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The Taylor Science Center

Twelve Female Science Students Receive Clare Boothe Luce Undergraduate Research Award

April 4, 2013 

Twelve of Hamilton’s outstanding female science students are the first recipients of the Clare Boothe Luce Undergraduate Research Award. The new annual award will fund up to 12 female scientists each summer over the course of three years as Clare Boothe Luce Scholars in the fields of computer science, physics and chemistry. The $144,600 grant from the Henry Luce Foundation will be matched with funds from Hamilton.

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Diane Paverman '13 and Eric Murray '13.

Student Researchers “Teach” Computer to Identify Human State of Mind

June 26, 2012 

George Orwell’s iconic dystopian novel 1984 famously featured cameras capable of discerning a person’s state of mind – their contentedness, truthfulness or trustfulness – simply by looking at their face. The year 1984 came and went without such a technology emerging, but as demonstrated by Diane Paverman ’13 and Eric Murray’s ’13 summer research on the functional near-infrared spectrometer (fNIRS), scientists are getting closer to achieving Orwellian-like surveillance capabilities.

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Sarah Hammond '14 and Justin Smith '14

Hammond ’14 and Smith ’14 Create New Text Analysis Software

Vast Possibilities for Application

June 21, 2012 

Imagine being able to select any written document on a computer and automatically know where the writer struggled, which sections the writer breezed through, and if the writer had plagiarized – all without reading a single word of the document itself. The idea seems simple enough to conceive with the use of text extracting programs and subsequent algorithms, but, surprisingly, no software maker has produced such a product.

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Research Corporation grant collaborators Alistair Campbell, Wei-Jen Chang and Natalia Connolly.

Science Faculty Awarded Research Corporation Grant for Collaborative Work on Ich

Chang, Connolly and Campbell Awarded $100,000

June 15, 2012 

Hamilton faculty Wei-Jen Chang (biology), Natalia Connolly (physics), and Alistair Campbell (computer science) have just been awarded a Multi-Investigator Cottrell College Science Award by the Research Corporation.  This award, in the amount of $100,000, is for developing novel computational techniques for investigating gene interaction networks in fish parasite called Ichthyopthirius multifiliis (Ich).

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Leanne Hirshfield

Hirshfield ’02 Named Technical Award Winner

April 17, 2012 

Research Associate Leanne Hirshfield ’02 was named 2011 Young Technologist of the Year by the Mohawk Valley Engineers’ Executive Council (MVEEC). According to the MVEEC, the award acknowledges the winner’s work and “contributions to our area’s knowledge base and to the next generation of technologists.”

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Spencer Gulbronson '12

Spencer Gulbronson '12 Awarded Watson Fellowship

She'll Explore Creative Approaches to Math Education in Four Countries

March 23, 2012 

Spencer Gulbronson, a candidate for May graduation from Hamilton, has been awarded a prestigious Thomas J. Watson Fellowship for 2012-13. Her project, titled “The Universal Language: Exploring Creative Approaches to Math Education,” was among 40 national winners of the Fellowships.

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The Dream Team, from left, Matt Farrington, Diane Paverman, Pete Lauro, Spencer Gulbronson and Prof. Stuart Hirshfield.

Can Computers Recognize a User's Brain "Signature"?

Hamilton Comp. Sci. Students Aim to Find Out Through Research

December 15, 2011 

The total number of students on Hamilton’s campus may be smaller than an entire graduating class at big research universities, but that doesn’t mean Hamilton’s research opportunities are any more limited. In fact, as Matthew T. Farrington ’12, Diane Paverman ’13, Spencer Gulbronson ’12, Peter Lauro ’12 and alumnus Sam Hinks ’11 are discovering, research at Hamilton is just as engaging as it can be at large universities. The students are working with Professor of Computer Science Stuart Hirshfield to determine if computers can recognize the unique “signature” of a user’s brain.

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Leanne Hirshfield

Hirshfield ’02 Discusses HCI at Syracuse University

December 14, 2011 

Research Associate Leanne Hirshfield ’02 presented a talk titled “This is Your Brain on Computers: Using Non-invasive Cognitive and Physiological Sensors to Enhance Human-Computer Interactions” on Dec. 7 at Syracuse University.

 

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Diane Paverman '13, Spencer Gulbronson '12, Matthew Farrington '12.

Students Track Frustration, Fear and Suspicion in Computer Use

Computer Science Department Teams With U.S. Air Force on Research

August 9, 2011 

Hamilton students and faculty are working with the U.S. Air Force this summer on a project that measures the neurological responses to fear, frustration and suspicion of humans as they interact with computers.

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Leah Wolf '14

Student as Teacher

Wolf '14 Helps Rewrite Computer Science Class Materials

July 31, 2011 

Many computer users are unaware of the varied and serious threats that their computers are exposed to. To help raise awareness of computer security, Leah Wolf ’14 is working this summer with Associate Professor of Computer Science Mark Bailey on curricular work for the introductory class Secrets, Lies and Digital Threats. She is preparing all the materials for this course to be available online for other educators.

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