URGO

Summer Research Conference

July 25thand 26th

“Discovery consists in seeing what everyone else has seen and thinking what no one else has thought.”

~Albert Szent-Gyorgy, Hungarian Biochemist,

1937 Nobel Prize for Medicine, 1893-1986

Wednesday, July 25: All sessions will be held in Kennedy 305

Session 1

9:00-10:30

1.Ingrid Bergland (women’s studies): “Expressing Gender Nonconforming Identities”

2.Austin Smith (religion): “Devotion to Apple as a New Religious Movement”

*3.Micheale Tesma (sociology): “What are the causes of bicyclist-motorist conflict (BMC)?”

4.James Mahowald (sociology): “Tattoos: Meaning and Identity Formation”

Session 2

10:45-12:15

1.Ryan Bachman (chemistry):“Preparation, purification and Analysis of Multifunctional organic hydroxy nitrates”

*2.Robert Morris (chemistry): “R&R Model: RON Predictions Using Simplified Structure and Entropy”

3.Karleen Stevens (chemistry/mathematics): “Non-periodic Tessellations and Quasicrystals”

4.Megan Rich (biology): Utilizing Fungal Endophytes as a Biological Control Agent for Soybean Pathogens”

Lunch

12:15-1:15

Session 3

1:15-3:00

1.Samantha Cantrall (music): “The Influence of Rap Music in the Arab Spring”

*2. Hillary “Hue” Manning (English/psychology): “Looking Back, That's Not True: Navigation of Narrative Meaning in Emerging Adulthood”

3.Steven Campbell (sociology): “Examining the Relationship Between Young Adults and Young Adults in Recovery”

4.Justin Caron (theatre arts/performance): "Chutes and Ladders: Class and Queer
Performance in American Theatre"

5. Nicolette Albertson (film/English): "On Driving Myself Crazy While Attempting to Write a Script About Mental Illness."

Session 4

3:10-4:40

*1.Kevin Ehrman-Solberg (history): “Little Untaught Brats”: Ethnic and Religious Discrimination in the Minnesota State Reform School, 1880-1900”

2.Yemi Melka (chemistry): “Catalytic Reduction of 4-Nitrophenol by Dendrimer Encapsulated Nanoparticles”

3.Emily Rutten (biopsychology): “Perception of Causality”

4. Ugaso SheikAbdi (economics & math): “Immigrant Health Care: Recommendations for Increasing Utilization of Health Care Services”

Thursday, July 26: All sessions will be held in SVE Room 206

Session 1:

9:00-10:30

1.Brianna Noland (mathematical economics): "An Economic Analysis of Financial Factors on Undergraduate Persistence"

2.Ryan Sward (exercise science) “The effects of caffeine during athletic performance"

*3.Jessica Larkin (exercise science) “Effects of a 6-week high-speed treadmill running program on ice hockey skating speed and examination of skate speed predictors”

4.Abbey Ehling (education): “!Stopping "Taco Night"! Creating Bicultural Curriculum that empowers ALL students”

Session 2:

10:45-12:15

*1.Chad Gilmer (chemistry/education): “Green Chemistry Experiments and Applications to the Classroom”

2.Eric Dooley (physics/education): "Collecting Dust in the Upper Atmosphere"

3.Lindsey Niederhaus (chemistry/education): “Optimizing Organic Amidization Reactions Using a Continuous Flow Reactor”

4.James Leonard (biology/education): "Daphnia magna Motion Tracking in 3-Dimensional Space"

5. Nora Helf (biology/education): “SCOBY: Bacterial Cellulose and the Classroom”

Lunch

12:15-1:00

Session 3

1:00-2:30

  1. Teryn Coffman (biology): “The Birth of Dopaminergic Neurons in Daphnia Magna”
  2. Rico Barrozo (biology): “Neuropharmacology: Drug-Screening in Daphnia”
  3. *Peter Schmit (biology): “Introductions of Sirna to Regulate Gene Expression in Daphnia Magna”
  4. Ashley Waters (chemistry): “A Fool-Proof Method of Synthesizing Coordination Compounds for Radiopharmaceutical Diagnostics and Therapeutics”

2:35-2:55

Andrea Sanow’s Open House: (Come dressed as your favorite scholar)

Session 4

3:00-4:15

1.Jessica Willborg (biology): "Human Airway Secretions Promote Growth of Pseudomonas Aeruginosa"

*2.Anna Weitz (biology): “Human Airway Secretions Inhibit Pseudomonas aeruginosa Biofilm Formation in vitro: Implications for Cystic Fibrosis Disease”

3. Charlie Hoy (chemistry): “Tri-t-butoxychlorosilane, A Useful Protecting Group for Primary Amines”

“If we knew what it was we were doing, it would not be called research, would it?”

~Albert Einstein, Nobel Prize for Physics in 1921