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New Research by TSYS School's Yi Zhou Proposes New Data Hierarchy for Optimizing KV Stores

The rapid growth of unstructured data has driven the widespread adoption of LSM-tree-based key-value stores (KV stores).  The write amplification resulting from compaction in LSM-trees causes a performance bottleneck. Existing solutions attempt  to address this issue through key-value separation strategies. However, these studies fail to optimize the memory components  of LSM-trees or provide efficient garbage collection (GC) strategies that achieve high performance while minimizing CPU  overhead. These limitations motivated TSYS School computer scientist Yi Zhou  and researchers from Anhui University,  Zhongguancun Laboratory and Auburn University  to propose a GPGPU-empowered gradient data hierarchy and key-value separation  for optimizing KV stores, named GDH+. In a study set to appear in a forthcoming issue of ACM Transactions on Architecture and Code Optimization , Zhou et al. utilize GPGPU acceleration for sorting and lushing operations, op...
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Bryant's Research Surpasses 3,500 Google Scholar Citations

Turner College professor of management Phil Bryant recently surpassed 3,500 career Google Scholar citations. Additionally, Google Scholar reports that his i10-index is equal to 15, meaning that Bryant has published 15 studies that have each garnered at least 10 citations. Google Scholar also reports an additional metric. This is a scholar’s h-index, which is the largest number, h, of a scholar’s publications that have each garnered at least h citations. Bryant’s h-index is 14, meaning that his 14 most-cited studies have each generated at least 14 citations. Bryant's top-cited publication is a 2010 study on retaining talent that appears in Academy of Management Perspectives . Another piece on the same subject – this one appearing in a 2013 issue of Compensation and Benefits Review – has garnered the second-most citations over Bryant’s career. Each of these studies was co-authored with David Allen of the University of Memphis, while the first of the two was also written with James V...

New Study by Turner College's Gisung Moon Examines Capital Budgeting Techniques Presented in Financial Management Textbooks

A new study by Turner College finance professor Gisung Moon and  Hongbok Lee of Western Illinois University  examines the capital budgeting techniques presented in financial management textbooks published by major U.S. publishers, focusing on the types of cash flows and discount rates, and then  proposes improvements to traditional capital budgeting techniques .  The study finds that textbooks typically evaluate a project's net cash flows using the firm's weighted average cost of capital (WACC). This method is valid only when the project's net cash flows have the same systematic risk as the firm's net cash flows. However, this assumption often does not hold. To address this, Moon and Lee propose using dual discount rates for the project's operating cash flows and expected future investment outlays. Specifically, the project's operating cash flows should be discounted at the firm's WACC or at a rate that reflects the systematic risk associated with those cas...

Turner College Alum Julissa Santoyo Joins Young Leaders Council with Big Brothers Big Sisters of Metro Atlanta

Turner College alum Julissa Santoyo recently joined the Young Leaders Council with Big Brothers Big Sisters of Metro Atlanta. The Young Leaders Council  is a board of young professionals dedicated to supporting and empowering Atlanta’s youth through mentorship and community impact. "I am honored to be part of an inspiring group and excited for what’s ahead," Santoyo stated. Julissa is a commercial banker at Synovus.

Graduating Turner College and TSYS School Seniors Gather at Clock Tower for Graduation Toast

Graduating CSU seniors, including some from the Turner College and TSYS School, recently gathered around the clock tower on CSU's main campus for the annual graduation toast. The Turner College's commencement ceremony is set for Friday at 9:00 am.

The Structural Divide in Georgia's Higher Education System

Our recent post on the structural divide in higher education drew a lot of reader interest. We decided to pull the same information that was provided for CSU for Georgia's other public and private universities. The large table below contains that information. Recall  that Substack essayist and higher education enthusiast Kyle Saunders used eight indicators drawn from federal data — IPEDS, College Scorecard, O*NET, WICHE projections, the Anthropic Economic Index — to position every four-year institution in the country along two dimensions: how resilient the institution itself is, and how well-positioned its graduates are in the labor market. In reading the table, institutions above the median on both axes are " High Capacity " while those below both are " High Stress ." The other two quadrants — " Market Misaligned " and " Structurally Exposed " — capture institutions with mixed structural positions.

Georgia's New DREAM Scholarship Signed into Law

Capitol Beat reporter Ty Tygami's recent story on Georgia's new DREAM Scholarship lays out very nicely how the new program will support Georgia's college students. Turner Business has been following the bill, now law, authorizing the funds for the program for months, so we wanted to complete the story with this entry. Georgia moves beyond HOPE, with need-based aid for college students by  Ty Tagami  |  May 11, 2026  |  Capitol Beat News Service ATLANTA — Next fall, Georgia students attending one of the state’s public colleges and universities will have a chance at financial aid if they come from a low-income family. Gov. Brian Kemp on Monday signed legislation that establishes a need-based financial aid program. The amended budget for fiscal year 2026 already included $325 million for the DREAMS Scholarship. Senate Bill 556 establishes the rules for spending it, placing the program under the Georgia Student Finance Commission, which oversees the HOPE scholarsh...