亚洲AV

Undergraduate research conference is a spotlight on excellence

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Karen T. Lee said she really likes conferences.

The assistant director for 亚洲AV鈥檚 (OSCAR) especially likes the National Conference on Undergraduate Research.

That is where undergraduate students from across the country showcase their research to their peers and their mentors, network, and meet with graduate school representatives.

Even though this year鈥檚 event, April 4-8, is again virtual, Lee said the impact is just the same.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a way for students to see what other students in their field are doing,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his is a possibility to meet people who might be lifelong colleagues, and undergraduate conferences are often the best places to get that opportunity.鈥

Fifteen Mason students will make presentations at the event. Lee said having one鈥檚 research accepted by the conference review board is high praise.

鈥淚n a typical year there are several thousand presentations,鈥 Lee said. 鈥淔or a student to be accepted, it means their research was judged to be significant, well thought-out, and interesting from a disciplinary perspective; not only well put together, but something people would want to know about.鈥

Here is some of the research to be shared by Mason students:


girl posing outside
Lin Grodi. Photo provided

Lin Grodi
Senior, Human Development and Family Science

Teacher-Family Communication among Latinx Immigrant Families and Teachers of Young Latinx children during COVID-19

The research: Grodi said the overarching focus of her study is family engagement. She examined teacher-family communication during the pandemic among Latinx immigrant parents and teachers whose students鈥 parents were immigrants of Latinx descent.

Why the research is important: According to Grodi鈥檚 research, the nature of online learning provided teachers a wider window to better understand students and families. Moving forward, technology can continue to play an important role in supporting ongoing communication between parents and teachers. Interpreters are essential in breaking down language barriers, so that parents can be invited as partners into their children鈥檚 education. Grodi said that this is even more significant for communication and relationships across parents and teachers from different cultural backgrounds.

Quotable: 鈥淭he findings from Lin's project provide important insight for the early childhood field in terms of how we might build on the momentum of the lessons learned during the pandemic to further support families and teachers in building reciprocal relationships through two-way communication," said , associate professor in the College of Education and Human Development, who served as Grodi鈥檚 mentor.

鈥擫auren Reuscher


girl posing
Molly Izer. Photo provided

Molly Izer
Sophomore, Government and International Politics

Misinformation Gone Viral: How Paywalls Impact the Consumption of Misinformation

The research: Izer is studying where people go after they hit a paywall when looking online for credible information and news. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a critical gap between when people hit a paywall versus where they find information after all,鈥 said Izer, an student who has interned in the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives.

Izer said she is surveying a randomized group on their information consumption habits, personality, political orientation, and demographics. She鈥檚 also gathering quantitative data from observing additional participants as they live-react to finding information and reaching a paywall.

Why the research is important: 鈥淎s society becomes more and more heavily digitized, we鈥檙e seeing society becoming more hyper partisan,鈥 Izer said. 鈥淕etting to know online journalism, paywalls, and the consumption of misinformation will allow us to better legislate around that issue and better understand how we can make an informed civil society.鈥

Quotable: 鈥淢olly is ambitious, tenacious, and courageous,鈥 said Associate Professor . 鈥淪he performs and operates on campus more like a graduate student than a first-year student. She is an excellent class participant, strives to meet her personal and academic commitments ahead of schedule, and is helpful to her peers.鈥

鈥擬ariam Aburdeineh


headshot of student researcher
Tulane Simpson. Photo provided

Tulane Simpson
Senior, English

Ecoandrogyny: Examining Environmentalism Beyond the Gender Binary

The research: Simpson said they wanted to study how to make environmentalism more gender neutral. Their research examines how important gender has historically been in shaping how people think about the environment, with, for example, women traditionally being cast as eco-caretakers and men traditionally being cast in opposition to nature.

Simpson used 鈥淎vatar: The Last Airbender,鈥 a children鈥檚 animation show, as a case study in leveraging individual gender expression for environmental goals.

Why the research is important: , assistant professor of English who helped supervise Simpson鈥檚 research, said, 鈥淭he project is about giving people the freedom to decide how they want to fight for environmental justice without being limited by gender roles and expectations.鈥 Simpson鈥檚 work also will be displayed in a virtual presentation of 鈥,鈥 which showcases student research to members of Congress.

Quotable: 鈥淚n any television show, having more representation is a good thing,鈥 Simpson said. 鈥淚f a show has the goal of encouraging environmentalism, it should portray different gender expressions to appeal to people more broadly.鈥

鈥擜nna Stolley Persky


male student in Horizon Hall
Ruoyu Xie. Photo by Evan Cantwell/Creative Services

Ruoyu Xie
Senior, Computer Science

Bilingual alignment for optical character recognition text

The research: Xie is exploring natural language processing, a form of artificial intelligence in which computers can learn, understand, and respond to text or speech. Xie is applying this to the endangered language of Griko, a Greek variety spoken by about 60,000 to 70,000 people in southern Italy. By using books in which Griko and standard Italian are displayed side-by-side as the software data, Xie is providing the computer a tutorial from which to translate between Griko and Italian.

Why the research is important: There are more than 7,000 distinct languages across the globe, according to Ethnologue, with about 3,000 in danger of becoming extinct because of lack of use. By using optical character recognition systems to digitize the endangered language into machine-readable text, and software that ties words in an endangered language to words spoken in a widely used language, Xie says a computer can 鈥渓earn鈥 the endangered language. That will make it available for web translations and help linguists and communities document these languages. As , an assistant professor of computer science and Xie鈥檚 mentor, said, 鈥淲e鈥檙e running out of time.鈥

Quotable: 鈥淟anguage is one of the representations of a culture,鈥 Xie said. 鈥淪o you can say, 鈥榊es, languages come and go.鈥 But if we forget about a language, we forget about the culture as well.鈥

鈥擠amian Cristodero