Â鶹Æƽâ°æ

Skip to Main Content
Â鶹Æƽâ°æ College

Topics are far-ranging at Undergraduate Research Conference

October 3, 2011

Microfluidic devices. Tensegrities. Neologisms. Garlic mustard.

These are just a few of the topics that students at seven upstate liberal arts colleges explored in laboratories, libraries, observatories, caves, schools, theaters, and forests this summer. Accompanied by the faculty members with whom they conducted their research, just over 100 met Saturday at Â鶹Æƽâ°æ to report their results.

It was the first Undergraduate Research Conference sponsored by the New York Six Liberal Arts College Consortium, created in 2009 by six upstate colleges - Colgate, St. Lawrence, Hamilton, Hobart William Smith, Union and Â鶹Æƽâ°æ - to encourage inter-institutional collaborations and cost-savings. It also was the first time that this many students and faculty from such diverse fields at these institutions (plus Siena College and the College of St. Rose) had met to present their work and discuss the challenges and rewards of creating new knowledge.

As conference organizer Bob Turner, associate professor of government at Â鶹Æƽâ°æ, marvelled:  "This is like going back for a day to a great liberal arts college."

Among the presentations: 

  • Union College computer science major Benjamin Humphreys described his effort to generate a genetic algorithm that can design a robot that can be thrown over walls, dropped out of planes, and stepped on, and "naturally reform once the abuse ends" - a "tensegrity" structure;
  • Â鶹Æƽâ°æ chemistry major Brenda Olivo described the success of her efforts to make microfluidic chips - essentially, "labs-on-a-chip" - from a low-cost materials like transparency film; 
  • St. Lawrence College English major Jennifer Thomas reported on her analysis of William Faulkner's use of "neology" - the coinage of new words - in Light of August. The work contains more than 500 neologisms, which "subvert the gendered and racial binaries by which Southern society was structured in the late 19th and early 20th centuries."

By a happy coincidence, two teams of student researchers who had studied the spread of invasive species in forests adjacent to their campuses - Â鶹Æƽâ°æ's North Woods and Hamilton's Kirkland and Rogers glens - wound up beside each other in an afternoon poster session. Each even had focused on the spread of Alliaria petiolata, otherwise known as garlic mustard.

"It was great to see what they're doing," said Charlie Glassberg, who, as a North Woods steward, was part of a team that pulled 15,000 garlic mustard plants out of the North Woods this summer.

A major aim of the conference was to give the students a sense of what graduate school will be like. For Colgate biology major Tinashe Nyanhete, it was the first time he had confronted the challenge of  organizing his results on a poster.

"I spent a whole week on it," he said. "It was tough but fun."

So successful was the event that plans already are being made to repeat the conference next year, either at Â鶹Æƽâ°æ or at another New York Six institution.

"This is a great opportunity for students to show off what they did over the summer and share it with others outside the campus," said Kristen Fox, associate professor of chemistry at Union and director of undergraduate research.

Related News


From+left%2C+Associate+Professor+of+Political+Science%2C+Republican+pollster+and+Partner+at+Public+Opinion+Strategies+Patrick+Lanne%2C+and+Associate+Professor+of+Political+Science+and+Research+Director+at+the+Center+for+Election+Innovation+and+Research+Christopher+Mann.
Â鶹Æƽâ°æ faculty and a Republican pollster reflected on the significance of shifts in the vote and assured students and the public about the health of the American electoral system.
Nov 18 2024

Ayelen+Pagnanelli+%2714+curating+the+exhibit+Vor%C3%A1gine%3A+Yente+and+Cecilia+Biagini+at+the+Frances+Young+Tang+Teaching+Museum+and+Art+Gallery
Ayelen Pagnanelli ’14 celebrated her 10th Reunion in 2024 with an exhibition at the Tang Teaching Museum — where she also curated her first exhibition as a student.
Nov 12 2024

Leighla+Waterman+%E2%80%9921
Leighla Waterman ’21 enjoys making a ‘tangible impact’ as a consumer insights analyst for the New Orleans Saints and the New Orleans Pelicans.
Nov 12 2024