Found 9 projects
Poster Presentation 1
11:00 AM to 1:00 PM
- Presenters
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- Catherine Jaekyung Yoo, Senior, English, Informatics
- Amulya Paramasivam, Sophomore, Engineering Undeclared
- Jack Lo, Senior, Informatics: Data Science
- Ashley Zhou, Junior, Informatics
- Shiyue Sybil Wang, Recent Graduate, Informatics, Economics
- Mentor
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- Alexis Hiniker, The Information School
- Session
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Poster Session 1
- MGH 241
- Easel #123
- 11:00 AM to 1:00 PM
Communication on online platforms has become one of the primary methods by which people communicate with one another. Regardless of conversation space, either online or offline, arguments can arise. Through our research, we are studying the ways in which the design of a platform influences the tenor of a conversation and the factors that lead to fights and reconciliation. We conducted in-depth in-person and phone interviews with 23 adults to understand how arguments arise online, how they end in different circumstances, and received input for possible design ideas. We followed up with the interviewees to gather demographic information about them. Through affinity diagramming, we qualitatively analyzed the 23 interview transcripts to uncover recurring themes, such as the role of time, the stages of an argument, the way people move arguments from public to private spaces, and differences between images and text in sparking arguments. Based on these themes and design suggestions from participants, we made sketches for potential design ideas that can be implemented in social media platforms to encourage constructive discourse. We are planning to use the design sketches to create prototypes to test with participants for iteration, which we will describe in a research paper to share our findings and design ideas broadly.
- Presenters
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- Katherine Suvan Yang, Junior, Human Centered Design & Engineering
- Jonathan Anh Tran, Senior, Human Centered Design & Engineering
- Mentors
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- Alexis Hiniker, The Information School
- Katie Davis, The Information School
- Session
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Poster Session 1
- MGH 241
- Easel #124
- 11:00 AM to 1:00 PM
Many smartphone users engage in compulsive and habitual phone checking which they find frustrating, yet our understanding of how this phenomenon is experienced is limited. We conducted a semi-structured interview, a think-aloud phone use demonstration, and a sketching exercise with 39 smart phone users (ages 14–64) to probe their experiences with compulsive phone checking. Their insights revealed a small taxonomy of common triggers that lead up to instances of compulsive phone use and a second set that end compulsive phone use sessions. Though participants expressed frustration with their lack of self-control, they also reported that the activities they engage in during these sessions can be meaningful, which they defined as transcending the current instance of use. Participants said they periodically refect on their compulsive use and delete apps that drive compulsive checking without providing sufficient meaning. We use these findings to create a descriptive model of the cycle of compulsive checking, and we call on designers to craft experiences that meet users’ definition of meaningfulness rather than creating lock-out mechanisms to help them police their own use.
Poster Presentation 2
1:00 PM to 2:30 PM
- Presenters
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- Jacquelynn (Jacki) O'Maley, Sophomore, Biology Transfer Degree, Edmonds Community College
- Isabella Chang, Sophomore, Biology, Edmonds Community College
- Carla Talbaux, Sophomore, Biology, Everett Community College
- Severin H. Robins, Junior, Extended Pre-Major
- Mentor
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- Jennifer (Gwen) Shlichta, Biology, Edmonds College
- Session
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Poster Session 2
- MGH 206
- Easel #177
- 1:00 PM to 2:30 PM
Methanol is a common pollutant in freshwater ecosystems due to its widespread use in industrial operations, fuel, antifreeze, paints, and insecticides, and being a result of the burning of garbage. As a bioindicator species, Daphnia magna health indicates changes in aquatic ecosystem health. They are an important part of the food web, eating algae, and as a food source to insects and fish. No previous studies have examined the effects of the pollutant methanol on Daphnia heart function and mortality. This experiment examined the effects of varying methanol concentrations on heart function and mortality of Daphnia magna. It was hypothesized that methanol significantly affects the heart and mortality rate of Daphnia. Fifteen experimental biospheres were used in each trial, with three jars for each of the five concentrations. The biospheres were filled with deionized water and methanol in concentrations of 0 ppm (control), 822.6 ppm, 1644.5 ppm, 3289.0 ppm, 7119 ppm. In a second trial, the concentrations were 0 ppm, 822.6 ppm, 1644.5 ppm, 205.7 ppm, and 411.3 ppm. Heart and mortality rates were observed and recorded for each trial over 4-8 days. For each jar, videos were recorded for 15 seconds each and heart rate was counted, and mortality counted every other day. Based on the survival and heart rate differences, it was concluded that as methanol concentrations increase, the heart rate of Daphnia varied but didn’t respond linearly to concentration levels. Additionally, higher concentrations of methanol negatively affect survivability, although the initial control groups had somewhat high death rates. This study highlights the negative impact of methanol pollution on Daphnia because a negative impact on Daphnia affects the whole freshwater ecosystem. Indeed, in Lake Washington, Daphnia represent a major source of nutrients for juvenile Sockeye Salmon, making Daphnia indispensable for their growth.
- Presenter
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- Gui Guenther Aksit, Fifth Year, Earth and Space Sciences: Geology Mary Gates Scholar, UW Honors Program
- Mentors
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- Alexis Licht, Earth & Space Sciences
- Megan Mueller, Earth & Space Sciences
- Session
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Poster Session 2
- Commons West
- Easel #34
- 1:00 PM to 2:30 PM
Anatolia, in modern Turkey, is a complex assemblage of micro-continents that collided during the Late Cretaceous and the Paleogene, 80 to 25 million years ago. Despite the large volume of work on the numerous Anatolian terranes and collisions, basic questions regarding the timing of collision, style of post-collisional deformation and development of topography remain enigmatic. In western Anatolia, the timing and mechanisms of these successive collisions are poorly understood and do not conform with current continent-continent collision models. This project reconstructs the evolution of the collision zone in order to reconstruct the tectonic evolution of western Anatolia and refine models of collisional tectonics. Here, we present new data from the 160-40 million year old sedimentary archives preserved in the Central Sakarya Basin, a sedimentary basin that formed adjacent to the collision zone. Two methods for sedimentary analysis are employed in this research: detrital zircon dating and sandstone petrography. Detrital zircon ages attained through Uranium-Lead dating techniques are compared to known ages from surrounding mountain ranges to determine the source of sediment through time and apply age constraints to stratigraphic layers. Sandstone petrographic analysis examines the composition of samples to determine sedimentary provenance. The evolution of sediment sources through time provides a robust timeline of collision, post-collisional deformation and topographic development. The results from zircon dating and sandstone petrography show an evolution of sediment provenance where the oldest, pre-collisional sediments are derived from an adjacent volcanic chain. The onset of collision, around 60 million years ago, is marked by a change in sediment composition as collision creates topography and fault systems exhume older, buried rock. In constructing a progression of sediment source, this research determines a precise chronology for the collision and post-collisional evolution of western Anatolia and contributes to modifying current models on collisional margins.
Poster Presentation 3
2:30 PM to 4:00 PM
- Presenter
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- Samuel Joseph Shekut, Senior, Earth and Space Sciences: Geology
- Mentor
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- Alexis Licht, Earth & Space Sciences
- Session
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Poster Session 3
- Commons East
- Easel #58
- 2:30 PM to 4:00 PM
The Olympic Mountains on the west coast of Washington State are an impressive topographic feature, the emergence timing of which remains poorly documented. The Olympic Peninsula comprises 52 million year old (52 Ma) igneous rocks, and marine sedimentary rocks deposited from 52Ma to present. Here, we use a proxy to model sourcing of sediment called detrital zircon provenance (DZP). We use DZP of sedimentary rocks from the Olympic peninsula and from the Seattle Basin further east to model ancient drainage systems in order to place age constraints on the uplift of the Olympic Mountains. Our data from both areas show that 52 Ma through 23 Ma sandstones display DZP patterns and sediment type in agreement with a direct supply from central Washington. Samples of 13 to 11 Ma sandstones and modern river sands from the west of the Olympic Peninsula display a youngest zircon age population at 17 Ma. These data indicate that this area was still fed by central Washington at that time. 11 Ma sandstones from the eastern part of the Seattle Basin display DZP patterns still in agreement with supply from central Washington. By contrast, contemporary river sandstones from the western part of the basin mostly consist of reworked older sediment. This change in sediment source shows that by 11 Ma, the Olympics had already emerged and reached sufficient topographic prominence to support eastward draining rivers that deposited the 11 Ma river sandstone units of the Seattle Basin. These data allow us to constrain the initial uplift of the Olympic Mountains sometime after 17 Ma but before 11 Ma. The data are in close agreement with previously published ages that establish the exhumation of the Olympic Mountains beginning at 18 Ma, and show that the Olympic Peninsula became an emerged topographic high in less than 6 million years.
- Presenter
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- Stokke Xu, Senior, Earth and Space Sciences: Geology, Drama: Design UW Honors Program
- Mentors
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- Alexis Licht, Earth & Space Sciences
- Caroline Strömberg, Biology
- Session
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Poster Session 3
- Commons East
- Easel #59
- 2:30 PM to 4:00 PM
Grasslands cover approximately 20% of Earth’s land today and spread gradually worldwide in subtropical areas during the last 40 million years. Pollen data from sedimentary rocks in Myanmar suggest that grasslands might have existed there as early as 25 million years ago but did not spread to other Asian regions until much later, 10-6 million years ago. To fully understand the ecology of these early Asian grasslands, I reconstructed the paleoenvironments of Myanmar during the late Oligocene and early Miocene, 25 to 18 million years ago. I used two paleoenvironmental proxies on paleosol samples from Burmese sedimentary rocks: carbon isotopic composition of bulk sediment and phytolith analysis. The bulk carbon isotopic composition in paleosol is an indirect insight into the local aridity and can help reconstructing soil productivity; phytoliths–silica bodies deposited inside living plant tissue that remain in the soil after the tissue decays, forming fossils—when extracted, can help identify the grass types and their relative abundance in the ecosystem. Documenting the characteristics and paleoenvironmental setting of these early grasslands will help us understanding why they did not spread until millions of years later in Asia –and if this timing of ecological expansion is linked to the regional evolution of monsoonal intensity.
- Presenter
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- Aida Amirah Rusman, Senior, Earth and Space Sciences: Geology UW Honors Program
- Mentor
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- Alexis Licht, Earth & Space Sciences
- Session
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Poster Session 3
- Commons East
- Easel #57
- 2:30 PM to 4:00 PM
The Irrawaddy River is Myanmar’s biggest river system and the world’s third largest river in terms of sediment load. It drains the eastern edge of the Himalayas and flows through the Central Myanmar Basin into the Andaman Sea. Its geological history remains yet poorly documented, and when its modern drainage basin was established is unknown. For my research, I reconstructed the history of the Irrawaddy drainage system by using sedimentary provenance methods. Sediments in the Central Myanmar Basin can be traced back to their source rock by using different geochemical and petrographic proxies; by using these proxies on dated sedimentary rocks in the basin, I aimed at determining when the modern sediment sources were established. My research focused on two proxies: zircon geochronology and petrographic analysis of sandstones. Zircon geochronology is a method of dating zircon minerals from sandstones. The zircon age distribution obtained from a particular sediment sample is a direct insight into the age of the sediment source rock. Sandstone petrographic analysis involves analyzing at least 300 individual sediment grains and classifying them according to their mineralogy to compare them with the known rock characteristics in the potential sediment source areas. Both proxies were applied on sedimentary rocks of different ages previously collected in the field. I compared the results from both analyses with the modern sediments collected from the Irrawaddy river mouth and modern sediment source areas. I looked for consistency in the zircon age distributions and petrography signatures between the modern and older deposits to deduce the maximum age of the river. My preliminary results suggest that the Irrawaddy River was established around Middle Eocene (40Ma), which would make the Irrawaddy one of the oldest drainage systems of Asia.
Poster Presentation 4
4:00 PM to 6:00 PM
- Presenters
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- A. Mitchell Kaminski, Sophomore, Associate in Biology, Edmonds Community College
- Joshua Panasyuk
- Uladzislau Niakhai, Senior, Biology, Edmonds Community College
- Mentor
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- Gwen Shlichta, Accounting, Biology, Edmonds Community College
- Session
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Poster Session 4
- MGH 206
- Easel #173
- 4:00 PM to 6:00 PM
Armadillidium vulgare are terrestrial isopods characterized by their ability to conglobate (roll into a ball) as a mechanism of defense from predation. It is theorized that conglobation functions as both a defense mechanism against predation and a means to avoid desiccation in arid environments. This project tests conglobation as a mechanism of water conservation. Water-loss in A. vulgare, was investigated in the free and conglobated states. In experiment one, 40 specimens of A. vulgare were suspended in their conglobated state using dental rubber bands and kept at 30.5°C and 30% relative humidity for 22 minutes along with a control group of additional 40 specimens of A. vulgare in their free state. Water-loss rate decreased by 16.5% when specimens were in their conglobated form. In experiment two, we first varied the humidity and then temperature to test whether different conditions triggered voluntary conglobation. Four groups of 15 specimens of A. vulgare were kept at 25°C in environments of varying humidity: 18%, 30%, 46%, and 99% respectively for one hour. No voluntary conglobation was observed in response to humidity change. Finally, we observed that high temperature triggered conglobation beginning with 6% conglobating at 31.5°C and 100% at 50°C. Our findings suggest that while conglobation behavior may help to conserve water, A. vulgare conglobate primarily as a defense mechanism. Further research is needed to clarify the function and purpose of the conglobation response in A. vulgare.
- Presenter
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- Ethan Frank (Ethan) Knight, Senior, Neurobiology, Public Health-Global Health Mary Gates Scholar, UW Honors Program
- Mentors
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- David Dichek, Medicine
- Alexis Stamatikos, Cardiology, Medicine
- Session
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Poster Session 4
- Balcony
- Easel #104
- 4:00 PM to 6:00 PM
Atherosclerosis, the underlying cause of most heart attacks and strokes, results from lipid accumulation in cells of the artery wall. Gene therapy, delivered directly to the artery wall, has the potential to prevent and reverse atherosclerosis. However, lipid accumulates primarily in cells below the endothelium, which are difficult to reach with gene therapy vectors. Our goal is to remove lipid from these cells by delivering therapeutic microRNA (miR) that increases cholesterol export from the cells. We hypothesized that if we introduced a therapeutic gene expressing the miR to endothelial cells (cells along the artery lumen), the endothelial cells would release this miR (anti-miR-33a-5p) via extracellular vesicles (exosomes) that transport miR between neighboring cells. We also hypothesized that smooth muscle cells (SMC) and macrophages would take up the therapeutic miR-containing exosomes, leading to higher expression of a critical cholesterol export protein (ABCA1) and increased cholesterol export. To test this in vitro, we introduced a therapeutic gene encoding the miR into endothelial cells and used RT-qPCR to test if the miR was released into the endothelial cell culture medium (CM) via exosomes. After confirming the presence of the therapeutic miR in exosomes purified from CM, we treated SMC and macrophages by incubating the cells with the exosome-containing CM. After incubation, we measured ABCA1 protein expression and cholesterol export. Expression of ABCA1 protein increased by 1.6- and 2.2-fold in SMC and macrophages, respectively, while cholesterol export increased by 1.4- and 1.6-fold. We conclude that gene therapy delivered to endothelial cells can produce therapeutic miR that is transferred to neighboring artery wall cells via exosomes, and increases cholesterol export in these target cells. If also effective in vivo, our approach has potential for reducing the severity of atherosclerosis by delivering therapeutic miR to cells that are difficult to reach with gene therapy.