Schedule of Events
Natural Science Oral Presentations
Richter Hall
This session will highlight students from various disciplines within the Natural Science Division. Each student will give a 15-minute oral presentation using PowerPoint. These stimulating presentations will reflect months of work on a single project which has likely been presented at a discipline-specific professional conference.
Student Abstracts
Roles of SOCS36E Inactivation in extra eye and Oncogenesis in Drosophila melanogaster
A main purpose of this study is to characterize SOCS36E function by analyzing the effects on ee penetrance and tumor proliferation when SOCS36E is inactivated. Analysis of F1 generations from crosses of ee by two SOCS36E loss-of-function mutations, referred to here as 33106 and 35896, revealed ee penetrance values of 1.08% and 1.82%, respectively. These values were significantly greater than 0.50% ee penetrance in wild type control crosses.In addition, over-activation of the JAK/STAT pathway by SOCS36E loss of function resulted in increased oncogenesis. Evaluation of six crosses for oncogenic phenotypes in the presence of HopTum-l and SOCS36E mutations indicated that lines 33106 and 35896 yielded tumorigenic phenotypes with penetrance values of 11.00% and 13.50%, respectively. Penetrance values for wild type crosses (1.50%) and ee crosses (3.00%) were lower. These studies suggest that SOCS36E operates normally to coordinate development by regulating JAK/STAT signals and possesses tumor suppressor characteristics.
Student(s):
Jared Berman
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. David Marcey
A Study of Electron Lifetime in the Large Underground Xenon Dark Matter Detector
Student(s):
Fransheska Berrios
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. John Deisz
Effect of Gender and Landing Direction on Knee Joint Kinematics and Kinetics During Drop Landings
Student(s):
Heidi Ferkranus, Heather Nony, Johnston Wang, Tyler Berg
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Michele LeBlanc
Mathematical Modeling of the Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis
This project is an analysis of models of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. The HPA-axis is the system responsible for cortisol regulation in the human body. Hormones of the HPA-axis fluctuate with circadian and ultradian rhythms. As a study of a biological system, the results of this project have implications in disciplines beyond mathematics. In our study we analyze models that address the ultradian rhythms of the axis, believed to be an intrinsic characteristic of the system. We look at three models, the ``Minimal Model'' (Vinther 2011), a model including hippocampal mechanisms (Vinther 2013), and a patient-specific model (Ottesen 2014). In each of the papers the authors' attempts to create oscillating solutions have varying degrees of success. A brief overview of the three models and analyses is given. Finally we present a new model of the system that expands upon the three models.
Student(s):
Courtney Hong
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Christopher Brown
Expansion of a Pyridinyl Cross-Coupling Methodology to New Pharmacologically-Active Substrates
Student(s):
Brittany Smolarski
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Jason Kingsbury
No Sexual Dimorphism in Bite Force and Sprint Speed in Uta stansburiana
Student(s):
Taelor Young
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Kris Karsten