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2011 NSF Graduate Research Fellow: Megha Sunny

Friday May 13, 2011

Megha Sunny receives NSF GRFP Award

Megha Sunny, undergraduate research assistant at the Center for Advanced Computation and Telecommunications and a senior in the Electrical and Computer Engineering department at the University of Massachusetts Lowell was awarded the prestigious National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship for 2011. Megha is one among fifty-one awardees nationwide in the field of Electrical and Electronic Engineering.

Photo courtesy of: GK12net


Anthropology Student Wins Graduate Research Fellowship

Friday Sep 17, 2010

Handicap doesn’t keep one student and his wife from excelling academically

William Nutt with his wife, Hannah. Photo courtesy of The Shorthorn

William Nutt with his wife, Hannah. Photo courtesy of The Shorthorn

Most people who go to museums are allowed to look, not touch. For William Nutt, it’s the other way around.

The anthropology graduate student has been blind since birth, but that won’t stop him from studying artifacts and human remains. Nutt earned a $30,000 fellowship in April to study the collapse of the Bronze Age.

“For the actual evidence and archeological material, there are museums,” he said. “A lot of it you can handle tactile. You can do just as much feeling as looking. My wife will be taking photos and I’ll be describing them.”

Nutt and his wife, Hannah — also an anthropology graduate student — will travel to museums around the world. William’s project will focus on the Anatolia region in Turkey.

William and Hannah will travel to museums in Chicago, Germany, Great Britain and Turkey over the course of three years. Hannah will assist him in his research by taking photos and describing artifacts and materials.

“It’s his baby, his project,” she said. “We approach thing’s differently. He’s more interested in materiality [artifacts]. I’m interested in the landscape, anything that is on the land or part of it.”

William will look at factors like how sites were constructed, and changes in peoples’ health to determine a cause in the collapse of the Bronze Age.

“I hope to find signs of foreign influence, like invasions or migration, and the decline in health,” he said. “Those are the two things I’m trying to find exist. If they don’t show up, I’ll know I need to look for another factor.”

William applied for the fellowship with the Graduate Research Fellowship Program, which is part of the National Science Foundation.

“It’s one of the best stipends you can get in America for science,” William said. “It’s very demanding and competitive. The demand is to turn in research reports. It’s like a full-time job. That’s the best way to look at it so you don’t get behind.”

William said he became interested in anthropology after taking a class on Aegean archeology with anthropology professor Karl Petruso. For William to take his exams, Petruso sent tests to the Office for Students with Disabilities, where they converted the exam into a text file and used a computer program to read them aloud.

“I told him it might not work, but he asked if he could stay in the class, and he did outstanding work,” Petruso said. “He has a great memory for detail. He is a tireless researcher and he writes beautifully, so his exams and papers were really first rate. I’ve seen the readers’ comments on his proposal. They were very impressed by his intellectual maturity.”

William won’t participate in any excavations, but he will be trained on how to excavate.

“You can’t just look at a pot and say ‘this time period, this region’. It’s not as cookie cutter,” he said. “There’s a lot of training to look at artifacts. Human and animal bones are, if anything, more complex.”


North Dakota State University Student Receives GRF Award

Friday Aug 13, 2010

NSF Fellowship Awarded to NDSU Graduate Researcher

Photo Courtesy of Newswise, Inc.

Photo Courtesy of Newswise, Inc.


Anoklase Ayitou, a graduate student in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry at North Dakota State University, Fargo, has been awarded a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship.

. . .

Anoklase completed his second year as a graduate student at NDSU under the guidance of Professor Sivaguru Jayaraman, who is a National Science Foundation CAREER Award recipient, as well as a recipient of the 2010 Swiss Chemical Society’s Grammaticakis-Neumann Prize.

Anoklase also received a UNCF-Merck Science initiative grant earlier this year, and is a Global Center of Excellence fellow at Osaka University, Osaka, Japan. “It is really a privilege to have a student of Anoklase’s caliber in my group,” commented Professor Sivaguru Jayaraman. Anoklase’s doctoral work involves the use of light to synthesize chiral molecules (molecules that are not superimposable on its mirror image). As a graduate student, Anoklase has published scientific papers in four peer-reviewed journals including the Journal of the American Chemical Society.

Anoklase is the third graduate student at NDSU to receive a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship.


DePauw University Student Honored with Award

Monday Jul 26, 2010

DePauw University Graduate Receives Award

Photo courtesy of DePauw University

Photo courtesy of DePauw University

Kathleen F. Mittendorf, a recent graduate of  DePauw University, was honored this year with a Graduate Research Fellowship. While at DePauw, she completed a double major in biology and biochemistry. Mittendorf will begin graduate study in the fall at Vanderbilt University’s Interdisciplinary Graduate Program in the Biomedical Sciences.

Mittendorf’s NSF fellowship isn’t the first national recognition she received while at DePauw. As a sophomore in 2008, she was one of three DePauw students to win a Goldwater Award, another highly competitive award given to students in mathematics, the natural sciences and engineering. She says that research experience during the summer of her freshman year — a component of the SRF program — gave momentum to the success she found during her four years at DePauw.

“Getting research experience before our senior year really helps to set us apart from some other schools,” Mittendorf says. “There’s no way I could have won a Goldwater as a sophomore if it wasn’t for that, and the Goldwater application process then made it a lot easier to pursue [the NSF fellowship].”

. . .

Mittendorf’s first foray into research was as a child, when she combed through The New York Times science section for information about treatments for multiple sclerosis, which affects a member of her family.

“Back then, I thought if you were interested in science you either became a doctor or a veterinarian, but I was already doing the most basic kind of research.” Mittendorf says.

. . .

“Fifty years ago, a lot of the techniques we use didn’t even exist,” Mittendorf says. “When my mother was in school, she would have just started to hear about the things we now do in introductory classes. Through the course of your career, you’ll never stop learning.”


Student from Baylor University Receives GRF Award

Wednesday Jun 30, 2010

Baylor Student Awarded Graduate Research Fellowship Grant From NSF

Meaghan McNeill, a graduate of Baylor University, received an NSF Graduate Research Fellowship this year.  While at Baylor, McNeill pursued a double major in mathematics and biology.

“It will probably take me four years to finish my graduate degree, but having three years paid for is a huge help,” McNeill said.

. . .

McNeill said she hopes to be a professor and conduct research, focusing on imaging and diagnostics. She said she plans to continue her studies at Rice University, studying biomedical engineering.


Two Washington State University Students Receive Awards

Monday Jun 14, 2010

Anthropology Makes History-Students Receive NSF Graduate Research Fellowships

For the first time in Washington State University history, two students from the anthropology department have received Graduate Research Fellowships. The two students, Stefani Crabtree and Kyle Bocinsky, are both working with the NSF funded Village Ecodynamics Project (VEP).

Modeling in the VEP involves computer simulation to recreate an area in the southwestern region of the United States. They input various important factors, such as farming soil, access to water, and access to animals for hunting, into the model in an attempt to recreate the human and climatic conditions of the time.

Simulated “residents” (agents) situate themselves on the landscape in relation to these critical resources, and VEP researchers compare the resulting conditions to the actual archaeological record. In this way, Crabtree, Bocinsky and other researchers are able to draw conclusions about what may have actually occurred in the past.
Researchers from the VEP hope agent-based models like these will provide answers to the mysteries surrounding climate change and sudden emigration from the region.
Stefani Crabtree, courtesty of Washington State University

Stefani Crabtree, courtesty of Washington State University

Crabtree plans to use the platform of the VEP to analyze how alliance formation among ancient societies helped them deal with marginal environments and what triggers made those alliances collapse and result in warfare. She anticipates that these alliances will help her to better understand the vast and complete depopulation of the central Mesa Verde region.

. . .
Kyle Bocinsky, courtesy of Washington State University

Kyle Bocinsky, courtesy of Washington State University

Second-year master’s student Bocinsky also works with the NSF funded VEP. Through his research he hopes to broaden archaeologists’ understanding of how turkey domestication spread across the southwest region of the United States.

Bocinsky has designed a module for the village simulation allowing people to hunt and domesticate wild turkeys, which show up abundantly in the archeological record and may have been a critical resource for people in the past.
He seeks to use innovative research methods to extract ancient DNA from turkey eggshells found at the site, which he believes will reveal the diet and the breeding habits of these ancient birds.

Four Utah State Students Awarded NSF Graduate Research Fellowship

Tuesday Jun 1, 2010

8 Honored in NSF Graduate Research Fellow Search

Utah State University hit a new record in 2010 for the most students and alumni it’s had recognized by the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship in one year. This year alone has been eight USU students honored, with four receiving an honorable mention and four receiving an award. The four students who received an award are Melissa Jackson (geology), Nathan Carruth (physics), Joanna Hsu (ecology), and Jan Marie Andersen (physics).

Melissa Jackson

Melissa Jackson, courtesy of Utah State University

Melissa Jackson, courtesy of Utah State University

Jackson has been studying Prehistoric Barrier Canyon Style (BCS) rock art using optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating to determine the age of the alluvial terraces. She plans to continues her study and usage of OSL and developing a protocol to expand the age range it’s capable of dating by using loess deposits. Jackson’s graduate study will take place at Wales’ Aberystwyth University. During her time at USU, her other honors included being named Spring’s 2010 Valedictorian for the College of Science, a USU Presidential Scholarship, and receiving fourth place as part of USU’s Soils Team during national competitions in 2009 and 2010.

Joanna Hsu

Joanna Hsu, courtesy of Utah State University USU graduate student Hsu is working with her advisor, Peter Adler, to study the relationship between precipitation and primary production.

“Primary production – how much green stuff plants are making – sets the amount of energy available for all organisms in an ecosystem,” Hsu says. “It’s also an important component of the global carbon cycle. Changes in precipitation patterns across the globe will impact primary production. The goal of my research is to find out just how large that impact will be.”

Nathan Carruth

Nathan Carruth, courtesy of Utah State University Carruth, a USU graduate student finishing his master’s degree  at the time of the application, had previously received two Honorable Mentions before receiving the award this year. While at USU, Carruth studied time with his faculty mentor Charles Torre.

“Among the questions we’re asking is ‘Is it possible for time to be discrete; is it necessarily continuous?’” Carruth says.

. . . Carruth will soon choose between offers of continued graduate study at University of California-Santa Barbara, University of California-Berkeley and England’s Cambridge University.

Jan Marie Andersen

Jan Marie Andersen, courtesy of Utah State Today After graduating from USU with a bachelor’s degree in mathematics and physics, Andersen went to the University of Copenhagen’s Niels Bohr Institute on a Fulbright Student Scholarship. Andersen is now studying low-mass stars called M-dwarfs at Boston University.

“Many astronomers filter out M-dwarfs as unwanted interference in their searches for larger, brighter celestial objects,” says Andersen, who was named 2007 College of Science Undergraduate Researcher of the Year. “But our studies of M-dwarfs could yield important clues about the early universe. One astronomer’s trash is another astronomer’s treasure.”


Rollins College Graduate Receives both Graduate Research and EAPSI Fellowships

Wednesday May 12, 2010
Photo Courtesy of Rollins College

Photo Courtesy of Rollins College

Nicholas Horton, a physics major and chemistry minor from the Rollins College Class of 2009, was recently awarded a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program award and the East Asia and Pacific Summer Institutes (EAPSI) fellowship.

Nicholas recently completed his first year of graduate study at Cornell University in Applied Physics. He also received in December 2009, The Cornell University Presidential Life Sciences Fellowship, a program intended to help form integrative new disciplines within the life sciences and to expand and support students’ interdisciplinary interests.

“According to the National Science Foundation, the GRFP program aims to ensure the vitality of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics in the United States and to reinforce its diversity by offering approximately 1,654 graduate fellowships. The Graduate Research Fellowship provides three years of support for graduate study leading to research-based masters or doctoral degrees and is intended for students who are in the early stages of their graduate study. The fellowship also provides a stipend for international travel, as well as financial support to the student’s institution”.

“As an EASPI, Horton will be performing optics research in Taiwan for eight weeks this summer. The primary goals of EAPSI are “to introduce students to East Asia and Pacific science and engineering in the context of a research setting, and to help students initiate scientific relationships that will better enable future collaboration with foreign counterparts.”

Horton credits Jay Shivamoggi, Director of the Office of External and Competitive Scholarships, for the counsel and guidance she provided him at Rollins.

“Dr. Jay’s application advice helped strengthen my GRFP and EAPSI applications,” said Horton.

While at Rollins, Horton was a Cornell Scholar and a 2008 Goldwater Scholarship recipient.


2010 NSF Graduate Research Fellow: Erica Brown

Monday May 3, 2010
photo of Erica Brown, University of Oklahoma

photo of Erica Brown, University of Oklahoma

OU student Erica Brown gets fellowship

Erica Brown, a University of Oklahoma honors student from Oklahoma City, has been awarded a 2010 National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship. The award offers $30,000 per 12-month fellowship year for a maximum of three years.

Brown has a 3.95 grade point average and will graduate summa cum laude in May with a degree in chemical engineering after being named a Goldwater Scholar last year. She plans to pursue a doctorate in biomedical engineering at Duke University.

“The well-deserved fellowship being awarded to Erica Brown is one of the most prestigious recognitions in the entire country that can be given to an undergraduate science or engineering student,” said OU President David Boren.

Her research experience includes work with stem cells in tissue engineering at OU and a National Science Foundation-sponsored Research Experience for Undergraduates internship at Cornell University to create a biodegradable nanofiber mesh for tissue engineering purposes.

She has given numerous presentations at OU, Cornell and national conferences in St. Louis and Philadelphia.

Related: The NSF Graduate Fellowships Class of 1952Two BYU seniors take NSF Fellowships to MITNine Dartmouth alumni given 2007 NSF Graduate FellowshipsNSF Awardees Use Algorithm to Explain Scientific Laws


2 Hamilton College Seniors Awarded NSF Graduate Research Fellowships

Monday Apr 26, 2010
photo of Tom Morrell, Hamilton College senior

photo of Tom Morrell, Hamilton College senior

Phillip Milner ’10 and Tom Morrell ’10, of were awarded NSF Graduate Research Fellowships

Two Hamilton seniors, Phillip Milner and Tom Morrell (photo), have been awarded National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowships. Milner is a chemistry/math double major who will be starting a Ph.D. program in chemistry in the fall, at an institution yet to be determined. Morrell is a chemistry major who will begin a Ph.D. program in chemistry at Princeton in the fall.

Two recent Hamilton graduates, Louisa Brown ’09 and Leanne Pasquini ’07, also received the prestigious fellowships. Brown is in her first year in the Ph.D. program in chemistry at Cornell, and Pasquini is at Yale in the first year of an environmental engineering Ph.D. program. Gregory Hartt ’08, Marco Allodi ’08 and Kristen Alongi ’08 received honorable mention.

The NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP) helps ensure the vitality of the human resource base of science and engineering in the United States and reinforces its diversity. The program recognizes and supports outstanding graduate students in NSF-supported science, technology, engineering and mathematics disciplines who are pursuing research-based master’s and doctoral degrees in the U.S. and abroad.

Ian Rosenstein, associate professor of chemistry, commented “This is a highly prestigious award and Phill and Tom are the first Hamilton students that I know of in recent years to be awarded one while still a college senior.”

Phillip Milner was a recipient of the Barry M. Goldwater Scholarship for the 2009-10 academic year. The Goldwater is the premier national undergraduate award in the fields of mathematics, the natural sciences and engineering. He was also the recipient of a Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics Talent Expansion Program (STEP) /Dreyfus Grant prior to his freshman year at Hamilton, which enabled him to conduct summer research with a Hamilton science faculty member.

Tom Morrell recently published an article, “Atmospheric Implications for Formation of Clusters of Ammonium and 1−10 Water Molecules,” in the Journal of Physical Chemistry A. His co-author was George Shields, former Hamilton College chemistry professor and currently dean of the College of Science & Technology at Armstrong Atlantic State University. Morrell was also the recipient of a STEP/Dreyfus grant.

NSF Fellows are anticipated to become knowledge experts who can contribute significantly to research, teaching and innovations in science and engineering. These individuals are crucial to maintaining and advancing the nation’s technological infrastructure and national security as well as contributing to the economic well-being of society at large.

Related: Three Iowa State Students Honored with NSF GRFP Awards2009 NSF GRFP Fellow: Sarah Latshaw2008 NSF Fellow: Ekaterina Hristova Spriggs


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