Jeffrey Wong
Department of MBA
University of Nevada
United States of America
Biography
Ph.D., University of Oregon Jeffrey Wong, Ph.D., CPA is a Professor in the University's Accounting and IS Department. He earned his Ph.D. with a concentration in accounting from the University of Oregon. Professor Wong's research interests focus on factors influencing management strategy and how strategic actions map to financial results. His published works have appeared in journals including: Journal of the American Taxation Association, Journal of Management Information Systems, Behavioral Research in Accounting, and Journal of Emerging Technologies in Accounting, Journal of Legal Tax Research, The Database for Advances in Information Systems.
Research Interest
Professor Wong is the Department Chair and currently teaches auditing and assurance services. Other courses previously taught include intermediate financial accounting, financial statement analysis, advanced managerial accounting, and Federal taxation. Awards given to Professor Wong include the College of Business Dean's Research Professor Award, Beta Gamma Sigma, Researcher of the year, Beta Alpha Psi Instructor of the Year, Mervyn L. Brenner Distinguished Teaching Fellow, and Donald A. Watson award for excellence in teaching.
Publications
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Wu AM, Chen W, Raubitschek A, Williams LE, Neumaier M, Fischer R, Hu SZ, Odom-Maryon T, Wong JY, Shively JE. Tumor localization of anti-CEA single-chain Fvs: improved targeting by non-covalent dimers. Immunotechnology. 1996 Feb 1;2(1):21-36.
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Attia J, Hatala R, Cook DJ, Wong JG. Does this adult patient have acute meningitis?. Jama. 1999 Jul 14;282(2):175-81.
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Wong J, Hong JI. Making mashups with marmite: towards end-user programming for the web. InProceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems 2007 Apr 29 (pp. 1435-1444). ACM.
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Hu SZ, Shively L, Raubitschek A, Sherman M, Williams LE, Wong JY, Shively JE, Wu AM. Minibody: a novel engineered anti-carcinoembryonic antigen antibody fragment (single-chain Fv-C H 3) which exhibits rapid, high-level targeting of xenografts. Cancer research. 1996 Jul 1;56(13):3055-61.