NC State Undergraduate Research Grant Awardee

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

NC State Undergraduate Research Grant Awardee 13th Annual SUMMER UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH S Y M P O S I U M July 30, 2014 Talley Student Center Ballroom - 1 : 0 0 P M U N T I L 5 : 0 0 P M OFFICE OF UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH DIVISION OF ACADEMIC & STUDENT AFFAIRS http://undergradresearch.dasa.ncsu.edu// Office of Undergraduate Research Division of Academic & Student Affairs NC STATE UNIVERSITY Box 7576 / 211Q Park Shops Raleigh, North Carolina 27695-7576 919.513.4187 (phone) 919.513.7542 (fax) July 30, 2014 www.ncsu.edu/undergrad-research/ Dear Students and Colleagues: Are you curious and interested in solving problems? Do you look for clues in problem- solving? Do you puzzle over mysteries, whether scientific or literary? If the answer to any of these questions is yes, then you are engaged in research. In every field of human inquiry, moreover, learning is equal to research, and in the end our great research universities are measured by their dedication to being places of learning. Since 1992 North Carolina State University has supported the Undergraduate Research Symposium as one of the most important ways in which students can take advantage of being part of this large, complex research community. As a result, our University has emerged as a leader among land-grant Research One institutions in providing opportunities to undergraduates to work beside some of the world's best faculty researchers. Students at North Carolina State have special opportunities that will shape the futures of countless persons. Top-tier research institutions like North Carolina State succeed precisely because they know that the concepts of research, learning, and engagement are reciprocal and reinforcing. Our university provides unparalleled opportunities to engage in cutting edge developments in a host of disciplines. Participation in research, moreover, gives every student the opportunity to gain an edge in admissions to graduate school, to find a first job, to build a career, and, perhaps most important, to become first-hand participants in the process of discovery. The enclosed abstracts are a wonderful reminder of the diversity of our research efforts. They are also a vivid demonstration of our intellectual ambitions and our continuing commitment to innovation in undergraduate education. Each of you -faculty mentors and student researchers- have my personal and professional thanks for making the Symposium a success and for reminding us all of what a special place North Carolina State University is. Sincerely, Dr. Christopher M. Ashwell, Director Office of Undergraduate Research Division of Academic & Student Affairs Office of Undergraduate Research, Division of Academic and Student Affairs Park Shops 211Q, CB 7576, NC State University, Raleigh, NC 27695-7576 The 13th Annual NC State University Summer Undergraduate Research Symposium Agenda The Symposium will be held in the Talley Student Center. 12:00 p.m. Doors open for registration 12:50 p.m. All posters must be up and ready to go by this time. 1:00 p.m. – 1:15 p.m. Welcome Welcome Dr. Mike Mullen, Vice Chancellor and Dean Academic and Student Affairs Overview Dr. Christopher Ashwell, Director Office of Undergraduate Research Division of Academic and Student Affairs 1:15 p.m. – 2:30 p.m. Poster Session I 2:30 p.m. – 3:45 p.m. Poster Session II 3:45 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. Poster Take‐Down 4:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. Reception, and Presentation of Summer Research Certificates by Program Directors and Program Managers Table of Contents LISTING OF POSTERS BY LOCATION 1 ABSTRACTS BY PROGRAM 17 Advanced Materials for Environmental Sustainability 18 ASSIST- NSF ERC Advanced Self-Powered Systems of Integrated Sensors and Technologies REU 24 Computation for Undergraduates in Statistics Program (NCSU CUSP) . 26 GEAR - Global Engagement in Academic Research . 28 IMSD - Initiative for Maximizing Student Diversity . 39 Interactive and Intelligent Media REU . 46 MEAS-Wake Tech Program . 53 NC Project Seed (High School) . 57 NC State Independent Researchers . 59 NC State Undergraduate Research Grant Awardee . 79 NSF EFRI-PSBR . 84 NSF ERC FREEDM Systems Center . 87 NSF Integrative Molecular Plant Systems REU . 90 NSF Modeling and Industrial Applied Mathematics REU. 95 NSF Undergraduate Research in Computational Astrophysics . 101 Plant Pathology Kelman Scholars . 105 Triangle MRSEC . 108 ALPHABETICAL INDEX OF LEAD STUDENT PRESENTERS . 112 OVERALL SUMMARY OF PARTICIPANTS AND PRESENTATIONS . 141 Poster Presentations Numerical Order Poster # Student Presenters Project Title Mentors / Co-Authors 1 Shelby Taylor Roland Cloning and Biochemical Characterization of Amy Grunden Biochemistry Thermophilic Proteases for Potential Applications in Microbiology Microalgal Biomass Recycling 2 Jonathan Duran Eagle Auxin Biosynthesis and Its Regulation Jose Alonso Plant and Biology Microbial Biology 3 Maurita Tifquwana Harris Static Images vs Videos and Auditory Instructions Laura Whitlock Psychology When Learning ASL Psychology Anne McLaughlin Psychology 4 Ravyn Sierra Tendai Njagu Does FXR In Vitro High-Throughput Screening Seth Kullman College of Biological Sciences with Predict In Vivo Results? Sciences Human Biology Concentration 5 Allison Lynn Pinosky Low Powered Pulse Oximetry Device Using Novel Alper Bozkurt Elec & Biomedical Engineering Proximity Detector Approach with Energy Comp Engineering Harvesting 6 Alan Kristopher Classification of Seismic Events in the Eastern DelWayne Bohnenstiehl Swartwood Geology Tennessee Seismic Zone Marine,Earth & Amanda Crenshaw Atmospheric Sci Geology; Jeffrey Weis Geology 7 Daniel Scott Schmitt Characterization of Iron Homeostasis Terri Long Plant Biology Biological Science Durreshahwar Muhammad Plant and Microbial Biology; Jeff Gillikin Plant Biology 8 Morgan Roberta Davis Verification of candidate genes for alcohol sensitivity Trudy MacKay Genetics Biology in Drosophila melanogaster 9 Priya Gupta Biomedical The Study of African Cassava Mosaic Virus infection Linda Hanley-Bowdoin Engineering in transgenic Arabidopsis plants Biochemistry Mary Dallas Biochemistry 10 Stephen Gregory Amenity Pond Carbon Cycling Christopher Osburn Richardson Associates in Marine,Earth & science Atmospheric Sci 11 Kellie Katherine Chieu Design of a wearable assistive walking device to Helen Huang Biomedical Biomedical Engineering balance force distribution. Engineering 12 Rebecca Marion Law Evaluating the Strength of Evidence in DUI Cases Brian Reich Statistics Statistics Presented in North Carolina Brady Melton Statistics 13 Crystal Tiangay Sarnor Could Tobacco Phyllopanins Confer Fungal Imara Perera Plant Biology Biology Resistance to Arabidopsis thaliana? 2014 NC State University Summer Undergraduate Research Symposium Page 1 14 Asia Louise Hilliard Reserve Intestinal Epithelial Stem Cells are Resistant Anthony Blikslager Microbiology to Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury Department of Clinical Sciences 15 Ebony Danielle Leon “Let’s Agree to Disagree†: The Influence Amy Halberstadt Psychology of Mothers’ Emotion Responses on Conflict Psychology Discussion Strategies 16 Daniel Paul Godfrey Interpreting Clusters of World Cup Tweets Carl Meyer Mathematics Mathematics Carol Sadek Mathematics; Caley Johns Applied Mathematics 17 James Warren Hurt Effect of Cr in NiFeCrCo Alloy on Mechanical Douglas Irving Material Physics Properties: A First-Principles Study Science Engineering Changning Niu Material Science Engineering 18 Amber Brianne Holmes Mathematical Phylogenetics and the Space of Trees Seth Sullivant Mathematics Mathematics Colby Long Mathematics Cody FitzGerald Mathematics; Emily Smith Mathematics; Mercedes Coleman Mathematics 19 Jillian Nicole Perrine Resistance of Phytophthora nicotianae to mefanoxam Asimina Mila Plant Agriculture Education Pathology 20 Marschall Lloyd Furman Investigating the Efficiency of Slime Mold as a Jamian Pacifici Biology Statistics Search Algorithm Wanlin Zheng Statistics; Nicholas Kapur Statistics 21 Annabelle Davey Surface Assembly of Elastin Like Polypeptides Jan Genzer Chemical and Macromolecular Science and Biomolecular Engineering Engineering 22 Omokuyani Chibuzor Modeling the Concentration of Flunixin in Tissue Ronald Baynes Department Udiani Physics Over Time of Population Health and Pathobiology 23 Landon DeNorris Blakey A Mathematical Representation for the Lignin Cranos Williams Elec & Electrical Engineering and Biosynthesis Pathway Comp Engineering Mathematics Erika Parker Chemical Engineering 24 Joseph Ryan Doherty Do Fungicides Affect Quantity and Diversity of James Kerns Plant Turfgrass Science Phyllosphere Microbes? Pathology 25 Tamira-marie Frances The Role of Phosphonositides in Vacuole Fusion and Marcela Rojas-Pierce Bickems Biology Vacuole Dynamics Plant Biology 26 Jared Andrew Cook Parameter Selection Techniques for Nonlinearly Ralph Smith Mathematics Computational Mathematics Parameterized Models Mami Wentworth Nina Ning Mathematics; Mathematics Nicholas Myers Mathematics 27 Brittney V Adams Geology Organic Matter Quality in Greenland Lakes Christopher Osburn 2014 NC State University Summer Undergraduate Research Symposium Page 2 Marine,Earth & Atmospheric Sci 28 Rahma Mohamed Hida A Systematic Review of Publication Trends Across John Begeny Psychology Psychology Seven School Psychology Journals, with a Focus on Examining International and Experimental Research 29 Ashley N. Edwards Applied Physiologically Based Pharmacokinetic Modeling for Marina Evans Mathematics; Biology Acetone: How Much Do We Really Breathe In? Pharmokinetics Benjamin Freedman Applied Mathematics; Vy Nguyen Applied Mathematics 30
Recommended publications
  • National Library of Medicine Board of Regents May 2014 Meeting Minutes
    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH NATIONAL LIBRARY OF MEDICINE MINUTES OF THE BOARD OF REGENTS May 13, 2014 The 166th meeting of the Board of Regents was convened on May 13, 2014, at 9:00 a.m. in the Board Room, Building 38, National Library of Medicine (NLM), National Institutes of Health (NIH), in Bethesda, Maryland. The meeting was open to the public from 9:00 a.m. to 4:25 p.m., followed by a closed session for consideration of grant applications until 4:45 p.m. MEMBERS PRESENT [Appendix A]: Dr. Ronald Evens [Chair], Washington University School of Medicine Dr. Katherine Gottlieb, Southcentral Foundation Dr. Robert Greenes, Arizona State University Dr. Trudy MacKay, North Carolina State University Ms. Mary Ryan, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Library Dr. F. Douglas Scutchfield, University of Kentucky College of Public Health Ms. Gail Yokote, University of California, Davis MEMBERS NOT PRESENT: Dr. David Fleming, University of Missouri School of Medicine Dr. Henry Lewis, American University of Health Sciences Dr. Ralph Roskies, University of Pittsburgh EX OFFICIO AND ALTERNATE MEMBERS PRESENT: Mr. Christopher Cole, National Agricultural Library Dr. Joseph Francis, Veterans Health Administration MGEN Dorothy Hogg, United States Air Force Capt. Paul Jung, Office of the Surgeon General, PHS Ms. Kathryn Mendenhall, Library of Congress Col. Cathy Nace, United States Army Dr. Dale Smith, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences CONSULTANTS TO THE BOR PRESENT: Dr. Tenley Albright, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Dr. Marion Ball, Johns Hopkins School of Nursing Dr. Holly Buchanan, University of New Mexico Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • ABSTRACT OPPENHEIM, SARA JANE. the Genetic Basis of Host
    ABSTRACT OPPENHEIM, SARA JANE. The Genetic Basis of Host Plant Use in a Specialist and a Generalist Moth. (Under the direction of Fred L Gould.) Differences in host plant use between Heliothis subflexa and H. virescens provide a compelling example of closely-related species with strikingly divergent ecological adaptations. I used a QTL mapping approach to investigate the genetic basis of interspecific differences between H. subflexa and H. virescens in use of Physalis angulata, a host of H. subflexa but not H. virescens. I introgressed H. subflexa genes into the H. virescens background by backcrossing interspecific hybrids to H. virescens, and examined the effects of QTL from H. subflexa on use of P. angulata. Many QTL had different size effects, and sometimes even different direction of effects, in males and females. Many QTL differed among lineages, but this variation probably reflects a lack of power to detect QTL rather than true differences in QTL effects. Size, significance, and direction of effects of some QTL varied among families within a lineage. The same Hs-like phenotype could be produced by introgressing different H. subflexa chromosomes into the H. virescens background. Sample size was increased almost four-fold from 2001 to 2007, and the increase in the number of QTL detected almost exactly matched the increase in sample size. QTL effect sizes were small, when measured as percent of backcross variation explained, but were larger when considered as the percent of interspecific difference explained. QTL effect sizes were consistent across traits. For most traits, individual QTL accounted for 10 to 40 percent of the interspecific difference, while backcross variation explained ranged from 0.5 to 6 percent.
    [Show full text]
  • La Biología Evolutiva Contemporánea: ¿Una Revolución Más En La Ciencia?
    LA BIOLOGÍA EVOLUTIVA CONTEMPORÁNEA: ¿UNA REVOLUCIÓN MÁS EN LA CIENCIA? COLECCIÓN DEBATE Y REFLEXIÓN Comité editorial Marina Garone Gravier Carlos Hernández Alcántara Lev Orlando Jardón Barbolla Ricardo Lino Mansilla Corona Octavio Miramontes Vidal María Elena Olivera Cordóva Mauricio Sánchez Menchero Guadalupe Valencia García Medley Aimée Vega Montiel María del Consuelo Yerena Capistrán La biología evolutiva contemporánea: ¿una revolución más en la ciencia? Julio Muñoz Rubio (coordinador) UNIVERSIDAD NAciONAL AUTÓNOMA DE MÉXicO CENTRO DE INVESTIGAciONES INTERDISciPLINARIAS EN CIENciAS Y HUMANIDADES MÉXICO, 2019 Primera edición electrónica, 2019 D. R. © Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México Centro de Investigaciones Interdisciplinarias en Ciencias y Humanidades Torre II de Humanidades 4º piso Circuito Escolar, Ciudad Universitaria Coyoacán 04510, México, CDMX www.ceiich.unam.mx Cuidado de la edición: Clara E. Castillo Alvarez Diseño de portada: Martha Laura Martínez Cuevas ISBN de la colección: 978-607-30-1052-8 ISBN del volumen: 978-607-30-1683-4 A la memoria de mi padre, Jerónimo Muñoz Rosas (1926-2016); profesor universitario que, luego de la inevitable pregunta infantil: "¿De dónde venimos todos?" que le formulé cuando contaba con unos cuatro años de edad, me respondió explicándome, por primera vez en mi vida, el fenómeno de la evolución de las especies. No por Mucho Publicar Te consagras Más Temprano EFRAÍN HUERTA ÍNDICE Introducción . 13 La revolución en biología como cuestionamiento de las relaciones esencia-apariencia Julio Muñoz Rubio . 23 La revolución no-darwiniana: ¿es darwiniana la extensión de la Síntesis Moderna? Carlos Ochoa y Ana Barahona . 71 ¿Una revolución científica en biología evolutiva? Juan Núñez-Farfán y Luis E .
    [Show full text]
  • BIOLOGY 639 SCIENCE ONLINE the Unexpected Brains Behind Blood Vessel Growth 641 THIS WEEK in SCIENCE 668 U.K
    4 February 2005 Vol. 307 No. 5710 Pages 629–796 $10 07%.'+%#%+& 2416'+0(70%6+10 37#06+6#6+8' 51(69#4' #/2.+(+%#6+10 %'..$+1.1); %.10+0) /+%41#44#;5 #0#.;5+5 #0#.;5+5 2%4 51.76+105 Finish first with a superior species. 50% faster real-time results with FullVelocity™ QPCR Kits! Our FullVelocity™ master mixes use a novel enzyme species to deliver Superior Performance vs. Taq -Based Reagents FullVelocity™ Taq -Based real-time results faster than conventional reagents. With a simple change Reagent Kits Reagent Kits Enzyme species High-speed Thermus to the thermal profile on your existing real-time PCR system, the archaeal Fast time to results FullVelocity technology provides you high-speed amplification without Enzyme thermostability dUTP incorporation requiring any special equipment or re-optimization. SYBR® Green tolerance Price per reaction $$$ • Fast, economical • Efficient, specific and • Probe and SYBR® results sensitive Green chemistries Need More Information? Give Us A Call: Ask Us About These Great Products: Stratagene USA and Canada Stratagene Europe FullVelocity™ QPCR Master Mix* 600561 Order: (800) 424-5444 x3 Order: 00800-7000-7000 FullVelocity™ QRT-PCR Master Mix* 600562 Technical Services: (800) 894-1304 Technical Services: 00800-7400-7400 FullVelocity™ SYBR® Green QPCR Master Mix 600581 FullVelocity™ SYBR® Green QRT-PCR Master Mix 600582 Stratagene Japan K.K. *U.S. Patent Nos. 6,528,254, 6,548,250, and patents pending. Order: 03-5159-2060 Purchase of these products is accompanied by a license to use them in the Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) Technical Services: 03-5159-2070 process in conjunction with a thermal cycler whose use in the automated performance of the PCR process is YYYUVTCVCIGPGEQO covered by the up-front license fee, either by payment to Applied Biosystems or as purchased, i.e., an authorized thermal cycler.
    [Show full text]
  • Trial Please Esteemed Panel of Researchers
    The Biomedical and Life Sciences Collection • Regularly expanded, constantly updated • Already contains over 700 presentations • Growing monthly to over 1,000 talks “This is an outstanding Seminar style presentations collection. Alongside journals and books no self-respecting library in institutions hosting by leading world experts research in biomedicine and the life sciences should be without access to these talks.” When you want them, Professor Roger Kornberg, Nobel Laureate, Stanford University School of Medicine, USA as often as you want them “I commend Henry Stewart Talks for the novel and • For research scientists, graduate • Look and feel of face-to-face extremely useful complement to teaching and research.” students and the most committed seminars that preserve each Professor Sir Aaron Klug OM FRS, Nobel Laureate, The Medical senior undergraduates speaker’s personality and Research Council, University of approach Cambridge, UK • Talks specially commissioned “This collection of talks is a and organized into • A must have resource for all seminar fest; assembled by an extremely eminent group of comprehensive series that cover researchers in the biomedical editors, the world class speakers deliver insightful talks illustrated both the fundamentals and the and life sciences whether in with slides of the highest latest advances academic institutions or standards. Hundreds of hours of thought provoking presentations industry on biomedicine and life sciences. • Simple format – animated slides It is an impressive achievement!” with accompanying narration, Professor Herman Waldmann FRS, • Available online to view University of Oxford, UK synchronized for easy listening alone or with colleagues “Our staff here at GSK/Research Triangle Park wishes to convey its congratulations to your colleagues at Henry Stewart for this first-rate collection of talks from such an To access your free trial please esteemed panel of researchers.
    [Show full text]
  • WEB Julyaugust2008:New ASPB News 2008.Qxd
    ASPB News THE NEWSLETTER OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF PLANT BIOLOGISTS Volume 35, Number 4 July/August 2008 President’s Letter Inside This Issue Three ASPB Members Elected to NAS A Model Citizen The Pan American Congress on Plants In my high school years in the late entire continent). All these events evoked and BioEnergy 1960s, I do not think I ever aspired to a visceral, emotional response—“they” be a “model citizen” of the society I saw (the older generation) were killing the around me. As a matter of fact, I think planet—that resonated perfectly with the Plant Biology 2008 being a model citizen would have been normal rebellion of adolescence. coverage starts on page12 anathema to me, rather akin to the In my college years, I was much influ- “goody two-shoes” term of derision of enced by Limits to Growth (2), which my younger years. It was the time of mathematically modeled the conse- the antihero, whether Donald Suther- quences of a rapidly growing world pop- land and Elliot Gould in MASH, Faye ulation given finite resources. That Dunaway and Warren Beatty in Bonnie Rob McClung analysis was controversial and has been and Clyde, Peter Fonda and Dennis Hopper in Easy criticized for the limitations of the data sets consid- Rider, Paul Newman and Robert Redford in Butch ered, but the premise was influential, and the basic Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, or Jack Nicholson in message, to me, remains fundamentally sound. Expo- Five Easy Pieces. I played in a rock ’n’ roll band— nential growth (in population, resource utilization, what can a poor boy do? (1).
    [Show full text]
  • Genetic Architecture of Hybrid Fitness and Wood Quality Traits in a Wide Interspecific Cross of Eucalyptus Tree Species
    ABSTRACT MYBURG, ALEXANDER ANDREW. Genetic Architecture of Hybrid Fitness and Wood Quality Traits in a Wide Interspecific Cross of Eucalyptus Tree Species. (Under the supervision of Ross W. Whetten and Ronald R. Sederoff.) The genetic architecture of interspecific differentiation plays a key role in the evolution of reproductive isolating barriers in plants, and has important implications for hybrid breeding programs. Interspecific hybridization is an important approach towards the genetic improvement of Eucalyptus tree plantations. However, incompatibilities between diverged eucalypt genomes often lead to reduced fitness of interspecific hybrids and decrease the efficiency of hybrid breeding programs. Furthermore, very little information is available on the genetic control of quantitative traits in interspecific hybrids of Eucalyptus tree species. The aim of this project was to obtain a detailed description of the genetic architecture of hybrid fitness and wood property traits in an interspecific cross between two commercially important hardwood tree species, E. grandis and E. globulus spp. globulus. This cross combines the superior growth and adaptability of E. grandis with the excellent wood properties of E. globulus. The two species are members of different sections of the subgenus Symphyomyrtus and hybrid generations of this wide cross are characterized by large amounts of F1 hybrid inviability and F2 hybrid breakdown. Two interspecific backcross families of E. grandis × E. globulus were each genotyped with more than 800 amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) markers using a new high- throughput protocol for AFLP analysis on automated DNA sequencers. A pseudo-backcross mapping approach was used to generate detailed comparative genetic maps of a single superior F1 hybrid tree and of two backcross parents.
    [Show full text]
  • Drosophila Genetic Reference Panel: a Community Resource for the Study of Genotypic and Phenotypic Variation
    Proposal to Sequence a Drosophila Genetic Reference Panel: A Community Resource for the Study of Genotypic and Phenotypic Variation Trudy Mackay, Stephen Richards, Richard Gibbs Overview: We propose the sequencing of a D. melanogaster genetic reference panel of 192 wild-type lines from a single natural population which have been inbred to homozygosity, and for which extensive information on complex trait phenotypes has been collected. This will create: (1) A community resource for association mapping of quantitative trait loci. Within this project we will demonstrate such mapping and provide candidate quantitative trait polymorphisms for traits relevant to human health. (2) A community resource of common Drosophila sequence polymorphisms (SNPs and indels) with a minor allele frequency (MAF) of 0.02 or greater. These variants will be valuable for high resolution QTL mapping as well as mapping alleles of major effect, molecular population genetic analyses, and allele specific transcription studies, among others. (3) A “test bench” for statistical methods used in QTL association and mapping studies for traits affecting human disease. The proposed genetic reference panel of sequenced homozygous lines has many advantages and creates a new innovative genetics tool for the Drosophila community. First and foremost, each line represents a homozygous genotype that can be made available to the entire community. The same strains can be evaluated for multiple complex traits, including ‘intermediate’ phenotypes such as whole genome transcript abundance and quantitative variation in the proteome and metabolome. This will facilitate a systems genetics approach for understanding the genetic architecture of complex traits in an economical genetic model organism. Interrogating a common resource population for genetic variation at multiple levels, traits, and environments will provide an unprecedented opportunity to quantify genetic correlations and pleiotropy among traits, as well as to quantify the magnitude and nature of genotype by environment interaction.
    [Show full text]
  • Genes, Behavior, and Developmental Emergentism: One Process, Indivisible?
    Genes, Behavior, and Developmental Emergentism: One Process, Indivisible? Kenneth F. Schaffner Philosophy of Science, Vol. 65, No. 2. (Jun., 1998), pp. 209-252. Stable URL: http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0031-8248%28199806%2965%3A2%3C209%3AGBADEO%3E2.0.CO%3B2-B Philosophy of Science is currently published by The University of Chicago Press. Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at http://www.jstor.org/about/terms.html. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use. Please contact the publisher regarding any further use of this work. Publisher contact information may be obtained at http://www.jstor.org/journals/ucpress.html. Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission. The JSTOR Archive is a trusted digital repository providing for long-term preservation and access to leading academic journals and scholarly literature from around the world. The Archive is supported by libraries, scholarly societies, publishers, and foundations. It is an initiative of JSTOR, a not-for-profit organization with a mission to help the scholarly community take advantage of advances in technology. For more information regarding JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. http://www.jstor.org Wed Oct 31 17:29:19 2007 Genes, Behavior, and Developmental Emergentism: One Process, Indivisible? Kenneth F.
    [Show full text]
  • A Century of Genetics
    2019 Genetics Society Meeting A Century of Genetics 13 – 15 November 2019. Royal College of Physicians, Edinburgh Meeting Programme Speakers and abstracts 1 WELCOME Just 10 years after Wilhelm Johannsen founders who were keen, for example, that coined the term “gene”, and 14 years both research academics and breeders be after William Bateson bequeathed us the involved. word “genetics”, on 25th June 1919 In June we celebrated the unveiling of Bateson and Edith “Becky” Saunders Blue Plaques for Saunders and Bateson convened a meeting in the rooms of the at the John Innes Centre, the focal Linnaean Society to propose the founding point of UK plant genetics, founded by of a “Genetical Society”. Approved Bateson. It is then appropriate that the unanimously, the first meeting was held in centenary conference should be convened Cambridge on 12th July that year. in Edinburgh, for long a UK centre for From the 26 members at the founding animal and molecular genetics. By happy meeting, the Genetical Society (now the coincidence, 2019 is also the centenary Genetics Society) has grown over the last of the origins of genetics research in century to an all-time high now in excess Edinburgh. of 2500 members. Members reflect a Genetics and Edinburgh broad span of career stages and expertise, covering all major branches of pure and The first lectureship in genetics was applied genetics. A cursory glance at the instituted at The University of Edinburgh past Presidents of the Society reflects both in 1911. The Animal Breeding Research the standing of the Genetics Society over Station of the government’s Board of the past century and the breadth and depth Agriculture and Fisheries was established of British genetics: from the founders of in Edinburgh in 1919 and evolved over the classical transmission genetics (Saunders, next 10 years to become The University of Reginald Punnett), to the developers of Edinburgh’s Institute of Animal Genetics.
    [Show full text]
  • Genetic Networks Underlying Natural Variation in Basal and Induced Activity Levels
    bioRxiv preprint doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/444380; this version posted August 13, 2019. The copyright holder for this preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under aCC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license. 1 Genetic networks underlying natural variation in basal and induced activity levels 2 in Drosophila melanogaster 3 4 Louis P. Watanabe, Cameron Gordon, Mina Y. Momeni, and Nicole C. Riddle 5 The University of Alabama at Birmingham 6 Department of Biology 7 Birmingham, Alabama 35294 8 1 bioRxiv preprint doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/444380; this version posted August 13, 2019. The copyright holder for this preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under aCC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license. 9 Running Title: Natural variation in activity levels 10 Key Words: Exercise, GWAS, DGRP2, Drosophila, REQS 11 12 Corresponding Author: 13 Nicole C. Riddle 14 1720 2nd Ave S 15 Birmingham, AL 16 35294 17 18 Phone: 205-975-4049 19 Email: [email protected] 20 21 22 23 2 bioRxiv preprint doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/444380; this version posted August 13, 2019. The copyright holder for this preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under aCC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.
    [Show full text]
  • Ecology and Evolution Coltman, J
    • Ecology Ecology and • Conservation • Natural Resource Management Evolution • Evolution Cover image www.cambridge.org/biosciences 2004/5 Contents Message from the Press Editor Ecology, Conservation and Natural We are delighted to present the new Ecology, Conservation, and Evolution Resource Management 1 catalogue from Cambridge University Press, announcing our new titles in Ecology, Biodiversity and Conservation conservation biology, natural resource management, biological and evolutionary Series 1 anthropology, and much more. Our range covers undergraduate and graduate New Ecological Reviews Series 1 textbooks, academic monographs, and popular science from some of the best BES Symposium Volume Series 2 writers in science today. Cambridge Studies in Landscape Ecology Series 3 Highlights include Conservation Biology Series 4 Evolution of the Insects by David Grimaldi and Biased Embryos and Evolution by Wallace Evolution 15 Michael Engel (p.18) Arthur (p.17 ) Cambridge Studies in Adaptive Explore the evolutionary history of the most A beautifully written introduction to Dynamics Series 15 diverse group of organisms on the planet in evolutionary developmental biology including Cambridge Studies in Philosophy and this magnificent, lavishly illustrated, full-colour Wallace Arthur's unique perspective on the Biology Series 16 book. role of development in evolution. Cambridge Studies in Biological and What Makes Biology Unique by Ernst Mayr Evolutionary Anthropology Series 21 The Evolution and Extinction of the Dinosaurs (p.16) by David Fastovsky and David Weishampel The latest book from the "Darwin of the 20th (p.19) Century" written in his 100th year. A new edition of this popular book with completely new artwork by John Sibbick, one of Darwin's Fishes by Daniel Pauly (p.17) the best palaeontology illustrators in the world.
    [Show full text]