Student RSCA Competition Finalists 2021

This year SJSU's Office of Research is delighted to send eight students to the 35th Annual CSU Student Research Competition, hosted virtually by Cal Poly Pomona, on April 30 and May 1, 2021. Each of these students is highlighted below, along with their eight-minute video presentation, which will be shown live at the CSU event.

CSU Student Research Competition.

Hung Tong

Hung Tong

A graduate student from the department of Mathematics and Statistics in the College of Science, Hung explores A Mixture of Multivariate Contaminated Normal Distributions with Missing Information.

Alaysia Palmer

Alaysia Palmer

The only finalist from the College of Education, Alaysia is an undergraduate studying Child and Adolescent Development. Her presentation is entitled Growing Up with a Sibling with Autism: College Students' Perspectives.

Nicholas Roubineau in the lab

Nicholas Roubineau

A department of Chemistry undergraduate student from the College of Science, Nicholas explores the Copolymerization of Styrene and Alkene-modified Pincer Ligands to Support Iridium Catalysts for Alkane Dehydrogenation.

Aeowynn Coakley

Aeowynn Coakley 

Aeowynn is an undergraduate, studying Biological Sciences, in the College of Science. Her presentation is on Novel Roles of Sirtuin 4 in Testes Revealed Using an Unbiased Bioinformatics Approach.

Tomasz Lewicki

Tomasz Lewicki

One of our graduate entrants, studying Computer Engineering in the College of Engineering, Tomasz's presentation is on Automous Drones for Wildfire Detection.

Terri Lee

Terri Lee

From the Lucas College and Graduate School of Business, Terri is an undergraduate researcher in the department of Information Systems and Technology. Her presentation is entitled Learning Artificial Intelligence with a Chatbot: A Study Among Business Undergraduate Students.

Victor Lui

Victor Lui

An undergraduate from the College of Engineering, studying Computer Engineering, Victor explores Secure Biometric Key Generation Scheme using ECG.

Muhammad Khan

Muhammad Khan

An undergraduate in the College of Science, studying Biological Sciences, Muhammad explores Mutagenesis and Recombinant Expression of Aedes aegypti Serine Protease I (AaSPI), a possible N-Terminal Nucleophile (Ntn) Hydrolase.