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![]() Sean Linehan '10 and Elizabeth Pendery '10 studied the biological diversity of Green Lake with Associate Professor of Biology Michael McCormick (far right). Green Lake, just east of Syracuse, is a rare meromictic lake, one in which various strata of water are chemically distinct and do not mix, and the team spent days aboard the College's research vessel, the Continental Drifter, collecting deepwater samples. The layering of the lake's waters creates a deep layer that contains little or no oxygen but high levels of sulfide. "If you went swimming down there," McCormick says, "you'd be in big trouble." Summer School Here is Not About Catching Up"It's such a good deal," says Samuel Hincks '11. "You get paid. You learn more about professional research. You can work with great professors." The "good deal" in question is summer research, and at Hamilton, Hincks was one of more than 100 students taking advantage of the opportunity. The season's projects covered topics ranging from the Continental Army to the Hippocratic Oath, from supernovas to peptide-lipid interactions, and from banks in the financial crisis to kindergarten readiness. Some projects built carefully on previous scholarship; others represented bold departures and new, interdisciplinary ways of thinking. What they all shared was the chance for students to collaborate closely with faculty members, tackling real research problems and joining the scholarly conversation in a way that few undergraduates can. Hincks, for instance, combined his computer science major and psychology minor as he worked with Stuart Hirshfield, the Stephen Harper Kirner Professor of Computer Science, to probe how measures of the brain's cognitive workload can help improve the user-interface design of digital devices. Hincks was one of about 90 students participating in the Summer Science Collaborative Research Program. About 20 other students worked on research through Emerson Foundation grants across a wide range of disciplines, while about the same number were Levitt Research Fellows, collaborating with faculty members on issues related to public affairs. And three students were Kirkland College Summer Research Associates, working on a variety of women's issues with faculty members. A sampling of summer research projects:
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