乐播传媒入口

Findings and Future Directions: Notes From Summer Science MAP Students

Oct 28, 2022

Mentored Advanced Projects (MAPs) give 乐播传媒入口ians the opportunity to delve deeply into research or creative projects that integrate the knowledge and skills they鈥檝e gained as an undergraduate. In the science division, work done by MAP students directly contributes to ongoing scholarly research. The experience often results in presentations, publications, and other opportunities, all while preparing students for research at the graduate-level.

While some students conduct MAPs for academic credit during the semester, many opt to apply for a summer MAP 鈥 living in 乐播传媒入口 and conducting research full-time. (Any student who spends a summer here will tell you that there鈥檚 nothing quite like the community and tranquility of 乐播传媒入口 in the summertime.)

Weeks after they concluded their summer science MAPs, we met up with five students to ask them about their research, the process of scientific inquiry, and what the MAP experience has taught them.

Malina Cantemir 鈥24: Getting familiar 鈥 very familiar 鈥 with frogs

A girl with brown hair and glasses smiles. She is surrounded by trees.
Malina Cantemir 鈥24, biology major.

鈥淚 always enjoy learning new things,鈥 says Malina Cantemir 鈥24, 鈥渁nd doing a MAP forces you to learn new things very quickly.鈥  Malina spent this summer in the laboratory of Joshua Sandquist, associate professor of biology, learning many new things about the embryonic cells of the African clawed frog. She overexpressed a protein, tricellulin, in the embryonic cells, and then observed the effect of that overexpression on how the cells prepared for division. It was a laborious process. A lot of time, effort, and luck went into identifying cells that met all the criteria for her dataset.

The thing that kept me going is that I could see myself improving.

Initially, Malina struggled with a sense that she wasn鈥檛 doing well enough or accomplishing enough. It took several weeks and many conversations with friends, labmates, and her advisor to overcome that worry. 鈥淭he thing that kept me going is that I could see myself improving,鈥 she says. Malina鈥檚 learned that, sometimes, research simply moves slowly and it鈥檚 not a reflection of her competence or potential. 鈥淣ow, I鈥檝e gotten to a point where I鈥檓 perfectly happy in the laboratory, working alone, sometimes even making mistakes,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檝e found that I genuinely like existing in lab.

Jiayi Chen 鈥23: An economist applying computer science to psychology

 

A girl with black hair stands in front of a brick wall. She is smiling.
Jiayi Chen, 鈥23, economics major.

鈥嬧赌嬧赌嬧赌

Jiayi Chen 鈥23 is an economics major, but that didn鈥檛 stop her from joining the research team of Fernanda Eliott, assistant professor of computer science. Why do a computer science MAP as an economics major? 鈥淚 think that economics today involves a lot of data analysis," Jiayi explains, "and I see data visualization as storytelling. If you make data visual, people can truly access what is going on. Doing this MAP I got to improve my ability to do that.鈥

I see data visualization as storytelling...Doing this MAP, I got to improve my ability to do that.

This summer, Jiayi worked in a team of students on a project called, 鈥淢eaning of Meaning,鈥 which blended computer science with neuroscience and psychology. They worked to identify clues of moral intuition, semantic meaning, and common sense in different images, in hopes of understanding how human visual reasoning can be mirrored in computational approaches and in artificial intelligence. Jiayi was tasked with developing an interactive web app that presents the group鈥檚 findings, work she鈥檚 continued as a MAP this fall. Over the summer, her research team also got to attend the 2022 Conference of the International Society for Research on Emotion at USC. There, Jiayi was amazed by the application of all sorts of research to real-world problems. 鈥淢y experience at that conference confirmed for me that I really want to go to graduate school and do research,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t was so inspiring to see people research something they love and then share that work with others.鈥

Dolch茅 Sanders 鈥23: Trying her hand at drug development

A girl with glasses smiles. Her hair is braided and pulled into a bun.
Dolch茅 Sanders 鈥23, biological chemistry major.

Dolch茅 spent this summer in the laboratory of Erick Leggans, associate professor of chemistry, synthesizing an antibiotic molecule called teixobactin. Teixobactin is produced naturally by a bacterium found deep in subsoil layers, Dolch茅 explains, but it鈥檚 difficult to isolate the molecule in quantities large enough to harness its antibacterial properties. Instead, her MAP aimed to reconstruct the molecule, building it piece by piece 鈥 one organic reaction at a time.

Doing research was an experiment in and of itself.

Dolch茅 is a fourth-year biological chemistry major who took most of her lab-intensive biology and chemistry courses online during the pandemic. The summer MAP was her first hands-on laboratory experience so doing research, Dolch茅 says, was an experiment in and of itself. For the past few years, she鈥檚 had her sights set on becoming a physician鈥檚 assistant (PA), but she鈥檚 also been curious about whether she鈥檇 enjoy a career in clinical research. Conducting a summer MAP gave her the opportunity to explore the life of full-time research. For now, Dolch茅 plans to stick with PA school and not a research career. 鈥淏ut now I can make that as an informed decision,鈥 she says, 鈥渉aving done research for a while and had a really great experience.鈥

Ella Kim 鈥24: Conducting research that will simplify research

A girl wearing a black dress is standing in a park on a sunny day.
Ella Kim 鈥24, computer science major.

This summer, Ella conducted a MAP with Priscilla Jimenez Pazmino, assistant professor of computer science. In a team of students, she worked to develop a virtual dashboard that will simplify how researchers navigate databases to expand their research. 鈥淓specially when exploring a new research topic or field, it can be overwhelming to understand and access trends,鈥 Ella says. The dashboard she worked on will address this problem, distilling search results down to a visual array of the leading papers or topics in a field.

Part of Ella鈥檚 project involved integrating files written in two different programming languages. "These two  languages communicate with each other differently," Ella explains, 鈥渟o I had to be a sort of translator and figure out how they interact.鈥 As a computer science major with a strong linguistics background, she found herself uniquely suited for this unexpected translatory challenge 鈥 and she loved it. 

It was challenging but also very exciting that there wasn鈥檛 much existing research pertaining to that specific issue 鈥 we had to answer our own questions in order to conduct our project.

Shrey Agrawal 鈥24: Developing new skills 鈥 and a new appreciation 鈥 for website design

A boy with glasses stands in front of a canal and smiles.
Shrey Agrawal 鈥24, computer science major and statistics concentrator.

Everyone needs statistics. That鈥檚 the idea behind Dataspace, a web app being developed by Shonda Kuiper, professor of statistics, and her research students. Through games and interactive 鈥渄ata stories鈥 drawing from real-life datasets, Dataspace guides users through principles of statistical analysis. This summer, Shrey joined the Kuiper laboratory to help with the development of the Dataspace website. He spent the first couple weeks of the summer analyzing data and building machine learning models based on a survey of people who had played the statistics games on the website. "The goal was essentially to determine whether using games to teach statistical concepts is a good idea or not, and the answer was, yes it is!" Shrey then moved on to design work that will help make the website as effective and engaging an instructional resource as possible.

You learn to say, 鈥業 haven't done this but I've done similar things.鈥

Shrey is a computer science major and a statistics concentrator, and prior to this summer he had almost no experience in website design 鈥 especially not in front-end design. (鈥淔ront-end鈥 refers to anything that users see when they interact with a software or a website.) Doing front-end design, Shrey says, meant putting himself in the user鈥檚 shoes. 鈥淏efore this MAP, I didn鈥檛 realize how much time and work goes into the slightest detail, into the tiniest thing that a user might interact with,鈥 Shrey says. He鈥檚 learned that tackling a computer science project requires flexibility with your skills and understanding 鈥淣o matter how prepared you feel you are or aren鈥檛, you learn new skills on the job," he says. "You don鈥檛 say, 鈥業 can鈥檛 do this because I鈥檝e never done it.鈥 Instead, you learn to say, 鈥業 haven鈥檛 done this but I鈥檝e done similar things.鈥欌

Learn more about Mentored Advanced Projects.


We use cookies to enable essential services and functionality on our site, enhance your user experience, provide better service through personalized content, collect data on how visitors interact with our site, and enable advertising services.

To accept the use of cookies and continue on to the site, click "I Agree." For more information about our use of cookies and how to opt out, please refer to our website privacy policy.