Graduate Research Symposium Awards Recognize Top Presentations

An Awards Reception was held immediately after the symposium. The deans of each academic division awarded a $100 gift certificate for the UCSC bookstore for the best presentation in the division. The UCSC Alumni Association-sponsored prizes, a $150 gift certificate for the UCSC bookstore, also honored presentations in each academic division. Two awards recognizing outstanding presentations in any discipline were awarded: a $250 cash Graduate Dean’s award and a $500 cash award for the Chancellor’s Graduate Research Prize. The award winners of the 9th Annual Graduate Research Symposium are listed below.

Graduate Dean’s Award: Mark Norris, Linguistics, for the poster presentation “Case concord at the syntax-phonology interface.”
Alumni Association Awards:
Arts Division: Gene Felice, Digital Arts & New Media, for the poster presentation “Oceanic scales balance through biomimicry.”
Jack Baskin School of Engineering: Amie Radenbaugh, Biomolecular Engineering & Bioinformatics, for the poster presentation “Identifying somatic mutations in cancer using high-throughput sequencing data from DNA and RNA.”
Humanities Division: Allan Jay Schwade, Linguistics, for the oral presentation “The role of gender in word recognition.”
Physical & Biological Sciences Division: Meghan Powers, Ocean Sciences, for the oral presentation “Bioluminescence in the deep-sea ctenophore Bathocyroe fosteri.”
Social Sciences Division: Veronica Yovovich, Environmental Studies, for the poster presentation “Trophic cascades: Pumas, deer and oaks in the Santa Cruz Mountains.”
Dean’s Awards:
Arts Division: Dana Forsberg, Social Documentation, for the media presentation “Growing people: A documentary film.”
Jack Baskin School of Engineering: Vladislav Uzunangelov, Biomolecular Engineering & Bioinformatics, for the poster presentation “A pathway-centric analysis of TCGA mutation data.”
Humanities Division: Ariane Helou, Literature, for the oral presentation “The Sybil’s voice: Prophecy and performance in early modern Italy.”
Physical & Biological Sciences Division: Rachel Doran, Molecular, Cell, & Developmental Biology, for the poster presentation “From armor to Achilles heel: Targeting the glycan shield of HIV in novel vaccine strategies.”
Social Sciences Division: Joanna Weill, Psychology, for the poster presentation “Social histories of capital defendants.”
Article written by Tim Stephens.