ and J. Rubin. (2012). Biofuels

development in Maine: Using trees to oil the wheels of sustainability. Maine Policy Review, 22(2): 56-65.

11. Anderson, M.W., Teisl, M. F. and Noblet, C.L. (2012). Giving Voice to the Future in Sustainability: Retrospective Assessment to Learn Prospective Stakeholder Engagement. Ecological Economics 84, 1-6.

Page 4: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

4

10. Thøgersen, J. and C. L. Noblet. (2012). Does Green Consumerism increase the acceptance of windpower? Energy Policy 51, 854-862.

9. Siriwardena, S.ᶲ, G. Hunt, M. F. Teisl, and C. L. Noblet. (2012). Effective environmental marketing of green cars: A nested-logit approach. Transportation Research D 17 (3): 237–242.

8. Noblet, C.L. K.P. Bell, C. Colgan and M.F. Teisl. (2012) Economic Development and Maine’s Sustainability Solutions Initiative. Maine Policy Review 21(1): 128-136. Available at: http://mcspolicycenter.umaine.edu/reports-publications/maine-policy-review/mpr21-1/#Economic

7. Anderson, M.W., C.L. Noblet and M. F. Teisl. (2012). Our environment: A glimpse at what Mainers value. Maine Policy Review 21(1) : 104-111.

6. Fein, S.B., A.M. Lando, A.S. Levy, M. F. Teisl and C.L. Noblet. (2011). Trends in US consumers’ safe handling and consumption of food and their risk perceptions 1988-2010 Journal of Food Protection, 74(9):1513–1523.

5. Teisl, M. F., M.W. Anderson, C.L. Noblet, George K. Criner, Jonathan Rubin and Timothy Dalton. (2010). Are Environmental Professors Unbalanced? Evidence from the Field Journal of Environmental Education 42 (2):67-83

4. Teisl, M. F., C.L. Noblet, and Jonathan Rubin. (2009). The Psychology of Eco-Consumption, Journal of Agricultural & Food Industrial Organization: 7(2), Article 9. Available at: http://www.bepress.com/jafio/vol7/iss2/art9

3. Teisl, M. F., C.L. Noblet, and Jonathan Rubin. (2009). Can Environmental Promotion Backfire? Evidence from the vehicle market. Social Marketing Quarterly 15 (3):2-32.

2. Teisl, M. F., Jonathan Rubin and C.L. Noblet. (2008). Non-Dirty Dancing? Interactions Between Eco-labels and Consumers. Journal of Economic Psychology. 29(2):140-159

1. Noblet, C.L., M. F. Teisl and Jonathan Rubin. (2006). Factors affecting consumer assessment of eco-labeled vehicles. Transportation Research D, 11:422-431

Journal Articles, in review

1. Noblet, C.L., Rubin, J., Eslin, A. and R. Jennings. What’s ‘Driving’ Adoption of Automated Vehicles: Attitudes and Perceptions of Benefits and Risks. Research in Transportation Economics

2. Teisl, M.F., Noblet, C.L., Corey, R.R. and Giudice, N.A. Seeing clearly in a virtual reality: Tourist reactions to an offshore wind project. Energy Policy. R&R received July 2018.

3. Horneᶲ, L., De Urioste-Stone, S., Daigle, J. and Noblet, C.L. Climate Change Resilience in the Face of Local Uncertainty, A Phenomenological study. Climatic Change.

Page 5: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

5

Journal Articles, in preparation 1. Noblet, C.L. and Evans, K.S. Public Preferences for Marine Development in Shared

Multi-use waters.

2. K.S. Evans and C.L. Noblet. Preference Heterogeneity for Shellfish Product Labels.

3. Goff, S.H., Noblet C.L. and J.R. Anthony. Environmental charitable donation: What gives?

4. Foxᶲ, E.L., Noblet, C.L., Bell, K.P. Connecting Latent Attitudes with Citizen Support for Water Quality Programs: Comparison with Engaged Stakeholders and Implications for Boundary Work.

5. Foxᶲ, E.L., McGreavey, B., Noblet, C.L. Ecosystem Service Values Workshops as Participatory Model for Stakeholder Engagement? A Case Study in Maine’s Frenchman Bay Region

Peer- Reviewed Chapters in Books/Monographs/Proceedings

1. Noblet, C.L., Lando, A.M. and Teisl, M. F. (2015). Health Communication: Advocacy Strategies, Effectiveness and Emerging Challenges. Chapter 4: What are Health Care Providers Telling Pregnant Women about Fish Consumption, Listeria and Food Safety? ISBN: 978-1-63483-464-3

2. C.L. Noblet and M. F. Teisl. (2015). Eco-Labelling as Sustainable Consumption Policy. Handbook of Research on Sustainable Consumption Edward Elgar Publishing; John Thøgersen and Lucia Reisch, editors. ISBN: 978 1 78347 126 3

3. Hassett (Farrow)ᶲ, K., M. F. Teisl, C.L. Noblet, S.K. McCoy and J. Rubin. (2010). Does Money Grow on Trees? People’s Willingness to Pay for Cellulosic Wood Ethanol. Chapter in Biofuel / Book 1 InTech Publishing.

4. Teisl, M.F., J.Rubin and C.L. Noblet. (2006). Do Eco-Communication Strategies Reduce Energy Use and Emissions from Light Duty Vehicles? Proceedings of the U.S. EPA Market Mechanisms and Incentives Workshop: Applications to Environmental Policy, October 17-18.

5. Teisl, M.F., J.Rubin and C.L. Noblet. (2006). Eco-information and the passenger vehicle consumer: Modelling the interaction and its impact on behaviour. Proceedings of the Applied Environmental Economics Conference. Royal Society - London. March 24.

6. Teisl, M.F., C.L. Noblet and J. Rubin. (2006). The design of an eco-marketing and labeling program for vehicles in Maine Chapter in New Frontiers in Environmental and Social Labeling. (Grote, Basu and Chau, eds.) pp. 11-36, Springer.

Research Reports and Technical Papers

1. Murray, M., Anthony, J.R., Noblet, C.L. and L. Rickard (2017). National Aquaculture Survey Results. Technical Report. August 2017.

2. Foxᶲ, E., Noblet, C.L., Bell, K.P., Anthonyᶲ, R. Kaminskiᶲ, A., Snell, M. and Hallowell§, A. Maine and New Hampshire Coastal Resident Survey: Technical Report. Technical Report. School of Economics Staff Paper #627. January 2017.

Page 6: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

6

3. Noblet, C. L., Teisl, M.F., Kashkooli§, M., Teisl, B§., Corey, R.R., Guidici, N.A. (2016). Potential Tourism Impacts of an Offshore Wind Farm Near Monhegan Island. Technical Report.

4. Foxᶲ, E., Noblet, C.L., Bell, K.P., Kaminskiᶲ, A., Snell, M. and Eslin§, A. Maine and New Hampshire Coastal Resident Survey (Pilot) Technical Report. School of Economics Staff Paper #623. March 2016.

5. Huff (Silver)ᶲ, E.J., Leahy, J.E., Weiskittel, A.R., Kittredge, David B., Noblet, C.L. New insights on timber harvesting behavior of Maine family forest owners. New England Society of American Foresters New Quarterly. Volume 76, Issue 3. pg. 6-7. June 2015.

6. Kaminskiᶲ, A., Bell, K. P., Noblet, C.L, Obamsawin§, T., Foxᶲ, E., and M. Snell, Maine and New Hampshire Beach User Survey Response Report. Technical Report. April 2015.

7. Kaminskiᶲ, A., Bell, K. P., Obamsawin§, T., M. Snell, and C.L. Noblet. Beach Attributes in Maine and New Hampshire: Observations and Findings. Technical Report. April 2015.

8. C.L. Noblet and T.M. Gabe. (2013) Business Climate for Maine’s Clean Technology Sector. School of Economics Staff Paper #607.

9. Renault, C.S., Gabe, T.M. and Noblet, C.L. (2013). The Clean Technology Sector in Maine, 2013. Prepared for Maine Technology Institute, Cluster Initiative Program Award #144. August

10. M. F. Teisl, C.L. Noblet, Andrew Knox§ and Jonathan Rubin. 2009. Consumer Biofuel Knowledge and Preferences: Results of Focus Groups University of Maine, School of Economics Staff Paper # 580.

11. M. F. Teisl, J. Rubin and C.L. Noblet. 2008. Environmental Marketing of Green Vehicles: Exploring Effective Design and Performance. Final Report to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the National Science foundation

12. T. Gabe and C.L. Noblet. 2006. “Economic Profile of the Environmental and Energy Technology Sector in Maine.” Department of Resource Economics and Policy, College of Natural Sciences and Forestry, University of Maine. Department Staff Paper Series No. 564. Orono, Maine.

13. C. L. Noblet and T. Gabe. 2006. “Business Climate for Maine’s Environment and Energy Technology Sector.” Department of Resource Economics and Policy, College of Natural Sciences and Forestry, University of Maine. Department Staff Paper Series No. 565. Orono, Maine

14. M. F. Teisl, B.Roe, C. L. Noblet, K.J. Boyle, N. E. Bockstael, A.S. Levy, G. Mumma, T. Riggs and M. Messonnier. 2007. Can Survey-based Scenarios Measure Consumer Values for Improved Food Safety? Final Report submitted to the National Center for Infectious Diseases, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA.

15. C. L. Noblet, G. M. Gouldᶲ, J. Rubin, Daniel Innis, Charlie Morris. 2006. Sustainable Transportation Funding for Maine’s Future included in: The Future of Transportation Funding in Maine: A Report to the Joint Standing Committee on Transportation 122nd Maine Legislature.

Page 7: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

7

16. K.Hunt, C.L. Noblet, T. Allen and L. Bragg. 2006. Maine’s Creative Economy: Connecting Creativity, Commerce and Community. Margaret Chase Smith Policy Center Publication.

17. M.F. Teisl, A. White-Cyr§, J. Rubin, C. L. Noblet, 2005. Mainers’ knowledge, practices and attitudes toward clean air, vehicle emissions and Maine’s Clean Car Program. Department of Resource Economics and Policy Staff Paper # 551

18. M. F. Teisl, J. Rubin, C. L. Noblet, L. Cayting, M. Morrill, T. Brown, and S. Jones. 2004. Designing Effective Environmental Labels for Passenger Vehicle Sales in Maine: Results of Focus Group Research. Maine Agricultural Experiment Station Bulletin 434.

Popular Publications

1. Caroline L. Noblet, Mario F. Teisl, Katherine H. Farrowᶲ and Jonathan Rubin. 2013. Biofuels development in Maine: Using trees to oil the wheels of sustainability. Bangor Daily News. March 12, 2013. http://bangordailynews.com/2013/03/12/opinion/biofuels-development-in-maine-using-trees-to-oil-the-wheels-of-sustainability/?ref=search

2. Mario F. Teisl, Caroline L. Noblet, and Shannon McCoy. 2011. Maine Voices: Offshore wind has role in Maine's future Maine Sunday Telegram. June 26. http://www.pressherald.com/opinion/offshore-wind-has-role-in-maines-future_2011-06-26.html

3. Mario F. Teisl, Shan Huang, Caroline L. Noblet, Lisa Bragg, Catherine LaRochelle, Micheal Devanney, Jennifer L. Ward and Metin Cakir. 2004. Should School Districts Consolidate Bangor Daily News, April 5.

RESEARCH GRANTS AWARDED

External Awards Total (based on percent responsibility, as noted below): $ 3,993,484 Internal Awards Total: $153,371

1. Disparate data integration and communication to support resilience in coastal Maine communities ($49,916)

Investigators: J. Jansujwicz and eight others including Noblet Sponsor: George J. Mitchell Center for Sustainable Solutions Project dates: May 2018-May 2019 Awarded: May 2018

2. Acadia National Park as a Resiliency Tool for its Surrounding Community ($23, 810) Investigators: Megan Bailey, Andrew Crawley and Caroline Noblet (10%) Sponsor: Friends of Acadia Project dates: January 2018-September 2018 Awarded: December 8, 2017

3. Communicating Climate Change for Maine’s Tourism ($45,000) Investigators: Caroline Noblet, Laura Rickard, Sandra DeUrioste-Stone Sponsor: George J. Mitchell Center for Sustainable Solutions Project Dates: June 2017-June 2018 Awarded: May 2017

4. Automated Vehicles: Economics Incentives for Environmental Benefits and Safety ($42,000)

Investigators: Jonathan Rubin and Caroline Noblet (50%) Sponsor: U.S. Department of Transportation, through Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Page 8: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

8

Project dates: August 2016-2018 Awarded: August 18, 2016

5. Recreation Impacts of Changing Shorelines ($9,912) Investigators: Kathleen Bell and Caroline Noblet (50%) Sponsor: US Department of Commerce through ME Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Conservation Project dates: July - October 2016 Awarded: Summer 2016

6. The Nexus of Coastal Marine Social-Environmental Ecosytems and Sustainable Ecological Aquaculture ($30,000,000)

Investigators: multiple investigators including Caroline Noblet as Theme co-leader (7%) Sponsor: National Science Foundation – EPSCoR, Track 1 Program Project dates: 2014-2019

7. Understanding factors influencing sustainable behavior and natural resource decision making

Investigators: CL Noblet Sponsor: USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture, 1003466 [Maine Agricultural and Forest Experiment Station ME021510 Project Dates: October 1, 2014-September 30, 2019

8. Community‐Based Sustainable Energy Solutions ($49,000) Investigators: Sharon Klein, Caroline Noblet, Cindy Isenhour Sponsor: George J. Mitchell Center for Sustainable Solutions Project Dates: June 2015-August 2016

9. Using Immersive Virtual Reality to Understanding the Impacts of Wind Energy Siting ($58,455)

Investigators: Nicholas Giudice, Mario Teisl, Caroline Noblet Sponsor: Maine EPSoR and Maine Sustainability Solutions Initiative Project Dates: January 2014-August 2014

10. Understanding factors influencing response to natural resource valuation information ($7,493)

Investigators: Caroline Noblet and Sandra Goff (Ph.D. student) Sponsor: University of Maine Rising Tide Center: Research Seed Program Project Dates: February 2014- Fall 2015

11. Collaborative Research: Strengthening the scientific basis for decision-making: Advancing sustainability science and knowledge-action capacities in coupled coastal systems ($3,000,000)

Investigators: Laura Lindenfeld, Kathleen Bell, David Hart (C. Noblet invited to join team post-award, 5%) Sponsor: National Science foundation, EPSCoR Track 2 Program Project Dates: September 2013-August 2016

12. Sustainable Energy Pathways – Integrated National Framework for Cellulosic Drop In Fuels ($2,000,000)

Investigators: one of 12 (Noblet, 5%) Sponsor: National Science Foundation Project Dates: July 2012 to July 2016

13. Economic Impact of Maine’s Clean Technology Sector ($25,000) Investigators: Todd Gabe and Caroline Noblet (50%) Sponsor: Maine Technology Institute Project Dates: July 2012 to July 2013

14. Funding Impacts on the Maine Snowmobile Industry ($5,000) Investigators: Stephen Reiling and Caroline Noblet (30%) Sponsor: Maine Snowmobile Association Project Dates: September 2010 to July 2011

Page 9: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

9

15. The Center for Sustainability Solutions: Linking Research with Action to Shape Maine’s Changing Landscape ($30,000,000)

Investigators: One of multiple investigators (Noblet, 5%). Sponsor: National Science Foundation-EPSCOR. (Track 1) Project Dates: 2009-2014

16. Marketing New England Biofuels to Ensure Energy Security ($101, 218) Investigators: Mario Teisl, Caroline Noblet (40%) and Jonathan Rubin Sponsor: US Department of Transportation through Cornell University Sungrant Project dates: July 2008 to July 2010

17. Saint John Valley Creative Economy Project (Phase 1: $49, 680; Phase 2: $49,992) Investigators: Kathryn Hunt and Caroline Noblet (20%) Sponsor: USDA Rural Business Opportunity Grants Project dates: October 2006-October 2007; October 2007-October 2008

18. Stonington Fisheries Industry Economic Impact ($13,500) Investigators: Caroline Noblet (50%) and James Wilson Sponsor: Town of Stonington Project dates: March 2008 to September 2008

19. Cooperative Agreement to Study Consumer Demand for Food Safety Investigators: Mario Teisl, Brian Roe and Caroline Noblet Sponsor: Center for Disease Control and Prevention Project Dates: September 2006 – January 2010

20. Economic Impact of Non-Motorized Guide-Led Recreation in Maine ($11,530) Investigators: Caroline Noblet (70%) and Todd Gabe Sponsor: Maine Wilderness Society Project dates: May 2006 – September 2008

21. Supporting Innovation and Growth of the Environmental and Energy Technology Cluster ($40, 198)

Investigators: Caroline Noblet (50%) and Todd Gabe Sponsor: Environmental Energy and Technology Council of Maine Project dates: April 2006 – April 2007

22. Sustainable Transportation Funding for Maine ($25,298) Investigators: Charles Morris, Daniel Innis, Caroline Noblet (20%), Jonathan Rubin and Gregory Gould Sponsor: Maine Department of Transportation Project dates: September 2005 – March 2006

23. Cooperative Agreement Proposal to the Maine Arts Commission ($15,000) Investigators: Kathryn Hunt and Caroline Noblet (25%) Sponsor: Maine Arts Commission Project dates: September 2005 – August 2007

PRESENTATIONS and POSTERS

1. Noblet, C.L., Rickard, L., Britwum, K. and Evans, K.S. More Farms on The Water? U.S

Consumers’ Perceptions of Aquaculture Practices and Products. Northeastern Agricultural and Resource Economics Association, pre-conference workshop. Philadelphia, PA. June 9-12, 2018. Conference Presentation

2. Evans, Keith S. and Noblet, Caroline L. Preference heterogeneity for shellfish product labels. Northeastern Agricultural and Resource Economics Association. Philadelphia, PA. June 9-12, 2018. Conference Presentation

3. Noblet, C.L., Goff, S.H. and J. R. Anthony. The impact of economic valuation information on environmental charitable giving. New England Experimental Economics Workshop. May 23-24, 2018. Conference Presentation

Page 10: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

10

4. Noblet, C.L., Goff, S.H. and J. R. Anthony. The impact of economic valuation information on environmental charitable giving. Conference on Behavioral and Experimental Economics Methods and Applications to Agri-environmental Policy. Shepherdstown, WV. October 14-15, 2017. Poster

5. Klein, S.J.W., Nittel, S., Stinsonᶲ, K., Noblet, C.L., Isenhour, C., Coffeyᶲ, S., Oral Presentation. Communities taking solar into their own hands: a social science look at the growing community solar movement, American Solar Energy Society’s 46th National Solar Conference, University of Colorado, Denver, Colorado, October 9-12, 2017. Conference Presentation.

6. Anthonyᶲ, J.R., Colgan, C., Noblet, C.L., and K. Bell "Beachgoers of Maine: Who are they and what do they think about water quality?" The Beaches Conference. July 14, 2017. Wells, Maine. Conference Presentation

7. Rickard, L.N., Noblet, C.L., Brayden, C. and Duffy, K. Awareness, perception and acceptance of marine aquaculture: An exploratory study of New England Consumers. Conference on Communication and Environment (COCE). Leicester, England. June 29-July 2, 2017. Conference Presentation.

8. Teisl, M.F., Engelberth, H., Frohmberg, E., Butts, K., Noblet, C.L, Stableford, S., Lando, A., & A. E. Smith. 2017. Informing pregnant women about the benefits and risks of eating fish. Invited paper. 13th International Conference on Mercury as a Global Pollutant. Providence RI July 19th

9. Noblet, C.L. and Evans, K.S. Public Preferences for Marine Development in Shared Multi-use waters. Northeastern Agricultural and Resource Economics Association. June 11-14, 2017. Washington, D.C. Conference Presentation

10. Liddellᶲ, C., Noblet, C.L. and Evans, K.S. Determinants of Preferences Regarding Logging in Maine’s North Woods. Northeastern Agricultural and Resource Economics Association. June 11-14, 2017. Washington, D.C. Conference Presentation

11. Braydenᶲ, W.C. and C.L. Noblet. Assessing consumer preferences for seafood labels. Canadian Economics Association. St. Francis Xavier University, Nova Scotia CA. June 2nd-June 4th, 2017

12. Noblet, C.L., Rubin, J. and R. Jenningsᶲ. Perceptions of Self-Driving Vehicles and Impact on Demand. Maine Economics Conference. April 29, 2017. Colby College Waterville, Maine. Conference Presentation.

13. Anthonyᶲ, J.R. and C.L. Noblet "Taking the risk: factors influencing citizen risk perception under beach and shellfish advisories and closures." Maine Economics Conference. April 29, 2017. Poster.

14. Liddellᶲ, C., Noblet, C.L., Evans, K.S. Building Maine's Economic Future: Can Forestry and Outdoor Recreation Coexist?". University of Maine Research Symposium, Bangor, ME, April 24, 2017. Poster

15. Braydenᶲ, W.C., and C.L Noblet. Assessing Consumer Preferences for Seafood Labels: the Impact of Certification and Origin. University of Maine Research Symposium, Bangor, ME, April 24, 2017. Poster

Page 11: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

11

16. Anthonyᶲ, J.R. and C.L. Noblet "Taking the risk: factors influencing citizen risk perception under beach and shellfish advisories and closures." University of Maine Graduate and Undergraduate Research Symposium. April 24, 2017. Poster.

17. Deschaine§, J. and Noblet, C.L. Exploring U.S. citizen knowledge of aquaculture. University of Maine Research Symposium, Bangor, ME, April 24, 2017. Poster

18. Eslin§, A. and Noblet, C.L. The Impact of Economic and Psychological Metrics on Political Decision-Making. University of Maine Research Symposium, Bangor, ME, April 24, 2017. Poster

19. Braydenᶲ, W.C., Noblet, C.L., Assessing Consumer Preferences for Seafood Labels: the Impact of Certification and Origin. Maine Sustainability & Water Conference, Augusta, ME, March 30, 2017. (2nd place in Graduate student competition). Poster.

20. Anthonyᶲ, J.R. and C.L. Noblet "Taking the risk: factors influencing citizen risk perception under beach and shellfish advisories and closures." Maine Sustainability and Water Conference. March 30, 2017. Poster.

21. Liddellᶲ, C., Noblet, C.L., Evans, K.S. Building Maine's Economic Future: Can Forestry and Outdoor Recreation Coexist?". Maine Sustainability & Water Conference. Augusta, ME. March 30, 2017. Poster

22. Braydenᶲ, W.C., Noblet, C.L. Assessing Consumer Preferences for Seafood Labels: the Impacts of Certification and Origin on Farm-Raised Products. Aquaculture America Conference, San Antonio, TX, February 21, 2017. Conference Presentation:

23. Braydenᶲ, W.C., Noblet, C. L., Snell, M., Kashkooli§, M. 2017. Assessing Consumer Preferences for Seafood Labels: The Impact of Certification and Origin. Northeast Aquaculture Conference and Exposition, Providence, RI, January 12, 2017. Poster

24. Braydenᶲ, W.C., Noblet, C. L., Snell, M., Kashkooli§, M. 2016. Assessing Consumer Preferences of Seafood Labels:The Impact of Production Type and Location. Regional Association for Research on the Gulf of Maine Annual Science Meeting, Portsmouth, NH, October 13, 2016. Poster.

25. Foxᶲ, E., McGreavy, B., Noblet, C.L., Eslin§, A., Bell, K., Disney, J. 2016. Ecosystem Values as a Participatory Model for Stakeholder Engagement? A Case Study in Maine's Frenchman Bay Region. Acadia Science Symposium, Winter Harbor, ME. Oct. 5, 2016. Poster.

26. Noblet, C.L., Evans, K.S., Foxᶲ, E., Bell, K.P., Kaminskiᶲ, A. 2016. Citizen Choices for Allocating Coastal Water Quality Funds. Northeastern Agricultural and Resource Economics Association Workshop: Economics of Changing Coastal Resources Workshop, Bar Harbor, Maine. June 21-22, 2016. Conference Presentation.

27. Noblet, C.L., Bell, K.P., Foxᶲ, E.L, Kaminskiᶲ, A., Eslin§, A. and Hallowell§, A. 2016. Turning the Tide: Impact of Framing on Coastal Water Quality Decisions. Association of Environmental and Resource Economists (AERE) Annual Conference Breckenridge, Colorado, Colorado. June 9-11, 2016. Poster.

28. S. Hughs Goffᶲ, T. Waring and C. L. Noblet. 2016. Does Pricing Nature Reduce Support for Conservation?: Evidence from Donation Behavior in an Online Experiment. Western

Page 12: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

12

Economic Association International (WEAI) Annual Conference. Portland, Oregon. June 29-July 3, 2016. Conference Presentation.

29. Grezdaᶲ, D., Teisl, M., Noblet, C.L.,"Factors influencing environmental behaviors". 4th Maine Economics Conference, Bates College, ME. April 30, 2016. Poster.

30. Foxᶲ, E., Noblet, C.L, Bell, K., Kaminskiᶲ, A., Snell, E., Eslin§, A. 2016. Attitudes and their impact on citizen willingness to pay for coastal water quality improvement. Maine Economics Conference. Lewiston, ME. April 30, 2016. Poster.

31. Hallowell§, A., Kashkooli§, M., Noblet, C.L. Consumer Seafood Preferences: Production Methods and Points of Purchase. University of Maine Student Research Symposium. April 27, 2016. Poster.

32. Braydenᶲ, W.C., Noblet, C. L., Kashkooli§, M. From Sea to Table: Examining Coastal Citizens' and Consumers' Perceptions of Aquaculture. University of Maine Student Research Symposium, Bangor, ME, April 27, 2016. Poster.

33. Foxᶲ, E. McGreavy, B., Noblet, C.L., Bell, K., Disney, J., Kaminskiᶲ, A., Farrell, A., Hallowell§, A. 2016. Ecosystem service values as relational communication and a model for stakeholder engagement. University of Maine Student Research Symposium. April 27, 2016. Poster.

34. Emma Foxᶲ, Isaac Leslieᶲ, Caroline L. Noblet, Thomas Safford, Kathleen P. Bell, Abigail Kaminskiᶲ, Charlotte Thompsonᶲ, Margaret Snell and Allyson Eslin§. 2016. Coastal tourism and citizen attitudes about coastal water quality: Risk communication and community engagement for effective coastal zone management in Maine. Maine Sustainability and Water Conference. March 29, 2016. Augusta, Maine. Conference Presentation.

35. Kathleen P. Bell, Abigail Kaminskiᶲ, Keith Evans and Caroline L. Noblet. 2016. Beach recreation, coastal water quality, and beach advisories: insights and questions (from Maine and New Hampshire). W-3133 Annual Meeting. Portland, OR February 25, 2016. Conference Presentation.

36. Mario F. Teisl, Caroline L. Noblet, Sarah Marrinanᶲ, Travis Blackmer, Dorina Grezdaᶲ and Nehat Dobratiqiᶲ. 2015. Internal and external motivators for environmentally sound waste management. Unitwin Network Seminar. University of Wisconsin. Madison Wisconsin. September 3-5. Invited keynote presentation (webcast).Presentation video: https://mediasite.engr.wisc.edu/Mediasite/Play/70b975fe8c6749e698699e87616570cd1d?playFrom=1706000

37. Noblet, C.L., Bell, K., Foxᶲ, E., Kaminskiᶲ, A., Eslin, A., Snell, M. “Testing the Waters’ with Citizens: Factors Determining Citizen Willingness to Pay for Coastal Water Quality Improvements”. Northeast Agricultural Northeastern Agricultural and Resource Economics Association (NAREA)/Canadian Agricultural Economics Society Joint Annual Meeting. Newport, RI. June 29, 2015. Conference Presentation.

38. Noblet, C.L., Teisl, M.F., Evans, K., Anderson, M.W., McCoy, S. and Cervone, E. Public Preferences for investments in renewable energy production and energy efficiency. Maine Economics Conference. Bowdoin, ME. May 2, 2015. Conference Presentation

39. Kaminskiᶲ, A., Bell, K. Noblet, C. L. What is the value of a day at the beach? An exploration of Maine and New Hampshire Beaches. Maine Economics Conference, Bowdoin, ME. May 2, 2015 (graduate student – category winner). Poster.

Page 13: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

13

40. Noblet, C.L., Wojtskowski-Barbarau L, Anderson, M.W. What are they thinking: Learning from Maine Citizens. Maine Land Trust Network Annual Conference. Plenary Speaker. April 25, 2015. Information available at: http://www.mltn.org/meetings/plenary-session.php. Video available at: http://www.mltn.org/meetings/conservation-conference.php

41. Noblet, C.L., Beard K., Bell, K.P., Foxᶲ, E., Kaminskiᶲ, A., and Obamsawin, T. Linking insights from Analysis of Fecal Coliform Levels and Citizen Survey Responses. Maine Sustainability and Water Conference. March 31, 2015. August, Maine. Conference Presentation

42. Foxᶲ, E., Noblet, C.L., Bell, K., Kaminskiᶲ, A., Obomsawin, T and Snell, M. ‘Who should bear the burden of cost for protecting water quality? Maine and New Hampshire coastal resident perceptions about financial responsibility’. Poster. Maine Sustainability and Water Conference. March 31, 2015.

43. Obomsawin,T., Noblet, C.L., Bell, K.P., Kaminskiᶲ, A. and E. Foxᶲ. 2015. A Statistical Report of Maine Residents’ Perceptions of Water Quality Issues. Poster. Maine Sustainability & Water Conference, Augusta, ME, March 31, 2015.

44. Kaczor, K., Kaminskiᶲ, A., Rude, A., Bell, K.P., Lynn, M., Peckenham, J., Noblet, C.L, and C. Colgan. 2015. Maine and New Hampshire’s Coastal Beaches: Multiple Perspectives, Maine Sustainability & Water Conference. Augusta, ME, March 31, 2015

45. Noblet, C.L. How do we talk about Global Climate Change. First Annual Maine Science Festival. Service Presentation. Bangor, Maine. March 21, 2015.

46. Noblet, C.L., McCoy, S.K., Plant, A., Goplen, J. Energy Behavior: Do we see licensing? Sustainability Psychology Preconference, Society for Personality and Social Psychology. February 26, 2015. Long Beach, California. Conference Presentation

47. Obomsawin, T., Noblet, C.L., Bell, K.P, Snell, M. and Kaminsky, A. ‘Do Maine and New Hampshire Residents Prefer Shellfish Harvested Locally? Measuring the Supply and Demand of Shellfish Harvested in Maine and New Hampshire’. Poster. Maine Annual EPSCoR Conference. December 1, 2014.

48. Eslin, A., Witick, A., Phillips, M., Noblet, C.L., Anderson, M. ‘The Value of Conservation in Hancock and Washington Counties’. Poster. Maine Annual EPSCoR Conference. December 1, 2014.

49. Eslin, A., Witick, A., Newcomb,S., Noblet, C.L. ‘Maine Citizens Interaction with Environmental Concerns’. Poster. Maine Annual EPSCoR Conference. December 1, 2014.

50. Noblet, C. L., Newcombᶲ, S., Witick, A., Eslin, A., Anderson, M., Teisl, M. and McCoy, S. ‘Adaptation and Sustainability Incentives’. Maine Climate Adaptation and Sustainability Conference, October 23, 2014 Orono, Maine. Invited Speaker.

51. Noblet, C. L., Anderson, Mark W. and Teisl, Mario F. 2014. Thinking past, Thinking future: An empirical test of the effects of Retrospective Assessment on Future Preferences. Western Economic Association International, Annual Conference. July 1, 2014. Conference Presentation.

52. Noblet, C. L., John Thøgersen and Mario F. Teisl. ‘Drive Less: Easy to Say, Hard to do. Understanding decisions to change travel modes’. Behavior Energy and Climate Change Conference. Sacramento, California November 17-20, 2013. Conference Presentation

Page 14: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

14

53. Noblet, C. L. ‘Economics, Psychology and Sustainability’. Invited Presentation. L.L. Bean Colloquium Series. October 28, 2013. Information available at: http://people.usm.maine.edu/gramlich/colloquium/fall13/noblet/

54. Teisl, M., S. McCoy, S. Marrinanᶲ, C. L. Noblet, T. Johnson, M. Wibberlyᶲ, R. Roper & S. Klein. 2013. Will offshore energy face fair winds and following seas?: Understanding what influences offshore wind acceptance. Selected presentation. Maine Economics Conference, April 27th, Bates College. Conference Presentation

55. C. L. Noblet. Describing the Clean Technology Sector in Maine: Preliminary Results from Sector Survey. Environmental and Energy Technology Council of Maine “Building & Growing the Clean Tech Sector” Forum. Portland, Maine March 12, 2013. Invited Speaker.

56. C.L. Noblet, Shannon McCoy and Mario F. Teisl. ‘Primed for Action? The potential role of priming in renewable energy acceptance’. Behavior Energy and Climate Change Conference. Sacramento, California November 12-14, 2012. Conference Presentation

57. Haley Engelberthᶲ, Mario Teisl, C.L. Noblet, Kathleen Bell, Andrew Smith, Eric Frohmberg and Karyn Butts. 2012. An econometric analysis of Maine’s mercury advisory. Selected paper. Annual meeting of the Agricultural and Applied Economics Association, Seattle WA Aug. 12-14.

58. Sarah Marrinanᶲ, Mario Teisl, C.L. Noblet, and Hsaing-tai Cheng Deep-water and Land-based Wind Power as Substitutes: Measuring the Influences for Wind Power Support in Maine. Selected paper. Annual meeting of the Northeast Agricultural and Resource Economics Association. Lowell, MA. June 12-14, 2012.

59. Haley M. Engelberthᶲ, Andy Smith, Mario Teisl, Kathleen Bell and CL Noblet. 2012. There’s nothing “Fishy” about fish: A public health effort to inform at-risk women in Maine about risks and benefits. Selected Paper. Agricultural and Applied Economics Association Food Environment Symposium, Tufts University May 31.

60. Haley M. Engelberthᶲ, Mario F. Teisl, CL Noblet, Kathleen P. Bell, Eric Frohmberg, Andrew E. Smith, and Karyn Butts. 2012. Selected poster (First place award). Fish Advisories for At-Risk Mainers: Does knowledge lead to action? Maine Water Conference, Augusta ME. March 14

61. C.L. Noblet, Mark W. Anderson and Mario Teisl. Dancing in the Wind: Do you do the Weltanshauung? Energy Decisions may depend on Worldviews. Poster. Behavior, Energy and Climate Change. Washington, D.C. November 29-December 1, 2011.

62. Sarah Marrinanᶲ, Mario F. Teisl , C.L. Noblet, Hsiang-tai Cheng, Megan Wibberly. 2011. Do you have to be a Maine-iac to recycle? Recycling among an aging population. Poster. Behavior, Energy and Climate Change Conference, Dec. 1 Washington, DC.

63. Megan Wibberlyᶲ, C.L. Noblet, Mario Teisl and Shannon McCoy. 2011. Income: What's There to Stress About? The Use of Economic Stress to Measure Budget Constraints. Selected paper. Behavior, Energy and Climate Change Conference, Dec. 1 Washington, DC.

64. Megan Wibberlyᶲ, Mario Teisl, C.L. Noblet and Shannon McCoy. National: Consumers are stressing out! The effect of perceived economic stress on willingness to pay for offshore wind power. Selected paper. Renewable Energy Markets Conference. San Francisco, CA, Nov. 15 – 18, 2011

Page 15: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

15

65. Megan Wibberlyᶲ, Mario Teisl, C.L. Noblet and Shannon McCoy. Local: What’s there to stress about? Using perceived economic stress to examine support for wind power in Maine. Presentation to the University of Maine School of Economics. Orono, ME, October 14, 2011

66. Megan Wibberlyᶲ, Mario Teisl, Caroline Noblet and Shannon McCoy. Local: What’s there to stress about? Using perceived economic stress to examine support for wind power in Maine. Invited Presentation. Maine’s Sustainability Solutions Initiative All Team Meeting. Orono, ME,October 5, 2011

67. Susan Gardner, C.L. Noblet and Shannon McCoy. Interdisciplinary Collaboration and Organizational Innovation. 2011 Maine Epscor Conference . September 26, 2011. Invited Presentation

68. Megan Wibberlyᶲ, Mario Teisl, C.L. Noblet and Shannon McCoy. Local: What’s there to stress about? Using perceived economic stress to examine support for wind power in Maine. Invited Presentation. Maine’s Sustainability Solutions Initiative All Team Meeting. Orono, ME,October 5, 2011

69. Sarah Marrinanᶲ, Mario F. Teisl, C.L. Noblet and Hsiang-tai Cheng. 2011. Wind power substitutes: Understanding the factors which deviate support between offshore and land-based wind power Selected Presentation. Maine EPSCoR State Conference. Orono, ME, September 26, 2011

70. Megan Wibberlyᶲ, Mario Teisl, C.L. Noblet and Shannon McCoy. 2011: What’s there to stress about? Using perceived economic stress to examine support for wind power in Maine. Selected Presentation. Maine EPSCoR State Conference. Orono, ME, September 26, 2011

71. Ryan Pickeringᶲ, Shannon McCoy, Stacia Dreyerᶲ, Mario Teisl, C.L. Noblet and Megan Wibberlyᶲ. 2011. He who is active is rich: Free outdoor recreation can make the poor feel richer and have a more positive outlook Selected Poster. Maine EPSCoR State Conference. Orono, ME, September 26, 2011

72. Stacia Dreyerᶲ, Shannon McCoy, Mario Teisl, C.L. Noblet and Joseph Wellmanᶲ. 2011 Get Outside and Play: Environmental Concern as a Mediator for the Effect of Outdoor Recreation on Pro-environmental Behavior Selected Poster. Maine EPSCoR State Conference. Orono, ME, September 26, 2011

73. C.L. Noblet. Economic Development in the Real Economy. New England Basic Economic Development Course. Sponsored by: Economic Development Council of Maine. September 12 - 14, 2011. Portland, Maine.

74. Mario F. Teisl, C.L. Noblet, Shannon McCoy, Mark Anderson, Megan Wibberlyᶲ, Brandon Cosleyᶲ, Joseph Wellmanᶲ, Stacia Dreyerᶲ, Sarah Marrinanᶲ, Karen Hutchinsᶲ and Kevin Price§. 2011. Are Mainers Blown Away by Wind? Selected presentation. Annual meeting of the Northeast Agricultural and Resource Economics Association. Pittsburgh, PA, July 25-26.

75. Shyamani Siriwardenaᶲ, Gary Hunt, Mario Teisl, and C.L. Noblet. 2011. Effectiveness of Eco-Marketing on Green Vehicle Purchase Behavior in Maine: A Nested-logit Model Approach Selected presentation. Annual meeting of the Northeast Agricultural and Resource Economics Association. Pittsburgh, PA, July 25-26.

Page 16: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

16

76. Megan R. Wibberlyᶲ, Mario F. Teisl, C.L. Noblet, and Shannon K. McCoy. 2011. How Will the Availability of Wind Energy Effect Electricity Consumption Behavior? Selected presentation. Annual meeting of the Northeast Agricultural and Resource Economics Association. Pittsburgh, PA, July 25-26.

77. Katherine Farrowᶲ, Mario F. Teisl and C.L. Noblet. 2011. Does Money Grow on Trees?: People's Willingness-to-Pay for Cellulosic Ethanol, Selected presentation. Annual meeting of the Northeast Agricultural and Resource Economics Association. Pittsburgh, PA, July 25-26.

78. C.L. Noblet, Stacia Dreyerᶲ, Shannon McCoy and Mario Teisl. Environmental Behaviors, Recreation and the NEP. What May NEP Subscales offer in this ongoing story? Selected Presentation. Joint Conference of the International Confederation for the Advancement of Behavioral Economics and Economic Psychology/International Association for Research in Economic Psychology / Society for the Advancement of Behavioral Economics Conference. July 12-July 15, 2011. Exeter, U.K.

79. Brandon Cosleyᶲ, Shannon McCoy, C.L. Noblet (presenter), Mario Teisl and Joseph Wellmanᶲ. Influencing support for new environmental technology by bolstering the status quo. Selected Presentation. Joint Conference of the The International Confederation for the Advancement of Behavioral Economics and Economic Psychology/International Association for Research in Economic Psychology / Society for the Advancement of Behavioral Economics Conference. July 12-July 15, 2011. Exeter, U.K.

80. Mario F. Teisl, C.L. Noblet, Shannon McCoy, Brandon Cosleyᶲ, Joseph Wellmanᶲ, Stacia Dreyerᶲ, Karen Hutchinsᶲ, and Sarah Marrinanᶲ. 2011. What you say and who you say it to: How messaging about wind power can be helpful, or harmful. Selected presentation. Joint conference of the International Association for Research in Economic Psychology~and the Society for the Advancement of Behavioral Economics University of Exeter, UK, July 12-15.

81. Megan R. Wibberlyᶲ, Mario F. Teisl, C.L. Noblet, and Shannon K. McCoy. 2011. How will the availability of wind energy effect electricity consumption behavior? Selected presentation. Joint conference of the International Association for Research in Economic Psychology and the Society for the Advancement of Behavioral Economics University of Exeter, UK, July 12-15.

82. Kathleen P. Bell, Eli Lazarus, C.L. Noblet and Shaleen Jain. Integrating across our sustainability science portfolio. Presentation to American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). May 23, 2011.

83. Laura Lindenfeld, Shannon McCoy, C.L. Noblet, Susan Gardner, Damon Hall and Karen Hutchinsᶲ. Knowledge to Action and Organizational Innovation. Presentation to American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). May 23, 2011.

84. Mario Teisl, C.L. Noblet, Shannon McCoy, Mark Anderson, Megan Wibberlyᶲ, Brandon Cosleyᶲ, Joseph Wellmanᶲ, Stacia Dreyerᶲ, Sarah Marrinenᶲ, Karen Hutchinsᶲ and Kevin Price§. 2011. Are Mainers ‘blown away’ by wind? Invited presentation. Maine Wind Energy Conference. Augusta, ME, January 24-25.

85. Mario Teisl, C.L. Noblet, Shannon McCoy, Mark Anderson, Megan Wibberlyᶲ, Brandon Cosleyᶲ, Joseph Wellmanᶲ, Stacia Dreyerᶲ, Sarah Marrinenᶲ, Karen Hutchinsᶲ and Kevin Price§. 2011. Are Mainers ‘blown away’ by wind? Presentation to the Advanced Engineered Wood Composites Lab, University of Maine. Orono, ME, January 11.

Page 17: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

17

86. Mark Anderson, C.L. Noblet and Mario Teisl. 2011. World Views and Knowledge to Action. Team presentation. Maine Sustainability Solutions Initiative. University of Maine, Orono. January 13.

87. Mario Teisl, C.L. Noblet and Jonathan Rubin. 2010. Success and failure in eco-marketing vehicles Selected Paper Behavior, Energy and Climate Change Conference Sacramento, CA, November 14-17. www.beccconference.org

88. Mark Anderson, Mario Teisl and C.L. Noblet. 2010. World Views and Knowledge to Action in Sustainability Science. Poster. Maine EPSCoR Conference. University of Maine, Orono. Nov. 8.

89. Mario Teisl, Shannon McCoy, C.L. Noblet. 2010. Modeling Stakeholder Acceptance of Solutions to Environmental Problems. Poster. Maine EPSCoR Conference. University of Maine, Orono. Nov. 8.

90. Brandon Cosleyᶲ, Shannon McCoy, C.L. Noblet, Mario Teisl and Joseph Wellmanᶲ. 2010. Persuaded by the status quo: The role of economic stress in persuasion for environmental messages. Poster. Maine EPSCoR Conference. University of Maine, Orono. Nov. 8.

91. Mario F. Teisl, Shannon McCoy and C.L. Noblet. 2010. What's Economic Psychology? It's MeSSI. Seminar Presentation. School of Economics, University of Maine, Orono. Oct. 1

92. Mario F. Teisl, Shannon McCoy and C.L. Noblet. 2010. We are MESSI (MainE Sustainable Solutions Initiative): Using Interdisciplinary Social Science Research to Encourage Sustainability. Invited Paper. The Forum for Social Science Research Concerning the Environment and the Department of Marketing and Statistics. Århus School of Business, University of Århus. Århus, Denmark. September 10.

93. Katherine Hassett (Farrow) ᶲ, Mario F. Teisl, C.L. Noblet and Shannon McCoy. 2010. What’s Attitude got to do with it? Consumer Demand for Biofuels. Selected poster. Joint Conference of the International Association for Research in Economic Psychology and the Society for the Advancement of Behavioral Economics University of Cologne, Germany September 5-8.

94. Katherine Hassett (Farrow) ᶲ, C.L. Noblet, Mario F. Teisl and Shannon McCoy. 2010. Take a Hike! The Simultaneous Relationship between Recreation Behavior & Environmental Concern. Selected Paper. Joint conference of the International Association for Research in Economic Psychology and the Society for the Advancement of Behavioral Economics University of Cologne, Germany September 5-8.

95. Mario F. Teisl, Shannon McCoy and C.L. Noblet,. 2010. What’s ‘Driving’ Eco-Substitution Behaviors? A study in choices related to biofuels. Selected Paper. Joint Conference of the International Association for Research in Economic Psychology and the Society for the Advancement of Behavioral Economics University of Cologne, Germany September 5-8.

96. C.L. Noblet, Mario F. Teisl and Jonathan Rubin. 2010. What will New England Consumers want from their Biofuels? Invited Symposium Paper (Bioenergy Demand, Economics and Feedstock Supply). Northeastern Agricultural and Resource Economics Association Annual Conference Atlantic City, NJ. June 13-15.

97. Katherine Hassett (Farrow) ᶲ, Mario F. Teisl, C.L. Noblet and Shannon McCoy. 2010. Linking People’s Environmental Concern to their Exposure to Various Outdoor

Page 18: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

18

Activities. Northeastern Agricultural and Resource Economics Association Annual Conference Atlantic City, NJ. June 13-15.

98. Mario F. Teisl, C.L. Noblet and Shannon McCoy. 2010. Typology of consumers’ beliefs, attitudes and norms and substitution patterns across various environmental behaviors. Invited presentation. 3rd International Workshop on Ecolabeling, Laboratory of Forest Economics, INRA–AgroParisTech. Rennes, France June 2-3.

99. Mario F. Teisl, C.L. Noblet and Shannon McCoy. 2010. Mapping consumers' ‘green’, economic and security motivations to participate in various energy behaviors. Invited presentation. Economics Laboratory, INRA–SupAgro, Montpellier, France June 7.

100. Katherine Hassett (Farrow) ᶲ, Mario F. Teisl and C.L. Noblet. 2010. Attitudes and Attributes: What Determines Fuel Choice? Invited presentation. The Northeast Sungrant Annual Meeting. Syracuse NY. May 24–26.

101. C.L. Noblet, Mario F. Teisl, Jonathan Rubin and Katherine Hassett (Farrow)ᶲ. 2010. Understanding people’s acceptance of cellulosic ethanol. Invited poster. The Northeast Sungrant Annual Meeting. Syracuse NY. May 24–26.

102. Mario F. Teisl and C.L. Noblet. 2009. The Psychology of Eco-Consumption - Invited paper. 2nd International Workshop on Ecolabeling, Laboratory of Forest Economics, INRA–AgroParisTech. Nancy, France June 29-30.

103. Mario F. Teisl, C.L. Noblet and Jonathan Rubin 2009. Designing a marketing program for cellulosic ethanol; SunGrant Initiative Energy Conference. Washington DC. March 13.

104. Mark W. Anderson, Mario Teisl, C.L. Noblet, George Criner, Jonathan Rubin and Timothy Dalton. 2008. Attitudinal Change in Higher Education Courses on the Environment: What Should We Be Asking? Selected Paper. Annual Meeting of the International Symposium on Society and Resource Management. Burlington, VT. June 12.

105. Mario F. Teisl, C.L. Noblet and Jonathan Rubin. 2007. Eco-marketing: Is going green red hot? Invited presentation. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency New England Headquarters. Boston, MA Oct. 24.

106. Mario F. Teisl, Brian Roe, C.L. Noblet, Nancy E. Bockstael, Kevin J. Boyle, Alan S. Levy, Gerald Mumma, Tamera Riggs and Mark Messonnier. 2007. Can survey-based scenarios measure consumer values for improved food safety? Selected paper. Annual Meeting of the American Agricultural Economics Association Portland, Oregon, July 29 – August 1.

107. Mario F. Teisl, Jonathan Rubin and C.L. Noblet. 2007. The impacts of an eco-marketing program for environmentally preferred vehicles. Selected poster. Annual Meeting of the American Agricultural Economics Association Portland, Oregon, July 29 – August 1.

108. Mark W. Anderson, Mario Teisl, C.L. Noblet, and George Criner. 2007. Using the New Ecological Paradigm (NEP) to Assess Attitudinal Change in Higher Education Courses on the Environment Selected paper. International Conference on the Environment in Portland, Maine, June 30-July 3.

109. Mario F. Teisl, Jonathan Rubin and C.L. Noblet. 2007. Do Eco-Communication Strategies Reduce Energy Use and Emissions from Light-Duty Vehicles? Selected Poster.

Page 19: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

19

Annual Meeting of the Transportation Research Board. Washington, D.C., January 21–25.

110. Mario F. Teisl, Jonathan Rubin and C.L. Noblet. 2006. Potentials of eco-

communication strategies Invited presentation. Market Mechanisms workshop – U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Washington, DC. October 17th-18th.

111. Mario F. Teisl, Jonathan Rubin and C.L. Noblet. 2006. Do eco-communication strategies provide a road to sustainability? Invited paper. Centre for Energy Policy and Technology, Imperial College London, UK. July 12.

112. Mario F. Teisl, Jonathan Rubin and C.L. Noblet. 2006. Do eco-communication strategies provide a road to sustainability? Evidence from the passenger vehicle market. Selected paper. International Conference of the Greening of Industry Network. Cardiff, Wales UK. July 2-5.

113. Mario F. Teisl, Jonathan Rubin and C.L. Noblet. 2006. Eco-communication policies: Highway to an eco-future or a wrong turn down a one-way street? Invited paper. Workshop on eco-labelling. French National Institute for Agricultural Research. Nancy, France. June 29.

114. Mario F. Teisl, Jonathan Rubin and C.L. Noblet. 2006. Modeling the interaction between eco-labels and consumers: A psychonomic assessment Selected paper, Annual meeting of the Northeast Agricultural and Resource Economics Association. Mystic, CT. June 11-14.

115. Mario F. Teisl, Jonathan Rubin and C.L. Noblet, 2006. Eco-information and passenger vehicle consumers: Modelling the interaction and its impact on behaviour. Selected paper. Envecon 2006: Applied Environmental Economics Conference. The Royal Society - London. March 24.

116. Mario F. Teisl, C.L. Noblet and Jonathan Rubin. 2006. The Design of an Eco-Marketing and Labeling Program for Vehicles in Maine Selected paper. Transportation Research Board Annual Meeting. Washington, D.C January 22-26.

117. Mario F. Teisl, Jonathan Rubin and C.L. Noblet, 2006. It takes two to tango: Modeling the dance between eco-labels and consumers Invited paper, Economics Institute of Zagreb – Croatia. January 31.

118. C.L. Noblet, Mario F. Teisl and Jonathan Rubin. 2005. Green with Gasoline: Factors Affecting Consumer Assessment of Eco-Labeled Passenger Vehicles. Annual meeting of the Northeast Agricultural and Resource Economics Association. Annapolis, MD. June 13.

119. Mario F. Teisl, C.L. Noblet and Jonathan Rubin. 2005. The effect of green labels on consumer preferences U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Science Forum 2005, Washington DC May 17.

120. Mario F. Teisl, C.L. Noblet and Jonathan Rubin. 2005. The design and implementation of effective environmental information policies. The Role of Labeling in the Governance of Global Trade: The Developing Economy Perspective Conference – Invited paper. Bonn Germany. March 17-19

121. Mario F. Teisl, Jonathan Rubin, C.L. Noblet and Alice White-Cyr. 2004. Joint eco-marketing project: Eco-labeling passenger vehicles Presentation to Maine Department of Environmental Protection. Dec. 15.

Page 20: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

20

122. C.L. Noblet, Mario F. Teisl and Jonathan Rubin. 2004. Designing an Eco-marketing Program for Passenger Vehicles: What is the Likelihood of Success? Environmental and Resource Economics Workshop – Colorado University. Oct. 22-23.

MEDIA

• 2018. Local trumps organic – Aquaculture North America. Story features results of work with Master’s student W. Christian Brayden: https://www.aquaculturenorthamerica.com/research/local-trumps-organic-1855)

• 2016. Science with Attitude (story features graduate research assistant Emma Fox’s work). http://umaine.edu/mitchellcenter/news/news-2/science-with-attitude/

• 2016. Allyson Eslin: Triple Major Aiming for Public Office (story features research assistant/advisee Allyson Eslin). January 21, 2016. UMaine News. https://umaine.edu/news/blog/2016/01/21/allyson-eslin-triple-major-aiming-for-public-office/

• 2015. Undergraduate Engage in Research with Real World Impact (story features research assistant/advisee Allyson Eslin). July 30, 2015 http://umaine.edu/mitchellcenter/2015/07/29/undergraduates-engage-in-research-with-real-world-impact/

• 2015. UMaine Today article: Investing in efficient, renewable energy: https://umainetoday.umaine.edu/archives/springsummer-2015/news-briefs/

• 2015. Maine Public Broadcasting interview on Energy Efficiency study. http://news.mpbn.net/post/university-study-suggests-support-energy-efficiency. First broadcast: March 29, 2015.

• 2015. “Mitchell Center Director David Hart Joins U.S. Senator Angus King for Conversation on Climate Change”, featuring work by Caroline L. Noblet and team. http://umaine.edu/mitchellcenter/2015/04/07/mitchell-center-director-david-hart-joins-u-s-senator-angus-king-for-conversation-on-climate-change/. April 7, 2015.

• 2014. Wind Turbines Unlikely to Chase Tourists Away, Research Shows”. Senator George J. Mitchell Center & Maine’s Sustainability Solutions Initiative. http://umaine.edu/mitchellcenter/home/news/news-2/proposed-wind-turbines-unlikely-to-chase-tourists-away/

• 2014. “Despite Critiques, Environmental Law Scholars Support Interdisciplinary Research” (based on Owen and Noblet, 2014). July 14, 2014. http://umaine.edu/mitchellcenter/2014/07/14/despite-critiques-environmental-law-scholars-support-interdisciplinary-research/

• 2014. “What drives general acceptance of offshore wind farms?” in European Commission’s Science for Environmental Policy (based on Teisl, M. F., et al. (2014). Will Offshore Energy Face “Fair Winds and Following Seas”?: Understanding the Factors Influencing Offshore Wind Acceptance. Estuaries and Coasts. July 10, 2014. DOI: 10.1007/s12237-014-9777-6.). http://ec.europa.eu/environment/integration/research/newsalert/pdf/380na3_en.pdf

• 2014. “High-tech Wind Farm Simulation Awaits Mohegan Island Tourists”. May 19, 2014. http://umaine.edu/mitchellcenter/2014/05/19/high-tech-wind-farm-simulation-awaits-mohegan-island-tourists/

• 2014. ‘A New Take on Measuring Environmental Views’. (based on Noblet, Anderson and Teisl, 2013). Available: http://umaine.edu/mitchellcenter/a-new-take-on-measuring-environmental-views/

• MaineBiz September 3, 2013. Report: Cleantech leads Maine technology sectors in growth.

Page 21: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

21

http://www.mainebiz.biz/article/20130903/NEWS06/130909989?utm_source=enews&utm_medium=Daily%2BExtra&utm_campaign=Tuesday

• 2013. Biofuels development in Maine: Using trees to oil the wheels of sustainability.Bangor Daily News. March 12, 2013. http://bangordailynews.com/2013/03/12/opinion/biofuels-development-in-maineusing-trees-to-oil-the-wheels-of-sustainability/?ref=search

• 2011. Television Interview Regarding: Presentation at Maine Wind Energy Conference, work regarding acceptance of wind energy. January 25, 2011 Channel 7 News. http://titancast.titantv.com/p/wvii/v/6pm-Newscast-Tuesday-125/1ACB29DV.aspx

• 2010. Miller-McCune Magazine September 3, 2010. Gas Mileage Labels Get Sophisticated. http://www.miller-mccune.com/politics/gas-mileage-labels-get-sophisticated-21956/

TEACHING, MENTORING AND ADVISEMENT Recent Courses Taught ECO 120 Principles of Microeconomics introduces students (often first and second year) to the principles of microeconomics. This course fulfills an important function for the University and the School of Economics. At the University level, it is a required course for programs as varied as School of Business to Ecology and Environmental Science. It is often the first opportunity many students have had to learn about the discipline of economics. Further, this course fulfills the University’s general education requirement for “Social Contexts and Institutions” while not requiring a prerequisite. At the Department level, ECO 120 is a core course for all economics majors and is a key recruiting tool into the Economics major. ECO 377 Natural Resource Economics introduces upper level students, who are generally not economics majors, to the concepts of Natural Resource and Environmental Economics. Students in this course are generally studying natural sciences with management and policy implications, of which economics is a core component. Thus, this course provides students with skills applicable to their future careers which may not have been introduced in previous course work. The growth in class size in the past five years may provide evidence of students’ perceived value of this course (2013 n=45, 2014 n= 47, 2015 n= 57, 2016 n=62; F2017=65, F2018 projected 75). ECO 404/504 Behavioral and Experimental Economics provides an opportunity for undergraduate and graduate students to be exposed to the theories and applications of behavioral and experimental economics. The course was first offered in Spring 2016 as ECO 370 (undergraduate only) with only one economics course as a prerequisite, and therefore students in the course spanned from first year to graduating seniors; a majority were economics majors but students from Business were also represented. I was asked by the Department to develop this course because this sub discipline of economics has grown greatly in recent years, and has garnered much attention internationally from policy makers, the media and academics. An enrollment of almost 40 students for a pilot course demonstrates the interest in this subject area. Further, graduate students in our department requested a graduate version of this course and we were able to accommodate them by creating a 400/500 split for Fall 2017. I thus retooled the course and changed the prerequisites to allow for greater depth in the course.

Page 22: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

22

Sample Student Evaluation Comments Fall 2013 – C. Noblet is an amazing professor and uses a whole array of materials to inspire academic confidence in her subject. (ECO 377) Fall 2013 – Great instructor. Seemed to be very excited about teaching us every single day. Very respectful and easy to talk to. Always looking out for our best interest and making sure material was clear” (ECO 120) Fall 2014 – “Best teacher I have had since being at this school” (ECO 377) Fall 2015- “Professor Noblet is a wonderful teacher who demonstrates proficient knowledge in her area of work as well as an enthusiastic and inspiring method of teaching. More teachers like her should be hired” (ECO 377). Spring 2016 - “This is the first time this course was offered and I wish it had been available sooner because I may have changed my career plan towards behavioral economics. Prof. Noblet inspires passion in the subject and makes the material easy to understand and extremely enjoyable” (ECO 404/504) Fall 2016 - “Dr. Noblet is a passionate and professional teacher who strives to help all her students succeed” (ECO 377). Fall 2016 -“I had almost full intention to drop this class, but after the first week, it was my favorite course” (ECO 120) Fall 2017 - Dr. Noblet is an awesome professor who really cares about student growth. Material was interesting and meaningful” (ECO 377) Fall 2017 -I really enjoyed the course and the way in which it was taught. I felt I could bring the concepts from this class to all of my other classes” (ECO 404/504) Fall 2017 - As a graduating senior I say with confidence that Prof. Noblet is not only one of the best professors in her department but also one of the best across the entire University” (ECO 404/504) Graduate Students

Ph.D. (9, co-chair: 1) 1. Sandra Goff, PhD, Ecology and Environmental Science, The influence of monetary

valuation on contributions to natural resources. Co-advisors: C. Noblet, T. Waring. Graduated: May 2015, Accepted tenure track position, Skidmore College

2. Sarah Newcomb, IPh.D., Psychological Barriers to Sound Money Management: Advances in theory of human decision with practical applications to financial education. Advisors: S. McCoy and M. Teisl. Graduated: May 2015.

3. Emily (Silver) Huff, Ph.D., Forest Resources, Understanding Private Woodland Owner Forest Management: Qualitative and Quantitative Applications. Co-Advisor: J. Leahy and A. Weiskittel. Graduated: May 2015.

4. Julia McGuire, PhD, Ecology and Environmental Science, Sustainable Dairy Production and Producer Networks. Advisors: L. Lindenfeld and X. Chen. Graduated: May 2016.

Page 23: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

23

5. Emma Fox, Ph.D., Ecology and Environmental Science. Future of Dams. Advisor: S. Klein. Anticipated Graduation: May 2019

6. Lydia Horne, Ph.D., Ecology and Environmental Science. Climate Change Impacts on Tourism. Advisor: S. DeUrioste-Stone. Anticipated Graduation: May 2020

7. Kirstie Ruppert, Ph.D. Wildlife Ecology. Human –Wildlife Interactions. Advisor: C. Sponarski. Anticipated Graduation: May 2020

8. Taylor Lange, Ph.D. Ecology and Environmental Science. Cooperative Behavior in Local Foods. Advisor: T. Waring. Anticipated Graduation May 2020.

9. Kevin Duffy, Ph.D. Communication. Preferences for the Development of Maine’s Coastal Viewshed. Advisor: L. Rickard. Anticipated Graduation May 2020.

Master’s (31, chair: 8) 1. Eleanor Bacani, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, Measuring the impacts of eco-

marketing on Maine's vehicle market. Graduated August 2008.

2. Katherine Farrow, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, Modeling the Demand and Supply of Environmentally Preferred Power. Graduated August 2011.

3. Sarah Marrinen, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, Measuring the Effectiveness of Communicating Messages about Sustainability (Co-Advisor). Graduated August 2012.

4. Megan Wibberly, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, Consumer Willingness to Pay for Off-Shore Wind Power (Co-Advisor) Graduated August 2012.

5. Haley Engelberth, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, Effectiveness of Mercury Consumption Messages for Pregnant Women in Maine. Graduated August 2012.

6. Johanna Barrett, MS, Resource Economics and Policy, Preconditions of local foods activity in Maine, a quantitative analysis. Advisor: T. Waring. Graduated: May 2014

7. Renee Kelly, Interdisciplinary Masters, Innovation Engineering as a Driver of Economic Development. Advisor: C. Noblet. Graduated: May 2014.

8. Michelle Debartolo-Stone, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy. Non-Thesis. Advisor: J. Rubin. Graduated: December 2015.

9. Eva Manandhar, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy. Non-Thesis. Advisor: M. Teisl. Graduated: May 2014.

10. Nicholas Lisac, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, Economic Impacts of Music Industry. Advisor: T. Gabe. Graduated May 2014.

11. Travis Blackmer, M.A. Economics, Economic Impacts of Solid Waste Management. Advisor: G. Criner. Graduated May 2015.

12. Emma Fox, M.S. Ecology and Environmental Sciences, Coastal Water Quality Valuation and Stakeholder Engagement. Advisor: C. Noblet. Graduated: December 2016

13. Abigail Kaminski, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, Economic Analysis of Water Quality and Beach Recreation Demand. Advisor: K. Bell. Graduated May 2016.

14. Ethan Tremblay, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, Cooperation in the local food industry. Advisor: T. Waring. Graduated May 2015.

15. Stephanie Coffey, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, Cooperative community solar energy projects in New England. Advisor: S. Klein. Graduated May 2016

Page 24: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

24

16. William Christian Brayden, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, Factors affecting consumer valuation of aquaculture seafood. Advisor: C. Noblet. Graduated August 2017.

17. Dorina Grezda, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, non-thesis. Advisor: M. Teisl. Graduated May 2016.

18. Nehat Dobratiqi, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, non-thesis. Advisor: M. Teisl. Graduated May 2016.

19. Lydia Horne, M.S. Parks, Recreation and Tourism, Sustainable Tourism and Climate Change. Advisor: S. DeUrioste-Stone. Graduated August 2017.

20. Daniel Mistro, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, Community Energy. Advisor: S. Klein. Graduated August 2017.

21. Andrew Morgan, M.S. Ecology and Environmental Sciences, Land use impacts of Mining. Advisor: S. DeUrioste-Stone. Graduated Fall 2017.

22. J. Ross Anthony, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, Risk Perceptions and Environmental Decision Making. Advisor: C. Noblet, Graduated May 2018.

23. Christina Robichaud, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, Applications of Spatial Analysis to Coastal Management. Advisor: K. Evans. Graduated August 2017.

24. Chelsea Liddell, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, Recreation and Environmental Decision Making. Advisor: C. Noblet and K. Evans. Graduated December 2018.

25. Sandaruwan Mudiyanselage, M.A. Communication, Message framing impacts on citizen preferences for aquaculture. Advisor: L. Rickard. Graduation Expected August 2018.

26. Amy Bainbridge, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, Viewshed impacts of Aquaculture. Co-Advisors: C. Noblet and K. Evans. Graduation Expected August 2019.

27. Avery Cole, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, Equilibrium Sorting Models. Advisor: K. Evans. Graduation Expected August 2019.

28. Olga Bredikhina, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, Stated and Revealed preferences: An Aquaculture application. Co-Advisors: C. Noblet and K. Evans. Graduation Expected August 2019.

29. Afton Hupper, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, Cooperative Behavior in Local Food Buying. Advisor: T. Waring. Graduation Expected August 2019.

30. Allyson Eslin, M.A. Economics and International Affairs, Policy Applications. Advisor: J. Rubin and C. Noblet. Graduation Expected August 2020.

31. Dina Vllasaliu, M.S. Resource Economics and Policy, Energy Preferences. Non-thesis.. Graduation Expected August 2018.

Page 25: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

25

Undergraduate Students

Honor’s Thesis (10 committee, 2 chair) Jack Cohen, Vehicle Consumers Honors Thesis, Committee 2009 Jon Erde, Wage Premiums Honors Thesis, Committee 2010 Ethan Tremblay, Local Foods Honors Thesis, Committee 2015 Jamie Stevens, Maine’s Waste Honors Thesis, Committee 2015 Abigail Seneck, Fisheries Management

Honors Thesis, Committee 2016

Allyson Eslin, Decision making Honors Thesis, Chair 2017 Afton Hupper, Food clubs Honors Thesis, Committee 2017 Leila Wojtkowski, Malaysian Palm Oil

Honors Thesis, Committee 2017

Maryam Kashkooli, Maine’s Economy

Honors Thesis, Committee 2018

Connor Huck, Rec. & Env. Motivation

Honors Thesis, Chair 2019

Independent Study, Directed Research and Undergraduate Research Assistants

Michaela Murray Sustainable Ecological Aquaculture

(SEANET) Su 2017-Su 2018

Gregory Warmuth SEANET Su 2018 Allyson Eslin SEANET F2016-Su2017 Jon Deschaine SEANET S2017 Maryam Kashkooli SEANET F,S2016 Angela Hallowell New England Sustainability

Consortium (NEST) S 2016

Allyson Eslin NEST F2015, SU 2015 Allyson Eslin Maine Rising Tide S2105 Leila Wojtkowski Sustainability Solutions Initiative

(SSI) S2015

Allyson Eslin & Anne Witick SSI and Downeast Research and Education Network.

Su-F2014

Bryan Teisl SSI Emerging Opportunities Su-F2014 Tagwongo Obamsawin NEST Su-F2014 Suet Ying (Michelle) Cheung, SSI F2013

UNIVERSITY SERVICE AND COMMITTEES

Departmental Committees and Service

• Chair, School of Economics Undergraduate Committee (2013-2015) • Coordinator, School of Economics Laboratory and Advising Center (2013-2015) • Chair, School of Economics Awards Committee (2014-2018) • Member, School of Economics Undergraduate Committee (2015-2018) • Member, School of Economics Policy Advisory Committee (2015-2018) [elected by

colleagues] • Search Committee, Faculty hire in Regional Economics (2015) • Chair, Post-Doctoral hire (2017) • Staff Paper Reviews (4 reviews) • Representative, from School of Economics to Ecology and Environmental Sciences

program (2015-2018)

Page 26: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

26

• School of Economics representative to collaborative hires in Food Science and Wildlife Ecology (2017)

College Committees and Service • Search Committee, Search Committee, Dean of Natural Sciences Forestry and

Agriculture (NSFA) and Director of the Maine Agricultural and Forest Experiment Station (MAFES) (2017)

• Mentor, Faculty Mentor to Dr. Katherine Ruskin, Ecology and Environmental Science Program (2017-present)

• Search Committee, Association Dean of the College of Natural Sciences, Forestry & Agriculture (2015)

• Member, Ecology and Environmental Sciences Undergraduate Curriculum Committee (2016-2018)

• Search Committee, Ecology and Environmental Sciences Lecturer Position (2016). • Member, NSFA Faculty Awards Committee (2017-2018) • NSFA Representative to University Limited Competition Grants Committee (2017) • School of Economics representative to the NSFA Undergraduate Coordinators (2013-

2015)

University Committees and Service • Steering Committee, Center for Excellence in Teaching and Assessment (2013) • Member, Director Search Advisory Committee - Center for Excellence in Teaching and

Assessment (2013) • Search Committee, Dean of the Maine Business School (2013) • Blackboard Core Group for University of Maine System Information Technologies,

Faculty representative from University of Maine (2013-2015) • Member, Working Group commissioned by Associate Provost on Independent Studies

(2014) • Participate in Assessment Video per request of B. Doore, Director of Assessment (2015) • Reviewer, Graduate Student Teaching Assistant Awards (2015) • Chair, Sustainability Solutions Initiative, Economic Development Taskforce (2015) • Selected Participant, Faculty Fellows Program (2015- 2017) • Volunteer Judge, University of Maine Student Research Symposia (2017) • Mentor, Mandela Fellows Program (2017) • Search Committee, Dean of Dean of the College of Natural Sciences, Forestry &

Agriculture (2017) • Panelist, New Faculty Orientation ‘Teaching Roundtable’ (2017) • Attendee, Maine Development Foundation Policy Leaders Academy Legislative Bus

Tour, January 2017 • Attendee, Graduate Hooding Ceremony and Commencement 2013-2018

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE and ACTIVITIES Professional memberships and activities:

Association Memberships Association of Environmental and Resource Economists (AERE) Northeastern Agricultural and Resource Economics Association (NAREA) Society for Personality and Social Psychology (SPSP) International Association for Research in Economic Psychology (IAREP) Society for the Advancement of Behavioral Economics (SABE)

Committee Memberships/Offices held Board of Directors, Northeast Agricultural and Resource Economics Association.

2018-2021

Page 27: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

27

Chair, Selected Papers and Symposia Committee for the 2018 annual meeting of the Northeast Agricultural and Resource Economics Association. 2017-2018

Member, Career Advancement and Mentoring (CAM) Committee for the 2018 annual meeting of the Northeast Agricultural and Resource Economics Association, 2017-2018

Member, Local organizing Committee for the 2016 annual meeting of the Northeast Agricultural and Resource Economics Association, Bar Harbor, Maine. 2015-2016.

Member, Selected Papers and Symposia Committee for the 2017 annual meeting of the Northeast Agricultural and Resource Economics Association. 2016-2017. –

Session organizer (with CAM Mentoring class 2015-2016): ‘“The Truth is Out There: But how do we communicate it?”, session on applying research to stakeholder needs for the 2016 Annual Meeting of the Northeastern Agricultural and Resource Economics Association

Service in reviewing papers and grant proposals (number of reviews in parentheses).

Journal Articles Reviewed

Agricultural and Resources Economics Review (2). American Journal of Agricultural Economics (2) Archives of Scientific Psychology (1) Climate Change (2) Conservation Biology (2) Energy Policy (2) Energy Strategy Reviews (1) Energy Research and Social Science (2) Environmental Management Ecological Economics (6) Environmental and Resource Economics (EARE) (2) Environment Development Sustainability (1) Environmental Education Research (2) Journal of Environmental Psychology (3) Journal of Forest Economics, (1). Journal of Food Distribution Research (1) Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics (1) Maine Policy Review (2) Psychological Reports (2) SAGE Open Sustainability Sustainability Science (1) Sustainability: Science, Practice & Policy (1) Transportmetrica (1) Climate Change (1)

Bulletins and Reports Reviewed Maine Agriculture and Forest Experiment Station, (2). School of Economics Staff Papers, (3).

Textbooks Reviewed Principles of Economics – Dirk Mateer and Lee Coppock. W.W. Norton and Company Publishing.

Grants Reviewed 2015 U.S.D.A. National Institute of Food and Agriculture 2018 U.S.D.A. National Institute of Food and Agriculture – AFRI, Exploratory Research Program

Page 28: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

28

Professional Development: Mentee, Northeastern Agricultural and Resource Economics Association (NAREA), Career Advancement Mentoring (CAM) program. June 2015-June 2016 Alan Alda Center for Communicating Sciences: Science Communication Training. University of Maine. Orono, Maine. October 2015. National Science Foundation Leadership Workshop. University of Maine. Orono, Maine November 19-20, 2015

SERVICE TO MAINE and THE COMMUNITY 2007-2010

• Bangor Regional Leadership Institute (graduate class of 2007, Alumni Committee 2007-2009, Chair of Fundraising Committee 2007-2009)

• Board of Directors, Bangor Land Trust

2013 • Chair, Maine Sustainability and Water Conference, Energy Session

• The Nature Conservancy: Review proposal entitled 'Baseline Assessment of Impacts on People from the Penobscot River Restoration'. Offer recommendations on the protocol and methods of the project, as well as help re-design questions included within the analysis. Dr. Lynne Lewis of Bates was a co-reviewer. Review was completed in September 2013

2014 • University observer to ‘Economic Benefits of Conservation in Hancock and Washington

Counties’ project, requested by: Down East Research and Education Network. Summer 2014.

• Meet with Keri Kaczor, of Maine Healthy Beaches Program, to discuss upcoming research initiatives and components of use to her program. February 2014.

2015 • Provide research status and update to Boston Executive Club of the University of Maine

(BECUM), Invited Speaker. October 2015.

• Representative Sara Gideon, Maine House as guest speaker in ECO 377. Discuss research outcomes on energy with Rep. Gideon. November 2015.

• Collaborate with Jane Disney of Mount Desert Island Biological Lab and the Frenchman’s Bay Partners (non-profit entity) to design and administer ecosystem service valuation workshops. Workshops held November and June 2015.

• Provide research status and outcomes to staff of Department of Marine Resources, related to work on Safe Beaches and Shellfish project. DMR Headquarters Boothbay Harbor, Maine. June 2015.

• Provide research status and outcomes to Maine Healthy Beach program – Beach Manager training. May 2015 (Camden, Maine).

• Provide Invited Plenary speech at Maine Land Trust Network Annual Conference; sharing research findings on framing of environmental messages. Engage with Maine Coast Heritage Trust (event host) prior to talk to ensure it met conference needs. April 2015.

Page 29: Caroline Lundquist Noblet ORCID 0000-0002-3122-9268 Google ... · 2016 Outstanding Teaching Award, College of Natural Sciences, Forestry and Agriculture. Awarded to one faculty member

29

• Panelist/Speaker at First Annual Maine Science Festival (free and open to the public event in Bangor, Maine) on Climate Change Panel. March 2015.

2016 • University observer to Down East Research and Education Network Strategic Plan and

Economic Benefits planning

• Attend Maine Aquaculture Research, Development & Education Summit in Belfast, Maine to share research feedback with industry stakeholders. January 2015.

Successfully submit grant with Vine Street School (public elementary school) for submission to Maine EPSCoR office regarding workforce development in STEM learning. The project entitled ‘Tank to Table’ allowed for purchase of an aquaponics unit for the school, purchase of STEM curriculum materials and visits from STEM speakers including the Director of the Maine Aquaculture Association, Sebastian Belle, UMaine Engineering Professor Kim Huegenard, Maine Maritime Professor Jessie Muhlin and UMaine Professor Mike Pietrak.

• Media coverage: A May 31, 2016 story by WABI TV 5 news: http://wabi.tv/2016/05/31/table-to-tank-program-at-bangors-vine-street-school/

February 2017 UMaine today story: https://umaine.edu/news/blog/2017/02/10/vine-street-school-grows-tank-table-aquaponics-program/

2017 • Engaged with Maine State Legislators during Maine Development Foundation Policy

Leaders Academy Legislative Bus Tour.

• Collaborated with Maine Coastal Program to study visitor’s Beach Erosion knowledge and awareness at Popham Beach State Park

• Collaborate with Maine Healthy Beaches Program (K. Kaczor) regarding risk perceptions of beach advisory signs; findings presented at Maine Beaches Conference

• Collaborate with Natural Resources Council of Maine (S.Hanes) to administer natural field experiment on response to economic information in donation behavior

• Collaborate with Natural Resources Council of Maine to have student-run data collection on impacts of visuals on charitable involvement and donation behavior

• Review Maine Climate Table’s efforts to develop a Climate Toolkit per request Elizabeth Rogers