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Office of Undergraduate Research Home » 2024 Undergraduate Research Symposium Schedules

Found 13 projects

Poster Presentation 1

11:00 AM to 12:30 PM
Challenges and Promises: Latine Perspectives on Support and Community at UW
Presenters
  • David Melgoza, Senior, Law, Societies, & Justice, Marketing, Entrepreneurship
  • Idail Garcia, Sophomore, Pre-Social Sciences
  • Jocelyn Jimenez Romero, Junior, Anthropology: Medical Anth & Global Hlth
  • Maria Guadalupe (Lupita) Ocampo Aguilar, Junior, Public Health-Global Health
  • Noelia Garcia Rivera, Senior, Political Science
  • Lindsay Rae (Lindsay) Wilsey-Bacso, Senior, Accounting
  • Lakshmi Osorio, Junior, Computer Science Allen Scholars
  • Rossy Sierra, Junior, Sociology
  • Abel Mendez Covarrubias, Senior, Public Health-Global Health
  • Saul Gonzalez, Junior, History
  • Fernanda Chavez-Hernandez, Junior, Pre-Sciences
Mentor
  • José Antonio Lucero, Jackson School of International Studies
Session
    Poster Session 1
  • MGH Balcony
  • Easel #54
  • 11:00 AM to 12:30 PM

  • Other students mentored by José Antonio Lucero (1)
Challenges and Promises: Latine Perspectives on Support and Community at UWclose

This study seeks to explore the perspectives of Latine students at the University of Washington (UW) regarding racial representation within the institution. Do Latine students see their experiences and identities represented and reflected in university life? How do Latine students experience and perceive Latine representation (or lack thereof) in terms of the composition of faculty, student body, and community spaces at UW? This research project aims to uncover the realities, challenges, and promise of support and community on campus. Through interviews with Latine students, faculty, and staff, this inquiry will describe how students find support at UW and navigate their academic environment. To attain a comprehensive understanding, the research utilizes a combination of primary and secondary sources, incorporating interviews with Latine students, staff, and faculty at the UW to capture personalized and nuanced perspectives. By examining the lived experiences and perspectives of individuals directly affected, the study aims to thoroughly examine the complex dynamics at play. Exploring the lived experiences of Latine students, the study will contribute to the discourse on racial representation in academia and its impact on student well-being and academic success. The findings will inform discussions on how institutions can foster an inclusive environment that recognizes and supports the diverse backgrounds of all students. This research project has emerged from ongoing conversation and collaboration with the Washington State Commission on Hispanic Affairs members. This research project will inform the community report that the Commission is preparing.


Examining Linkages between Regional Governance and Transportation Accessibility
Presenter
  • Seth Gebauer, Senior, Political Science, Economics, Pacific Lutheran University
Mentors
  • Michael Artime, Political Science
  • Maria Chavez, Political Science, Pacific Lutheran University
Session
    Poster Session 1
  • MGH Commons East
  • Easel #38
  • 11:00 AM to 12:30 PM

  • Other Political Science major students (17)
  • Other Economics major students (22)
  • Other students mentored by Michael Artime (1)
Examining Linkages between Regional Governance and Transportation Accessibilityclose

The composition of metropolitan governance has many effects on land use decisions, budget allocations, housing development, transportation planning, and racial, economic, and social equity in urban areas. However, there has been little academic inquiry into the effect of regional governance structure on transportation accessibility. This paper seeks to examine statistical linkages between regional governance fragmentation and trends toward and away from greater transportation accessibility in metropolitan areas. I perform a comparative statistical analysis of 47 of the 50 largest Metropolitan Statistical Areas, examining census data from 2002 to 2022 and transit accessibility data from the University of Minnesota Accessibility Observatory from 2014 to 2021 to examine this relationship. The causal factor I investigate is metropolitan governance fragmentation, which I capture through a Governance Fragmentation Index (GFI). The dependent variable, transportation accessibility, is captured through an Accessibility Gap Index, which categorizes transportation access through accessibility levels throughout each Metropolitan Statistical Area, utilizing data from the Accessibility Observatory from 2014 to 2021. My analysis controls for potential confounding variables, such as geographic area, population size, poverty levels, and region. I expect to find that lower levels of governance fragmentation in a Metropolitan Statistical Area will be associated with greater gains in transportation accessibility. Whether or not a significant relationship is identified, the research conducted will contribute to literature and ongoing research surrounding metropolitan governance and transportation accessibility.


Oral Presentation 1

11:30 AM to 1:00 PM
The Right to Seek Asylum and Disability: A Comparative Analysis of Asylum Procedure in Uganda and Colombia 
Presenters
  • Alexandra Lauren (Alex) Crooks-Moreno, Junior, Pre-Major (Arts & Sciences) UW Honors Program
  • Stuart Ryan Asplund, Sophomore, Pre-Social Sciences UW Honors Program
Mentor
  • Megan McCloskey, International Studies, School of Law
Session
    Session O-1B: Navigating Social Landscapes: Exploring Diverse Perspectives on Society, Institutions, and Migration
  • MGH 228
  • 11:30 AM to 1:00 PM

The Right to Seek Asylum and Disability: A Comparative Analysis of Asylum Procedure in Uganda and Colombia close

The Disability Inclusive Development Initiative (DIDI) is a project that brings together students and faculty from various fields to promote the human rights of persons with disabilities. Our current project builds upon the findings of a 2020 Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between the International Disability Alliance (IDA) and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). We are conducting a comparative analysis of asylum procedures in Uganda and Colombia, specifically examining how these procedures consider the rights of persons with disabilities. Our goal is to ensure that refugees and asylum-seekers with disabilities have access to fair and accommodating processes. We are also looking into the challenges faced by persons with disabilities during the asylum process and how governments are addressing these challenges. To achieve these aims, we are conducting a comprehensive literature review, including primary legal research, using resources from the University of Washington libraries. Additionally, we are consulting with experts working in this field. Our team is dedicated to producing a report for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, which will outline our findings, highlight effective practices, and offer recommendations for future actions.


Formerly Fundamentalist: Why and How Evangelicals Leave Organized Religion
Presenter
  • Brieana Smith, Senior, Sociology, Anthropology McNair Scholar, UW Honors Program, Undergraduate Research Conference Travel Awardee
Mentor
  • Jerald Herting, Sociology
Session
    Session O-1B: Navigating Social Landscapes: Exploring Diverse Perspectives on Society, Institutions, and Migration
  • MGH 228
  • 11:30 AM to 1:00 PM

  • Other Sociology mentored projects (10)
Formerly Fundamentalist: Why and How Evangelicals Leave Organized Religionclose

In recent years, the Evangelical church in the United States has begun to see a decline in attendance which mirrors earlier declines in more mainstream denominations. Some who leave Evangelical congregations go on to host podcasts, write books, and speak at conferences about their experiences inside Evangelicalism and their journeys out of it. As they do so, these ‘Exvangelicals’ create meaning around their experiences, form new identities and communities around their newfound disbelief, and create spaces for, and inform the journeys of, other Evangelicals who are questioning their participation in the American Evangelical church. The intensity and frequency of the creation of new identities and communities around a former religious affiliation seems to be unique to Evangelicalism. This paper examines how and why these individuals come to leave Evangelicalism and create identities, media, and physical and psychological spaces oriented around that choice and considers whether the unique culture of American Evangelicalism may contribute to the likelihood of forming these communities. I conduct a qualitative analysis of 30 publicly available interviews of individuals who have left American Evangelicalism and now participate in public discussions of their exits. I expect to find common narratives around the strictness of family-of-origin religious experiences, feelings of betrayal or disillusionment, and similarly held political and social values among interviewees, as well as cultural and personality traits which may predict which individuals choose to become outspoken in the movement. It provides a better understanding of the newly formed and growing group of self-identified ‘Exvangelicals,’ their experiences, and the process of group identity they have undertaken, as well as describing the ways they connect and interact, and how they replicate aspects of the church they have left behind.


Poster Presentation 2

12:45 PM to 2:00 PM
State of the University of Washington Student Worker
Presenters
  • Sara Sprague, Senior, Law, Societies, & Justice, Political Science
  • Maya Cruz, Recent Graduate,
  • Bisma Ali, Sophomore, Pre-Major, UW Bothell
  • Niki Muratori, Junior, Ethnic, Gender, and Labor Studies:Labor
  • Areeg Ahmed, Freshman, Pre-Major, UW Bothell
  • Maya Elizabeth Bolin, Senior, Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences (Psychology), UW Tacoma
  • Drake Monfregola, Junior, Mathematical Thinking and Visualization
  • Eqra Sayid Mohamed, Senior, Politics, Philosophy, & Econ: Economics
Mentor
  • Rachel Erstad, Political Science
Session
    Poster Session 2
  • MGH Commons East
  • Easel #35
  • 12:45 PM to 2:00 PM

State of the University of Washington Student Workerclose

With this project, researchers for the Harry Bridges Center for Labor Studies from Seattle, Tacoma, and Bothell campuses seek to gain a better understanding of the intricate relationship that exists between the UW undergraduate experience and employment, as well as inform students on existing resources and support services both on and off campus. To sufficiently measure unique student experiences, we have sought survey responses through canvassing, contacting departmental and Registered Student Organization (RSO) listervs, and visiting in-person classes. Over the course of the past 6 weeks, we have made 73 points of outreach at the Seattle campus, 62 at Bothell, and 44 at Tacoma, resulting in 430 survey responses as of February 7th, 2024. Our Qualtrics survey will run through the end of winter quarter. We will then also offer paid interviews for 15-20 students to supplement survey data through further examination of survey themes and trends. Modeling UCLA Labor Center’s Unseen Costs: The Experiences of Workers and Learners in Los Angeles County, we will then compile our survey results and interview stories into a cumulative research report about why UW students work while pursuing their undergraduate degrees, what fields they have worked in, and any associated workers’ rights violations they may have faced while in these positions. With this research, we aim to create a more supportive environment for our student workers, and to help educate our respective campuses to meet their student body needs.


Oral Presentation 2

1:30 PM to 3:00 PM
The Ongoing Sikh Genocide
Presenter
  • Jasnoor Kaur (Jasnoor) Hans, Senior, Law, Societies, & Justice, Political Science
Mentor
  • Jonathan C Beck, Political Science, UW Seattle
Session
    Session O-2B: Tactics of Oppression and the Voices of the Oppressed
  • MGH 242
  • 1:30 PM to 3:00 PM

The Ongoing Sikh Genocideclose

Why does human rights law fall short in protecting people from human rights abuses made by governments acting in the name of self-sovereignty? In this project, I analyze these questions in the context of human rights abuses, such as extrajudicial killings, false imprisonments, rapes committed by law enforcement officers, and forced disappearances in Panjab, India. To do so, I use official reports from non-governmental organizations, an original interview I conducted with a survivor of Operation Blue Star, which was an attack on one of the holiest shrines for Sikhs, process-tracing, and human rights legal analysis. After developing the political and legal framework, I present my research in the form of three narrative case studies. I argue that the acts orchestrated by the Indian government and the tactics they employed to eradicate Sikhs constitute genocide under human rights law. Nonetheless, Sikhs struggle in gaining recognition due to extreme efforts by the Indian Government to cover-up and malign the names of Sikhs through their own governmental groups, and an international political environment that discourages foreign governments from condemning Indian government actions. With the research conducted in this project, links between other human rights violation in India can be found. The lack of accountability of the Indian government in multiple cases can be uncovered, which will prove how even with the existence of human rights law, governments have the most power.


Poster Presentation 3

2:15 PM to 3:30 PM
Extent of Submarine Phreatomagmatic Volcanism and Submarine Landslides in American Samoa
Presenters
  • Aisha Rashid, Senior, Oceanography, Marine Biology Undergraduate Research Conference Travel Awardee
  • Sophie S. (Sophie) Goddard, Senior, Political Science, Oceanography
  • Zachary Levitan, Senior, Oceanography, Anthropology
Mentor
  • Andrea Ogston, Oceanography
Session
    Poster Session 3
  • MGH Commons West
  • Easel #9
  • 2:15 PM to 3:30 PM

  • Other Oceanography mentored projects (23)
Extent of Submarine Phreatomagmatic Volcanism and Submarine Landslides in American Samoaclose

Located in the Southern Pacific Ocean, American Samoa was formed nearly 400 thousand years ago due to hotspot volcanism. As these eruptions occur, ash and volcanic rock fragments settle and leave behind texture, roughness, and clast sizes that are identifiable using mapping techniques such as backscatter analysis. The 2024 Oceanography Senior Thesis cruise aboard the R/V Thomas G. Thompson, produced bathymetric and backscatter maps utilizing the Multibeam Kongsberg EA302 to identify the boundary of such deposits and the thickness of sediment that has been deposited on it, indicating relative age and formation of volcanic features on the seafloor. This study focused on the islands Ofu-Olosega and Ta’u, and we located several intact and exploded cinder cone. Sediment cores were collected to quantify the grain size of the basalt that erupted violently out of these hot spots. We hypothesized that the grain size would correlate with distance from the caldera, with larger clasts sinking closer to the eruption site, and fine sediment carried farther. This was found true, but there were also large grain sizes radiating away from the initial cinder cone site, indicating the presence of other eruptions on the seabed. Multiple landslides were documented on the southern and northeastern slopes of Olosega Island. These landslides display key features such as steep amphitheater headwalls, blocky ridges, and hummock aprons. The landslides were classified as either slumps or debris avalanches based on these characteristics and compared to other volcanic hotspot landslides within the Pacific region. We hypothesized failure deposits would be identifiable in the seabed up to 30 km away from the caldera, and found them to be graphically obvious for about 21 km.


The Causes of Crime in Rural America
Presenter
  • Conner Frans, Senior, History, Political Science
Mentor
  • Rebecca Thorpe, Political Science
Session
    Poster Session 3
  • MGH Commons East
  • Easel #24
  • 2:15 PM to 3:30 PM

  • Other Political Science mentored projects (14)
  • Other students mentored by Rebecca Thorpe (7)
The Causes of Crime in Rural Americaclose

From 2012 to 2022 violent crime in rural America has either increased or stayed above the national crime rate. At the same time, the amount of firearms in these counties rose dramatically while law enforcement expenditure and poverty reduction stagnated. I theorize that a combination of high poverty rates, increased firearm ownership, and fewer police has contributed to the increase in rural crime over the past decade. As the literature suggests, firearms make it easier to commit violent crimes, fewer police make crime harder to detect, and poverty pushes people into crime due to unstable living conditions. I will evaluate the effect of these three factors on rural crime rates by using FBI Uniform Crime Report, U.S Census Bureau, and RAND Corporation data to perform multivariate regression in order to determine causality. I expect to find a strong positive correlation between these three factors and the rural crime rate. I will use multivariate regression analysis to examine the influence of gun ownership, law enforcement spending and poverty on rural crime rates. By finding the causes of crime in rural communities, I will help identify the areas that local governments will need to address to solve problems of violence.


Abiding by Silence: Impact of Early Marriage on Gender-Based Violence in India
Presenter
  • Sadah Sarkaria, Senior, Political Science, Economics
Mentors
  • Dennis Young, Political Science
  • Mark Smith, Political Science
Session
    Poster Session 3
  • MGH Commons East
  • Easel #25
  • 2:15 PM to 3:30 PM

  • Other Political Science mentored projects (14)
Abiding by Silence: Impact of Early Marriage on Gender-Based Violence in Indiaclose

My research is an analysis of the pervasive issue of gender-based violence faced by women in India. Despite the presence of constitutional safeguards, the entrenched patriachal norms, and the prevalent misogyny in Indian society continue to deny women the healthy and peaceful lives they rightfully deserve. By analyzing pre-existing data along with data collected from interviews conducted with women between the ages of 35-45 from village Gumtala in Punjab, I have conducted a study to examine the relationship between postponed age of marriage and gender-based violence. It's through the lens of these women, I argue that decades of suppression in the name of culture have normalized violence against them. I conducted this study with careful consideration, ensuring that the questions posed in the semi-structured interviews were sensitive to the unique backgrounds and experiences of the women involved. Through the method of convenience sampling and qualitative analysis of interview data, I identified patterns of gender based violence and socio-economic factors. The results of my study suggest that early marriage not only increases women's vulnerability but also fosters economic dependence and social isolation of young brides that fuels the act of dowry practices causing marital abuse.These findings are not only essential in creating awareness regarding the vulnerable state of these women but also help me pose possible policy interventions by the Governmnet of India. My research has allowed me to argue how raising the legal marriage age for women to 25 mitigates gender-based violence, allowing women more time to pursue education and build financial independence before marriage. This study is an ode to all the women who are denied a voice.


Filling the Welfare Well: Examining the Influence of Welfare Spending on Poverty Rates
Presenter
  • Madeline Olson Ellis, Senior, Political Science
Mentor
  • Rebecca Thorpe, Political Science
Session
    Poster Session 3
  • MGH Commons East
  • Easel #22
  • 2:15 PM to 3:30 PM

  • Other Political Science mentored projects (14)
  • Other students mentored by Rebecca Thorpe (7)
Filling the Welfare Well: Examining the Influence of Welfare Spending on Poverty Ratesclose

According to some measures, the United States has the largest economy in the world. Despite its massive gross domestic product, US citizens still face high poverty rates across states and counties. Why are there persistent poverty rates and why do they vary across the nation? To answer this question, I hypothesize a negative relationship between welfare spending and poverty rates. Welfare spending is one of the most direct ways that the government can provide money to people experiencing poverty. When people have their most basic needs provided, through welfare programs, they are significantly more likely to get out of poverty. To explore this relationship I use a multivariate regression, controlling for other factors that can impact poverty rates. Through testing this data, I hope to illustrate the importance of adequately funding welfare programs to reduce poverty across the nation. By increasing welfare spending individuals can get out of poverty and communities can thrive, improving the lives of all citizens.


Oral Presentation 3

3:30 PM to 5:00 PM
Weighing the Cost of Climate Change: Analyzing how Economic Reliance on the Fossil Fuel Industry Impacts Support for Climate Legislation
Presenter
  • Tyrel E. (Tyrel) Duckworth, Senior, Political Science
Mentor
  • Rebecca Thorpe, Political Science
Session
    Session O-3B: Ecology - from Physiology to Economics
  • MGH 288
  • 3:30 PM to 5:00 PM

  • Other Political Science mentored projects (14)
  • Other students mentored by Rebecca Thorpe (7)
Weighing the Cost of Climate Change: Analyzing how Economic Reliance on the Fossil Fuel Industry Impacts Support for Climate Legislationclose

While Tropical Storm Harold struck off the coast of Corpus Cristi, the Texas State Legislature ratified a bill effectively making their state a fossil fuel sanctuary. Scientists agree that the Deep South is one of the most vulnerable regions in the United States to climate change and the rise in climate-caused disasters. Why is it that despite being the most vulnerable region, the Deep South continues to offer pushback against climate mitigation? This research project attempts to understand the psychological components that induce preferences to policy. In the past, researchers have primarily focused on the economic lobbying power of Big Oil and Coal industries within jurisdictions. Utilizing rational choice theory, this project evaluates this puzzle from the perspective of voter preferences in response to economic reliance on the fossil fuel industry. The fossil fuel industry proves vitally important to local communities, providing jobs and resources. Using multivariate regression, I examine the effect of employment in the fossil fuel industry and reliance on nonrenewable energy within 467 different counties across the Deep South and other states. I weigh these results against possible other factors including partisanship, age, race, and vulnerability to observe if economic reliance accurately characterizes the misalignment observed within the Deep South. Based on previous literature and rational choice theory, I hypothesize that in counties economically dependent on the fossil fuel industry there will be less support for climate change legislation. Policy implications of this research include securing resources for communities threatened by a transition to renewable energy sources.


Migration and Ontological Security: The European Union's Pyschological Need to Defend "Home"
Presenter
  • Connor John Middleton, Senior, Political Science, Global and Regional Studies UW Honors Program
Mentors
  • Kathie Friedman, Jackson School of International Studies
  • Deborah Porter (debzport@uw.edu)
Session
    Session O-3G: Developing Pathways to the Past through Design, Analysis, Visualization and Research
  • MGH 228
  • 3:30 PM to 5:00 PM

  • Other Jackson School of International Studies mentored projects (10)
Migration and Ontological Security: The European Union's Pyschological Need to Defend "Home"close

The European Union's (EU) New Pact on Migration and Asylum demonstrates the EU’s securitizing behavior towards migration. Current discussion surrounding the measures prevalent within the New Pact is primarily focused on the EU’s severity towards managing migration flows. While there has been a consensus on the inherent flaws of these extreme measures, previous research has taken the rationale behind the EU’s decisions for granted. The lack of clarification on the EU’s logic leads to a failure to explain why the EU continues to push this New Pact despite both the flaws present within it and the opposition to the pact by African nations directly affected by it. To illustrate the EU’s reasoning, I utilize discourse analysis of semantic structures and the use of metaphors in seven speeches made by key European Commission members on the New Pact. This process finds and measures the salience of the Commission members' ideations of an EU “home” that needs to be defended from threats to collective identity. These findings are supplemented by content analysis of European Newspapers to find underlying economic and political factors that also explain the EU’s stubbornness on the New Pact. The content analysis of articles will demonstrate why ontological insecurity has emerged as a problem now. My findings indicate that the European Commission members' refusal to adjust the New Pact is caused by a break in the psychological anchors that make people feel secure. Specifically, Commission members have been found to feel ontologically insecure when governing migration. They demonstrate the belief that migration flows are a threat to the EU’s collective identity and the idea of an EU “home.” To prevent a supposed deterioration of the EU “home” harsh policies such as the New Pact are passed to stem supposedly threatening migration flows.


Poster Presentation 4

3:45 PM to 5:00 PM
A Brief Behavioral Intervention in a Clinically Depressed Sample
Presenters
  • Logan Coe (Logan) Mattingly, Senior, Psychology
  • Morgan Leslie McCraney, Senior, Psychology, Political Science
  • Annika Hope (Annika) Barsy, Junior, Psychology
  • Troye Lu, Junior, Psychology
  • Madison Chiu, Junior, Psychology
Mentor
  • Mavis Tsai, Psychology
Session
    Poster Session 4
  • MGH Balcony
  • Easel #54
  • 3:45 PM to 5:00 PM

  • Other Psychology mentored projects (43)
A Brief Behavioral Intervention in a Clinically Depressed Sampleclose

Social connection is fundamental to human well-being, encompassing mental and physical health, and overall quality of life. The importance of forging deep, meaningful relationships is a key focus within relationship sciences. Evidence from 140 studies highlights the significant impact of loneliness on health, equating its risk to that of severe health behaviors and conditions, such as heavy smoking. This underscores the essential role of close relationships in maintaining health. The process of building these relationships, according to relationship sciences, involves mutual disclosure and perceived responsiveness. While extensively studied in individual interactions and laboratory settings, group dynamics remain less explored. Functional Analytic Psychotherapy (FAP), a treatment developed at the University of Washington that is practiced by clinicians worldwide, indicates that relationships strengthen when vulnerable disclosures are met with validating and compassionate responses. The principles of FAP, distilled into the concepts of Awareness, Courage, and Love (ACL) are now being disseminated to the general public through the ACL relational model. A randomized-controlled pilot study with 10 participants evaluated the impact of a three-week ACL group intervention on depression in a clinically depressed sample, using the Montgomery–Åsberg Depression Rating Scale for assessment. The intervention, focusing on exercises in self-disclosure, reflection, and compassionate response, demonstrated promising results. Participants showed significant reductions in depression symptoms and increased self-compassion compared to a control group engaging in self-guided, personally meaningful activities. This study indicates the potential of ACL group interventions in enhancing self-compassion and alleviating depressive symptoms, highlighting the importance of supportive group dynamics in mental health improvement. The findings advocate for the integration of relationship-focused practices in mental health interventions, emphasizing the value of vulnerability and mutual support in fostering psychological well-being.


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