Here - UMass Amherst
Transcription
Here - UMass Amherst
Co-sponsored by Commonwealth Honors College at UMass Amherst and the Massachusetts Public System of Higher Education Complete abstracts online at: www.honors.umass.edu/conference Friday, April 27, 2012 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Lincoln Campus Center University of Massachusetts Amherst TABLE OF CONTENTS Conference Schedule 3 Microbiology 96 Acknowledgements4 Middle Eastern Studies 96 Entomology 178 Keynote Speaker 5 Molecular Biology 97 Environmental Studies Venue Maps 6 Nursing97 Forestry188 178 Philosophy 99 Geography 189 Oral Presentation Schedules 10 Physics100 Geological Science Poster Presentation Schedules 18 Plant, Soil, and Insect Sciences 103 Geology192 Political Science History192 Presenters/Oral 30 Anthropology 30 103 190 Psychology 107 Industrial Engineering 195 Art32 Public Health Interdisciplinary Studies/BDIC 195 Art History 33 Radio-Television-Film118 Japanese197 Asian Studies 33 Social Thought & Political Economy 118 Kinesiology 197 Biochemistry 33 Social Work Landscape Architecture 205 Legal Studies 206 Biology34 112 119 Sociology120 Chemical Engineering 36 Sociology, Anthropology, Chemistry37 & Crime & Justice Studies 125 Linguistics206 Literature206 Classical Language & Literature 37 Spanish125 Management Commonwealth Honors College 38 Theatre126 Marketing208 Communication 41 Veterinary Science 126 Community or Public Service 47 Mathematics & Statistics 210 Women's Studies 127 Mechanical Engineering 212 Presenters/Poster 130 Microbiology 214 Middle Eastern Studies 219 Molecular Biology 219 Comparative Literature 48 Computer Science 49 Economics 51 Accounting 130 Education52 American Indian Studies 131 Electrical Engineering Animal Sciences 132 Anthropology 132 56 English57 English Literature 62 Environmental Studies 66 Finance68 History69 Art133 Biochemistry 134 Biology139 Interdisciplinary Studies/BDIC 76 Chemical Engineering 152 International Studies 77 Chemistry155 Nursing221 Nutrition & Food Science 225 Philosophy 226 Physics226 Plant, Soil, and Insect Sciences 229 Political Science 233 Psychology 233 Public Health 270 Japanese78 Civil Engineering Kinesiology 82 Classical Language & Literature 163 Landscape Architecture 87 Commonwealth Honors College 163 Latin American Studies 88 Communication 165 Legal Studies 88 Communication Disorders 165 Linguistics89 Community or Public Service 166 317 Literature90 Sociology, Anthropology, & Crime & Justice Studies Computer Science 171 Women's Studies 317 Index of Presenters by Name 323 Index of Presenters by Campus 331 Management 91 Marketing93 Mathematics & Statistics 93 Mechanical Engineering 95 162 207 Radio-Television-Film303 Religious Studies 304 Social Thought & Political Economy 305 Sociology305 Dance174 Economics 175 Education175 English Literature 176 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 2 2012 CONFERENCE SCHEDULE 8:00 am – 9:00 am Registration 9:00 am – 9:25 am Extended Poster Session 1 - First Half 9:30 am – 10:30 am Welcome and Keynote 10:35 am – 11:00 am Extended Poster Session 1 - Second Half 10:40 am – 11:25 am Oral Session 1 11:35 am – 12:20 pm Poster/Oral Session 2 12:20 pm – 1:20 pm Lunch 1:30 pm- 2:15 pm Poster/Oral Session 3 2:30 pm – 3:15 pm Poster/Oral Session 4 3:30 pm – 4:15 pm Poster/Oral Session 5 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 3 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We would like to acknowledge all of the faculty members who volunteered their time and expertise to review abstracts and give invaluable guidance to student presenters. We would like to express our great appreciation to the following campus contacts for their time and support of the conference. Stacy Evans Jenny Shanahan Tom Grady Libby Dunphy Delores Bird Sara Pollak Levine Katelyn Christopher Judi Greene-Corvee Kim Hicks Matt Silliman Jason Mazaik Maureen Kelly Mark Patrick Susan Martelli David Kalivas Sheila Murphy Marcey Marold Ginger Hurajt Susan McPherson Eric Entemann Joanna Gonsalves David Winsper Julia Alexander Joyce Morrissey Jennifer Wilson Mulnix Jim Canning Glen Brewster Josna Rege Berkshire Community College Bridgewater State University Bristol Community College Bunker Hill Community College Cape Cod Community College Fitchburg State University Framingham State University Greenfield Community College Holyoke Community College Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts Massachusetts Bay Community College Massachusetts College of Art and Design Massachusetts Maritime Academy Massasoit Community College Middlesex Community College Mount Wachusett Community College North Shore Community College Northern Essex Community College Quinsigamond Community College Roxbury Community College Salem State University Springfield Technical Community College University of Massachusetts Amherst University of Massachusetts Boston University of Massachusetts Dartmouth University of Massachusetts Lowell Westfield State University Worcester State University We would also like to give special recognition to Conference Coordinator Julia Alexander, Conference Assistant Stephanie Viens, Meredith Lind, Melissa Woglom, Celso Avelar, Zoe Pappenheimer, Aruna Aruna, Andy Guavin, Shelley Gibbons, the Lincoln Campus Center staff, and the faculty, staff, and students at Commonwealth Honors College. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 4 KEYNOTE SPEAKER Dara Wier has directed the Master of Fine Arts program for poets and writers at UMass Amherst where she teaches poetry workshops and seminars. She is the author of eleven poetry collections, with a new collection, You Good Thing, due to release in early 2013. The important American composer and performance artist John Cage said, “without thinking we can tell what is being said without understanding it.” Likewise, sometimes we understand what is being said without thinking. Dara Wier will discuss how we make sense of what we hear and see, and why we need to do so in order to take charge of our own lives, confident that we can interpret and understand what we observe going on around us. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 5 FLOOR PLAN OF CONFERENCE FACILITIES Lincoln Campus Center, First Floor A C Coat Check Auditorium A Concourse C 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 6 FLOOR PLAN OF CONFERENCE FACILITIES Auditorium, Morning Session 1 2 = Poster Board 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 7 FLOOR PLAN OF CONFERENCE FACILITIES Auditorium, Afternoon Session 1 2 = Poster Board 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 8 FLOOR PLAN OF CONFERENCE FACILITIES registration tables Concourse escalator stairs Concourse C Detail 1 2 = Poster Board 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 9 Oral Sessions READING ROOM PANEL PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 1 AMY O’REGAN COMMONWEALTH HONORS COLLEGE UMASS AMHERST 10:40-11:25 22 1 HANNAH RAPP COMMONWEALTH HONORS COLLEGE UMASS AMHERST 10:40-11:25 23 1 RAQUEL BOUDREAU COMMUNITY OR PUBLIC SERVICE UMASS AMHERST 10:40-11:25 37 2 SOPHIA ZAMAN POLITICAL SCIENCE UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 168 2 AVIV CELINE COMMONWEALTH HONORS COLLEGE UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 18 2 AVERY FUERST COMMONWEALTH HONORS COLLEGE UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 19 3 MEGAN CONERY PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 171 3 TRACY GEBHART COMMONWEALTH HONORS COLLEGE UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 20 3 NOELLE KELLICKER INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES/BDIC UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 103 4 SARAH KELLEY ANTHROPOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 2 4 ALEXANDRA MARTINES EDUCATION UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 54 4 ALLISON MCGRAIL COMMONWEALTH HONORS COLLEGE UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 21 5 ERICA ROTHSCHILD COMMUNITY OR PUBLIC SERVICE UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 39 5 HANAN BUMPUS COMMUNITY OR PUBLIC SERVICE UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 38 5 TEQUAN JONES SOCIAL WORK UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 195 ROOM 101 PANEL PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 1 JULIANA KEIL LITERATURE WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 10:40-11:25 131 1 CHRISTOPHER GOUDREAU ENGLISH WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 10:40-11:25 64 1 AMBER PETTELL ENGLISH WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 10:40-11:25 68 2 DEREK PIETRAS ENGLISH LITERATURE FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 11:35-12:20 78 2 JESSICA ANDREASON ENGLISH LITERATURE UMASS DARTMOUTH 11:35-12:20 74 2 KATELYNN LARSON ENGLISH LITERATURE MASS COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS 11:35-12:20 76 3 MERRILL SUNDERLAND ENGLISH LITERATURE SALEM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 79 3 JESSICA THELEN ENGLISH LITERATURE WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 80 3 CAITLIN LARRACEY ENGLISH LITERATURE BRIDGEWATER STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 75 4 DEVON TORRES RADIO-TELEVISION-FILM BRISTOL C.C. 2:30-3:15 192 4 JENNIFER SHAKSHOBER ENGLISH WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 72 4 ERIN PUTNAM LITERATURE NORTH SHORE C.C. 2:30-3:15 132 5 RACHEL LAREAU ENGLISH WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 65 5 KAILA CUMMINGS ENGLISH WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 61 5 LYNDON SEITZ ENGLISH WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 71 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 10 Oral Sessions ROOM 162 PANEL PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 1 HILLA ROGEL MATHEMATICS & STATISTICS UMASS AMHERST 10:40-11:25 142 1 FREDDY PIETTER COMPUTER SCIENCE WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 10:40-11:25 42 1 GARY SAVOIE COMPUTER SCIENCE WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 10:40-11:25 43 2 DANIEL STUBBS COMPUTER SCIENCE UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 44 2 ANNA GAVRILMAN COMPUTER SCIENCE UMASS BOSTON 11:35-12:20 41 2 KEVIN GIARDINI MATHEMATICS & STATISTICS UMASS DARTMOUTH 11:35-12:20 139 3 KEITH RESENDES MATHEMATICS & STATISTICS UMASS DARTMOUTH 1:30-2:15 141 3 JODIE TRIVEDI PHYSICS SALEM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 159 3 RISHI SINGH MECHANICAL ENGINEERING UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 143 4 FELECIA CLODIUS BIOLOGY UMASS DARTMOUTH 2:30-3:15 11 4 JESSE GUTIERREZ BIOLOGY NORTHERN ESSEX C.C. 2:30-3:15 12 4 JILL MOORE MATHEMATICS & STATISTICS UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 140 5 EVAN WATTERS BIOCHEMISTRY UMASS LOWELL 3:30-4:15 10 5 BRENNA HAYNES BIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 13 5 SAVANNAH LLOYD VETERINARY SCIENCE UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 211 ROOM 163 PANEL PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 1 NOLAN WETHERELL ENGLISH LITERATURE WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 10:40-11:25 81 1 ALEX MARSHALL ENGLISH LITERATURE MASS COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS 10:40-11:25 77 1 CHRISTOPHER ROBINSON ENGLISH UMASS AMHERST 10:40-11:25 70 2 KAITLIN HICKS COMMUNICATION FITCHBURG STATE UNIVERSITY 11:35-12:20 27 2 KARL ROZYN COMPARATIVE LITERATURE SALEM STATE UNIVERSITY 11:35-12:20 40 2 STEVEN AVRAS MANAGEMENT UMASS BOSTON 11:35-12:20 133 3 ROSS MARTIN ENGLISH SALEM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 67 3 JESSE MANGAN ENGLISH UMASS BOSTON 1:30-2:15 66 3 LYDIA GRAVELL HISTORY SALEM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 92 4 MOLLY FITZELL ENGLISH SALEM STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 62 4 SARAH TOURIGNY ENGLISH SALEM STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 73 5 JENNIFER BOYD ENGLISH WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 59 5 HANNAH CLIFFORD ENGLISH WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 60 5 ALEXANDRA PITZER ENGLISH NORTH SHORE C.C. 3:30-4:15 69 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 11 Oral Sessions ROOM 168 PANEL PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT# 1 DANIEL HEALEY ART HISTORY UMASS AMHERST 10:40-11:25 8 1 EMILY LANE ART FITCHBURG STATE UNIVERSITY 10:40-11:25 7 1 HEATHER PASTUSHOK CLASSICAL LANGUAGE & LITERATURE UMASS AMHERST 10:40-11:25 17 2 GARY FORSTER PHYSICS UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 154 2 ALEXANDER NEMTZOW PHYSICS UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 157 2 ZACHARY NEMTZOW PHYSICS UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 158 3 PETER JUMPER PHYSICS UMASS DARTMOUTH 1:30-2:15 155 3 IAN BROWN PHYSICS UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 152 3 KEVIN JUMPER PHYSICS UMASS DARTMOUTH 1:30-2:15 156 4 ANDREW CAIDE PHYSICS UMASS BOSTON 2:30-3:15 153 4 ROJAY WAGNER ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 58 4 TRINH DINH CHEMISTRY UMASS BOSTON 2:30-3:15 16 5 RONDY MALIK BIOLOGY UMASS BOSTON 3:30-4:15 14 5 SARENA HORAVA CHEMICAL ENGINEERING UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 15 5 JOSHUA COOMEY PLANT, SOIL, AND INSECT SCIENCES UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 160 ROOM 176 PANEL PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT# 1 KATHLEEN JWANOWSKI MICROBIOLOGY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 10:40-11:25 144 1 ARIANA BEVILACQUA MOLECULAR BIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 10:40-11:25 146 1 CHELSEA CUMMINGS VETERINARY SCIENCE UMASS AMHERST 10:40-11:25 210 2 CAROLINE DORR MANAGEMENT UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 134 2 JULIA RATZLAFF ANTHROPOLOGY UMASS BOSTON 11:35-12:20 3 2 SAMUEL OFFEI ECONOMICS QUINSIGAMOND C.C. 11:35-12:20 47 3 NORILYZ FIGUEROA MANAGEMENT UMASS BOSTON 1:30-2:15 135 3 DANIEL MUWAMBA MANAGEMENT UMASS BOSTON 1:30-2:15 137 3 BERTRAND MUHIRE MANAGEMENT UMASS BOSTON 1:30-2:15 136 4 MATTHEW DENNY ECONOMICS UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 45 4 NEIL MASIELLO ECONOMICS FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 46 4 THOMAS PEAKE ECONOMICS UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 48 5 TYLER BUCCETTI FINANCE UMASS BOSTON 3:30-4:15 88 5 MICHAEL SPIRO MARKETING UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 138 5 DEVANSH BAJAJ FINANCE UMASS BOSTON 3:30-4:15 87 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 12 Oral Sessions ROOM 803 PANEL PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT# 1 ANTHONY RASCATI PUBLIC HEALTH WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 10:40-11:25 188 1 NICHOLAS MOREAU EDUCATION FITCHBURG STATE UNIVERSITY 10:40-11:25 55 1 REBECCA HEADLEY PUBLIC HEALTH HOLYOKE C.C. 10:40-11:25 185 2 REBECCA RWAKABUKOZA PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 189 2 EDEN HOLT SOCIOLOGY UMASS BOSTON 11:35-12:20 203 2 JEREMY MILLER PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 187 3 KELSEY DEWEY NURSING UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 147 3 KRISTINA LUNDQUIST NURSING UMASS DARTMOUTH 1:30-2:15 149 3 ALEXANDRA GIORGIO NURSING UMASS DARTMOUTH 1:30-2:15 148 4 BRITHNY DOLCIUS PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 182 4 JUSTIN DIAMOND EDUCATION NORTH SHORE C.C. 2:30-3:15 51 4 SARAH FERGUSON PUBLIC HEALTH FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 183 5 LAUREN CORTE-REAL PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 181 5 DANIEL HYNES PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 186 5 ESAM GOODARZY PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 184 ROOM 808 PANEL PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION 1 TYRONE SMITH 1 SEBASTIAN CLARKIN 1 2 CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT# SOCIAL THOUGHT & POLITICAL ECONOMY BRISTOL C.C. 10:40-11:25 194 COMMUNICATION BRISTOL C.C. 10:40-11:25 26 SARA PEDERSEN COMMUNICATION WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 10:40-11:25 32 KRISTEN MCLOUGHLIN KINESIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 117 2 HANNAH MOVERMAN KINESIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 118 2 HANNAH STOOPS KINESIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 123 3 KRISTEN RICHARD KINESIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 121 3 MEGAN COLWELL KINESIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 114 3 LINDSEY RICHARD KINESIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 120 4 ANNA FEDOROWYCZ KINESIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 115 4 SAMANTHA SANTIAGO KINESIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 122 4 SALIM ZERRINY KINESIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 124 5 AARON KARP PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 175 5 ANISHA PATEL KINESIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 119 5 LEAH KATSOS KINESIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 116 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 13 Oral Sessions ROOM 809 PANEL PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 1 KATELYN SASSOROSSI EDUCATION UMASS AMHERST 10:40-11:25 57 1 BRANDON AGNEW EDUCATION UMASS AMHERST 10:40-11:25 49 1 CORINNE GLENNIE EDUCATION WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 10:40-11:25 52 2 CEIRA O’BRIEN EDUCATION WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 11:35-12:20 56 2 LAUREN DENIO EDUCATION WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 11:35-12:20 50 2 JAMES MADIGAN EDUCATION WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 11:35-12:20 53 3 MARIEL ADAMS PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 169 3 JACOB SHADE PSYCHOLOGY SALEM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 178 3 CAROLYN WILCOMB PSYCHOLOGY WORCESTER STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 179 4 JENNIFER GARDNER PSYCHOLOGY WORCESTER STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 173 4 TIMOTHY DILLON PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 172 4 SAMANTHA HAGUE PSYCHOLOGY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 174 5 ELISE KENNEDY SOCIAL WORK BRISTOL C.C. 3:30-4:15 196 5 MARY KATE BRADLEY PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 180 5 ALEXANDER KEEFE PSYCHOLOGY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 176 ROOM 811 PANEL PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION 1 ALICIA SCOTT SOCIOLOGY, ANTHROPOLOGY, CRIME & JUSTICE STUDIES HOLYOKE CC 1 MEAGHAN HALFPENNY HISTORY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 10:40-11:25 93 1 LAUSON ODE WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 10:40-11:25 97 2 ANDREA CHIARENZA WOMEN’S STUDIES UMASS BOSTON 11:35-12:20 214 2 SAMANTHA RIBEIRO WOMEN’S STUDIES WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 11:35-12:20 215 2 TIAGO AMARAL SOCIAL THOUGHT & POLITICAL ECONOMY BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 193 3 NICHOLAS SMARRA POLITICAL SCIENCE WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 167 3 SAMANTHA BAILEY ANTHROPOLOGY UMASS DARTMOUTH 1:30-2:15 1 3 NACIK SADIQ MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES UMASS BOSTON 1:30-2:15 145 4 KRISTINA TAMS ANTHROPOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 5 4 EILEEN THOMPSON PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 191 4 STEPHAN ROCHEFORT HISTORY MASS COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS 2:30-3:15 99 5 VERONICA TAYS ANTHROPOLOGY HOLYOKE C.C. 3:30-4:15 6 5 NICOLE GODARD ENGLISH WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 63 5 JENNIFER ROLENZ ANTHROPOLOGY MASS COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS 3:30-4:15 HISTORY CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 10:40-11:25 207 4 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 14 Oral Sessions ROOM 903 PANEL PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 2 JOHN PARK LEGAL STUDIES UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 127 2 LAUREN SHEEHAN PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 190 2 BRENNA BEAN PSYCHOLOGY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 11:35-12:20 170 3 EMILY WHITE COMMUNICATION UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 36 3 KELSEY CINTOLO COMMUNICATION UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 24 3 SARA CLARKE COMMUNICATION UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 25 3 REBEKA ROBILLARD COMMUNICATION UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 33 4 SAMANTHA KENNEDY COMMUNICATION UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 28 4 KATHRYN WALSH COMMUNICATION UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 35 4 ELIZABETH MULLANE COMMUNICATION UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 31 5 ALLISON MESSIER COMMUNICATION UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 30 5 KYLE LUNT COMMUNICATION UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 29 5 STEPHANIE VIENS COMMUNICATION UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 34 ROOM 908 PANEL PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 1 SAM MCMAHON JAPANESE UMASS AMHERST 10:40-11:25 110 1 MARY WHITEBIRCH JAPANESE UMASS AMHERST 10:40-11:25 113 1 ELISE DURVILLE JAPANESE UMASS AMHERST 10:40-11:25 106 2 ERINA SATO JAPANESE UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 112 2 LINDA PHAN JAPANESE UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 111 2 SOLEIL LE JAPANESE UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 108 3 SETH PETSCHING ASIAN STUDIES UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 9 3 SHAWN FLYNN JAPANESE UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 107 3 JOHN MCLAUGHLIN JAPANESE UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 109 4 JESSICA RYTER ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 86 4 EMILY ROUND LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 125 4 CAROLINE MAYOTTE ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 84 5 ANN GRILLI ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES HOLYOKE C.C. 3:30-4:15 83 5 LINDSAY BARRON ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 82 5 STEPHEN PIKE ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 85 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 15 Oral Sessions ROOM 909 PANEL PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT# 1 SAMANTHA RYAN LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES UMASS AMHERST 10:40-11:25 126 1 ARIEL GEIST POLITICAL SCIENCE UMASS AMHERST 10:40-11:25 165 1 DANIEL MCDONALD HISTORY UMASS AMHERST 10:40-11:25 96 2 KARA CLIFFORD POLITICAL SCIENCE UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 163 2 JASON AGRESS POLITICAL SCIENCE UMASS BOSTON 11:35-12:20 161 2 JOHN BROSNAN POLITICAL SCIENCE UMASS BOSTON 11:35-12:20 162 3 KYLE HODNETT HISTORY UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 94 3 BRIANA SICARD HISTORY UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 100 3 RYAN FITZGERALD HISTORY SALEM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 91 4 ROBERT DONOGHUE POLITICAL SCIENCE WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 164 4 SARAH STOE HISTORY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 101 4 ERIN MCMANUS POLITICAL SCIENCE SALEM STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 166 5 GREGORY MURPHY PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 177 5 CLAIRE BRONCHUK INTERNATIONAL STUDIES UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 105 5 ALEXANDRA SMIALEK SOCIOLOGY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 205 ROOM 911 PANEL PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT# 1 KATELYN ANDERSTROM WOMEN’S STUDIES WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 10:40-11:25 212 1 PETER SCIBAK THEATRE HOLYOKE C.C. 10:40-11:25 209 1 STEPHANIE BONVISSUTO WOMEN’S STUDIES UMASS BOSTON 10:40-11:25 213 2 REBECCA L.C. HOELL SPANISH UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 208 2 KATHERINE DEVANE BROWN LINGUISTICS UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 128 2 KAYLY TILLMAN LINGUISTICS UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 129 3 NICOLE BRADEN INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES/BDIC MASS COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS 1:30-2:15 102 3 GENEVIEVE RAMOS HISTORY BRISTOL C.C. 1:30-2:15 98 3 WILL KIDDER PHILOSOPHY SALEM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 151 4 SEAN DOHERTY HISTORY FITCHBURG STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 90 4 LAUREN BISHOP HISTORY SALEM STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 89 4 ILIYA YANACHKOV LINGUISTICS UMASS DARTMOUTH 2:30-3:15 130 5 GERRYANNE JEAN HISTORY SALEM STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 95 5 SHELBY GIACCARINI PHILOSOPHY MASS COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS 3:30-4:15 150 5 SHOTA KOBAYASHI INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES/BDIC UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 104 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 16 Oral Sessions ROOM 917 PANEL PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT# 1 KELLY GIBSON SOCIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 10:40-11:25 202 1 KATELYN BLANEY SOCIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 10:40-11:25 200 1 KATHERINE LAORENZA SOCIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 10:40-11:25 204 2 MARISA BAGLANEAS SOCIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 199 2 ELIZABETH SULLIVAN SOCIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 206 3 SAMANTHA ALONSO SOCIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 197 3 ROSE EGAN SOCIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 201 3 PAOLA ARANGO SOCIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 198 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 17 Poster Sessions EXTENDED POSTER SESSION: 9:00-9:25 AND 10:35-11:00 AUDITORIUM (BOARDS 01A-48A) AND CONCOURSE (49C-76C) BOARD # PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 01A ALYCIA MAFFEO SOCIOLOGY, ANTHROPOLOGY, CRIME & JUSTICE STUDIES WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 9:00-11:00 626 02A SARAH ZIMMERMAN PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 03A CASSANDRA SANTOS COMMUNITY OR PUBLIC SERVICE WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 9:00-11:00 301 04A BRIAN LONG PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 500 05A VANESA ESTRELLA PSYCHOLOGY HOLYOKE C.C. 9:00-11:00 474 06A CHRISTOPHER CHAN CLASSICAL LANGUAGE & LITERATURE UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 288 07A ALYCIA SULLIVAN PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 516 08A ALINA BAHLAVOUNI PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 452 09A CAITLIN GAUVIN PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 478 10A HANNAH BARRETT PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 453 13A DASHA DANIELS PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 469 14A DEANNA JULIAN PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 493 15A AMANDA WINKLER PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 523 16A LAUREN MIDDLETON ART UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 224 17A ALYSIA BOYLE PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 459 18A ANDREA NORTON PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 505 19A STEPHANIE GOVER PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 483 20A RACHEL PERRY INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES/BDIC WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 9:00-11:00 364 21A CORINNE GOLASH PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 480 22A JESSICA KENT PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 494 23A VICTORIA CREEDON PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 467 24A KATHERINE PAPAZIAN PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 510 25A ALEXANDRA WALLS PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 522 26A SYDNEY ADAMS PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 447 27A JOANNA HONG PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 490 28A ARIANA ROCHE PSYCHOLOGY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 9:00-11:00 512 29A CHELSEY O’CONNOR PSYCHOLOGY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 9:00-11:00 506 30A BRITTANY NORTON ART WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 9:00-11:00 225 31A LISA LEARY ART WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 9:00-11:00 223 32A KYLIE NELSON EDUCATION WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 9:00-11:00 317 33A AMY ELCOCK PUBLIC HEALTH WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 9:00-11:00 545 34A VIKTORIA NAKHABENKO PUBLIC HEALTH WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 9:00-11:00 571 35A BETH TEAGUE RADIO-TELEVISION-FILM WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 9:00-11:00 597 36A ELIZABETH ABATE SOCIAL THOUGHT & POLITICAL ECONOMY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 9:00-11:00 600 37A JESSICA COONS SOCIOLOGY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 9:00-11:00 602 38A GRACE HAUCK PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 488 39A TYNESIA SMITH PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 586 9:00-11:00 525 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 18 Poster Sessions BOARD # PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 40A CAROLYN REED PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 574 41A ETHAN YOUNG COMMONWEALTH HONORS COLLEGE UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 291 42A CATHERINE PICCOLO PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 573 43A SHANZAY HAIDER PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 552 44A COLLEEN TAYLOR PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 589 45A EDEN KETEMA PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 558 49C ARIELLE CLINE PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 535 50C AVAE THOMAS PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 593 51C RHODE MOISE PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 569 52C SAMANTHA ROGERS PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 577 53C AZRA CAUS PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 531 54C JACLYN KOZAK PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 559 55C KAYLA TEGELER PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 590 56C SOFIA SHAIKH PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 583 57C SHIFAT AHMED PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 527 58C DANIEL UNKEL PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 594 59C SILVANA MELO PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 565 60C KENDALL BENNETT PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 528 61C NAKIA WEAVER PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 595 62C KATHLEEN GEOGHEGAN PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 548 63C LUCKAR THACH PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 591 64C KELSEY LYONS PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 563 65C TESSA MERRICK PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 566 66C TRACEY SCHNITTMAN PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 580 67C JENNA LAVALLEE PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 561 68C ASHLEY CUBBEDGE PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 538 69C AMANDA DOOLIN PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 543 71C CLAIRE SOMMERS PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 587 72C DEBRA MORETA PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 570 73C ALYSSA JOHNSON PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 555 74C AMAL MOHIUDDIN PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 9:00-11:00 568 POSTER SESSION 2: 11:30-12:20 AUDITORIUM (BOARDS 1A TO 48A) AND CONCOURSE (BOARDS 49C TO 76C) BOARD # PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 01A NICOLE GILFORD EDUCATION FITCHBURG STATE UNIVERSITY 11:35-12:20 316 02A NICHOLAS RABY EDUCATION MASS COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS 11:35-12:20 318 03A JONATHAN VAN DYKE SOCIOLOGY MOUNT WACHUSET C.C. 11:35-12:20 625 04A MATTHEW FORTIER SOCIOLOGY MOUNT WACHUSET C.C. 11:35-12:20 609 05A ALEJANDRA MARIN RELIGIOUS STUDIES BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 599 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 19 Poster Sessions BOARD # PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 06A HAKEEM EGUNTOLA RELIGIOUS STUDIES BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 598 07A CASSANDRA HULECKI SOCIOLOGY MOUNT WACHUSET C.C. 11:35-12:20 610 08A ISAAC MATSON SOCIOLOGY MOUNT WACHUSET C.C. 11:35-12:20 615 09A STACEY MINER SOCIOLOGY UMASS DARTMOUTH 11:35-12:20 617 10A ANJA M. NEUMANN SOCIOLOGY BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 619 11A HALEY COTE SOCIOLOGY CAPE COD C.C. 11:35-12:20 603 12A RYAN BAKER SOCIOLOGY BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 601 13A LUKE SMITH SOCIOLOGY BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 623 14A TOLOGON ESHIMKANOV SOCIOLOGY BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 607 15A CAMERON HADFIELD HISTORY CAPE COD C.C. 11:35-12:20 356 16A DAVID CONDON HISTORY CAPE COD C.C. 11:35-12:20 355 17A BENJAMIN WEEKS HISTORY BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 360 18A DERMOT O’ BRIEN HISTORY BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 358 19A STEPHANIE NGUYEN HISTORY BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 357 20A THAMYRIS TAVARES DE ALMEIDA HISTORY UMASS AMHERST 11:35-12:20 359 22A REBECCA MONTANO ENGLISH LITERATURE SALEM STATE UNIVERSITY 11:35-12:20 320 23A BRANDEN PACHECO ENGLISH LITERATURE UMASS DARTMOUTH 11:35-12:20 321 24A RATNASARI LUSIAGA LITERATURE BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 386 25A DOMINICA CINELLI-GRAHAM ENGLISH LITERATURE BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 319 26A JESSICA MELLO LITERATURE BRISTOL C.C. 11:35-12:20 387 27A CORAL FURTADO LINGUISTICS BRISTOL C.C. 11:35-12:20 385 28A SELVAPRIYA SELVARASAH AMERICAN INDIAN STUDIES BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 219 29A WEVERTTON SOUZA AMERICAN INDIAN STUDIES BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 220 30A LAP IAN LOU JAPANESE BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 366 31A MCGREGORY MENEUS MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 415 32A VIET PHAN COMMUNITY OR PUBLIC SERVICE BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 300 33A YASMIN VASQUEZ COMMUNITY OR PUBLIC SERVICE BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 303 34A BERYL FOMUNDAM COMMUNITY OR PUBLIC SERVICE BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 298 35A ASHLEY MCCARTER COMMUNITY OR PUBLIC SERVICE BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 299 36A PISETH CHEAV COMMUNITY OR PUBLIC SERVICE BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 296 37A SOLOMON ADNEW COMMUNITY OR PUBLIC SERVICE BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 295 38A YUANHUA CHEN COMMUNITY OR PUBLIC SERVICE BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 297 39A LEI SHEN COMMUNITY OR PUBLIC SERVICE BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 302 40A MELISSA MASSE ANTHROPOLOGY BRISTOL C.C. 11:35-12:20 222 41A LAMYA NUR PHILOSOPHY BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 430 42A KERRY GORHAM INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES/BDIC QUINSIGAMOND C.C. 11:35-12:20 362 43A TORI HARTMAN INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES/BDIC NORTH SHORE 11:35-12:20 363 44A EDWARD LIPCHUS RADIO-TELEVISION-FILM BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 596 45A JULIE BARROWS COMMUNICATION FITCHBURG STATE UNIVERSITY 11:35-12:20 292 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 20 Poster Sessions BOARD # PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 46A LUIZ RODRIGUES INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES/BDIC BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 365 49C JASON ALMEIDA COMMONWEALTH HONORS COLLEGE BRISTOL C.C. 11:35-12:20 289 50C KATHRYN SCOTT WOMEN’S STUDIES 11:35-12:20 639 51C STEPHANIE KEOGH COMMONWEALTH HONORS COLLEGE BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 290 52C CARINE ILUNGA WETE WOMEN’S STUDIES BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 636 53C MARA ARAUJO WOMEN’S STUDIES CAPE COD C.C. 11:35-12:20 627 54C MATTHEW COHEN WOMEN’S STUDIES CAPE COD C.C. 11:35-12:20 628 55C ROBERT SEIBOLD WOMEN’S STUDIES CAPE COD C.C. 11:35-12:20 640 56C SVIATLANA ROSE WOMEN’S STUDIES CAPE COD C.C. 11:35-12:20 638 57C TESSA GIFFORD WOMEN’S STUDIES CAPE COD C.C. 11:35-12:20 635 58C GABRIELLE FARIA WOMEN’S STUDIES CAPE COD C.C. 11:35-12:20 631 59C JOSEPH FISH WOMEN’S STUDIES CAPE COD C.C. 11:35-12:20 632 60C ASHLEY CONDON WOMEN’S STUDIES CAPE COD C.C. 11:35-12:20 629 61C BRIDGET GERETY WOMEN’S STUDIES CAPE COD C.C. 11:35-12:20 634 62C CARA SGRIGNOLI WOMEN’S STUDIES CAPE COD C.C. 11:35-12:20 641 63C DONALD MCCULLOUGH WOMEN’S STUDIES CAPE COD C.C. 11:35-12:20 637 64C ELIZABETH CONDON WOMEN’S STUDIES CAPE COD C.C. 11:35-12:20 630 66C ANGELA FORGIONE WOMEN’S STUDIES BUNKER HILL C.C. 11:35-12:20 633 67C JESSICA MORSE PSYCHOLOGY CAPE COD C.C. 11:35-12:20 503 68C TESIAH COLEMAN PSYCHOLOGY CAPE COD C.C. 11:35-12:20 465 69C SHANNON PEEBLES PSYCHOLOGY BRISTOL C.C. 11:35-12:20 511 70C TAMI DURRIGAN PSYCHOLOGY BRISTOL C.C. 11:35-12:20 471 71A HELEN HARDY PSYCHOLOGY QUINSIGAMOND C.C. 11:35-12:20 487 72C JARAD BUSHNELL PSYCHOLOGY QUINSIGAMOND C.C. 11:35-12:20 461 73C LEEWOOD LANE PSYCHOLOGY QUINSIGAMOND C.C. 11:35-12:20 497 74C TODD CRIVELLO PSYCHOLOGY QUINSIGAMOND C.C. 11:35-12:20 468 75C LISA O’DONNELL PSYCHOLOGY SALEM STATE UNIVERSITY 11:35-12:20 507 FITCHBURG STATE UNIVERSITY POSTER SESSION 3: 1:30-2:15 AUDITORIUM (BOARDS 1A TO 48A, 77A-96A) AND CONCOURSE (BOARDS 49C TO 76C) BOARD # PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 01A JOSEPH SCHWARZ PSYCHOLOGY BERKSHIRE C.C. 1:30-2:15 513 02A JAMES HALEY PSYCHOLOGY BERKSHIRE C.C. 1:30-2:15 486 03A DENNIS MILAN SOCIOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 616 04A EMILY JOSSELYN SOCIOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 613 05A SARAH ARENA PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 450 06A TAYLOR EHRHARDT PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 473 07A JANELLE ENGERMAN SOCIOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 606 08A JESSICA NEWCOMBE SOCIOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 620 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 21 Poster Sessions BOARD # PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 09A REBECCA HOLMES PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 489 10A ROBIN SELWITZ PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 514 11A SARAH DONOVAN SOCIOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 604 12A STEPHANIE NARBONNE SOCIOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 618 13A MEGHAN BULLOCK PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 460 14A MEAGHAN LAFFERTY PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 496 15A MICHELLE LECHTANSKI PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 498 16A NICHOLAS FOX PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 477 17A OANAKI TORRES PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 520 18A RIMA BONEMERY PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 457 19A DELIA GUO PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 485 20A ELIZABETH GILLIAM PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 479 21A HALEY CHRISOS PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 464 22A LAURYN FENNELL PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 475 23A MICHELLE BEECOFF PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 454 24A ALEXANDRA ANASTOS PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 449 25A ALICEN MURRAY PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 504 26A JACLYN DURIDAS PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 470 27A JESSICA HOPKINS PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 491 28A JODIE MORRELL PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 502 29A KRISTYNA SMITH PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 515 30A KIRA WONG PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 524 31A TIMOTHY FLYNN PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 476 32A JUSTINE ALPERT PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 448 33A JOSEPH TERRANOVA PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 519 34A MAHEEN CHAUDHRY PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 463 35A REBECCA OWEN PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 509 36A SNEHA SURESH PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 517 37A AUDREY CARR PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 462 38A LAUREN SZYMULA PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 518 39A ALEIGH JEROME SOCIOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 612 40A COLLEEN SULLIVAN SOCIOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 624 41A TOBIAS BENNETT PSYCHOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 455 42A PATRICK HANLON BIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 248 43A GLENN PENZONE SOCIOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 621 44A GREG LONG SOCIOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 614 45A LUKE EGLINGTON PSYCHOLOGY UMASS BOSTON 1:30-2:15 472 46A THOMAS GREGORY PSYCHOLOGY UMASS BOSTON 1:30-2:15 484 47A MELANIE FIGUEROA SOCIOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 608 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 22 Poster Sessions BOARD # PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 48A CORI OSTROWSKI PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 508 49C MARIA RODRIGUEZ SOCIOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 622 50C NICOLLETTE IANNICIELLO SOCIOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 611 51C KATHERINE KRITIKOS PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 560 52C MELISSA SANON PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 579 53C KRISTY LESSARD PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 562 54C STEFANIE CHIN PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 532 55C DEVESH SHRESTHA PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 585 56C MITCHELL DOUCETTE PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 544 57C KATE GRANNEMANN PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 550 58C LAUREN SHEWEY PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 584 59C MARISSA RODRIGUES PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 576 60C MASSA SAMMAH PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 578 61C KRISTJAN ENDRIKO PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 546 62C LAURA MALICIA PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 564 63C CAROLINE BROWN PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 529 64C CHRISTINE KELLY PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 556 65C CHRISTOPHER INGRAHAM PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 554 66C DI YI (JESSICA) HE PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 553 67C DEVON THIBODEAU PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 592 68C SONAL DESAI PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 541 69C RACHEL SCHWARTZ PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 581 70C KETSIA CLERMONT PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 534 71C PAULA JACKSON NURSING SALEM STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 421 72C ABIGAIL ROY NURSING UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 424 73C PAULA CRUZ NURSING UMASS DARTMOUTH 1:30-2:15 420 74C ANNA-RAE LECLAIRE NURSING UMASS DARTMOUTH 1:30-2:15 423 75C NICOLE TREMBLAY NURSING UMASS DARTMOUTH 1:30-2:15 426 76C IRENE BERANTUO NURSING QUINSIGAMOND C.C. 1:30-2:15 419 77A LAURA COUTINHO PSYCHOLOGY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 466 78A STEVEN AYALA PSYCHOLOGY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 451 79A AMBER GOULART PSYCHOLOGY WORCESTER STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 482 80A ALICIA LELAND PSYCHOLOGY WORCESTER STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 499 81A EMILY TRIPP PSYCHOLOGY WORCESTER STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 521 82A ELIZABETH HOWARD PSYCHOLOGY WORCESTER STATE UNIVERSITY 1:30-2:15 492 83A ELAINA DOMINESEY PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 542 84A ANASTASIA SUMNER PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 588 85A CAROLINE KELLY PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 557 86A ELLYN ROBARE PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 575 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 23 Poster Sessions BOARD # PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 87A JOHN DAU PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 539 88C JESSICA GRAY PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 551 89A ANDREA GARON PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 547 90A AHMED ABUBAKAR PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 526 91A NICOLE SFORZA PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 582 92A MARIAH CROWLEY PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 537 93A MICHELLE O’BRIEN PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 572 94A KENDALL CONNORS PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 536 95A MADELINE DEPINA PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 540 96A KIMBERLY GOMES PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 1:30-2:15 549 POSTER SESSION 4: 2:30-3:15 AUDITORIUM (BOARDS 01A TO 48A, 77A-96A) AND CONCOURSE (BOARDS 49C TO 76C) BOARD # PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 01A SARAH SNOW KINESIOLOGY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 380 02A ASHLEY EATON KINESIOLOGY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 371 03A KRISTEN CLARK PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 533 04A ANGELA CASADO-DIAZ PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 530 05A CHRISTOPHER FIELDS KINESIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 372 06A DEVIN KELLY KINESIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 374 07A JULIE BERNAZZANI PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 456 08A LAUREN LACAVA PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 495 09A MEGHAN BLANCHARD KINESIOLOGY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 368 10A MEAGHEN CHALMERS KINESIOLOGY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 369 11A JESSICA JARVIS NURSING UMASS DARTMOUTH 2:30-3:15 422 12A KASEY SULLIVAN NURSING UMASS DARTMOUTH 2:30-3:15 425 13A CHELSEA DECOTEAU KINESIOLOGY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 370 14A CARISSA TILTON KINESIOLOGY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 381 15A HEIDI LEVIN KINESIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 375 16A JOSHUA LIDDY KINESIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 376 17A REBECCA SLATE KINESIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 379 18A STEPHANIE SIMOES KINESIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 378 19A ANDREA ARABADJIS KINESIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 367 20A VESNA TODD KINESIOLOGY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 382 21A YEZENIA SANTOS KINESIOLOGY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 377 22A AMANDA HABER KINESIOLOGY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 373 23A KAYLA SETO NUTRITION & FOOD SCIENCE UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 429 24A ERIC BRACK NUTRITION & FOOD SCIENCE FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 427 25A JULIA CURRAN NUTRITION & FOOD SCIENCE UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 428 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 24 Poster Sessions BOARD # PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 26A STEVEN ZYCH PLANT, SOIL, & INSECT SCIENCES UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 445 27A THERESA COPELAND PLANT, SOIL, & INSECT SCIENCES UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 439 28A CHRISTINA KOLLISCH PLANT, SOIL, & INSECT SCIENCES UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 441 29A E ALEXA MCKENZIE PLANT, SOIL, & INSECT SCIENCES UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 443 30A HANNAH HASKELL PLANT, SOIL, & INSECT SCIENCES UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 440 31A ANDREW LOCKE PLANT, SOIL, & INSECT SCIENCES UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 442 32A JULIANNE SCOTT PLANT, SOIL, & INSECT SCIENCES UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 444 33A ANDREA COLBERT PLANT, SOIL, & INSECT SCIENCES UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 438 34A DANIELA PIERRE-TOUSSAINT ANIMAL SCIENCES BUNKER HILL C.C. 2:30-3:15 221 35A ERIC LEE BIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 250 36A HANNAH KINCAID BIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 249 37A SONAL DESAI BIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 244 38A SRINIVASA NITHIN GOPALSAMY BIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 247 39A HANNAH GORMAN PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 481 40A BETHANY MACRAE PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 501 41A KIMBERLY MANN DANCE QUINSIGAMOND C.C. 2:30-3:15 314 42A ELIZABETH SUSSKY ENTOMOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 322 43A MEGHAN CORKERY BIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 242 44A ADRIANNA BOURDON PSYCHOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 458 45A SRUTHI SATISHCHANDRAN BIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 259 46A MARCELINA MACHADO BIOLOGY BUNKER HILL C.C. 2:30-3:15 252 47A HUONG DOAN CHEMISTRY WORCESTER STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 273 48A MARY DULONG SOCIOLOGY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 605 49C ELONIA LAMONTAGNE CHEMISTRY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 277 50C LUZ PACHECO CHEMISTRY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 281 51C JEFFREY BOERTH CHEMISTRY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 271 52C JACQUELYN DORHOUT CHEMISTRY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 274 53C CHRISTIN HARRINGTON CHEMISTRY WORCESTER STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 276 54C STEPHANIE BELLINGER BUCKLEY CHEMISTRY UMASS BOSTON 2:30-3:15 270 55C COLLEEN STEWART CHEMISTRY UMASS DARTMOUTH 2:30-3:15 282 56C JOSHUA LITCHMAN CHEMISTRY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 278 57C JENNIFER WILCOX CHEMISTRY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 284 58C NICK DEGRAAN-WEBER CHEMISTRY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 272 59C THOMAS FOLEY CHEMISTRY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 275 60C ELYSE TANZER BIOCHEMISTRY FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 233 61C INNA BROCKMAN BIOCHEMISTRY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 226 62C KATHLEEN BURNS BIOCHEMISTRY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 227 63C YING QI ZHANG BIOCHEMISTRY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 234 64C ARMAND KOUNGA BIOCHEMISTRY UMASS BOSTON 2:30-3:15 230 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 25 Poster Sessions BOARD # PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 65C BENJAMIN HART BIOCHEMISTRY UMASS BOSTON 2:30-3:15 229 66C MICHAEL MURPHY BIOCHEMISTRY UMASS BOSTON 2:30-3:15 232 67C ROBERT CHAN BIOCHEMISTRY UMASS BOSTON 2:30-3:15 228 68C VALERY KOUNGA BIOCHEMISTRY UMASS BOSTON 2:30-3:15 231 69C KEWEI ZHANG MICROBIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 413 70C MICHAEL BOUCHER MICROBIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 405 71C REBECCA COTTMAN MICROBIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 407 72C SHUNING ZHENG MICROBIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 414 73C TARA MAHENDRARAJAH MICROBIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 409 74C XENIA CHEPA-LOTREA MICROBIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 406 75C ALICE TRAN MICROBIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 411 76C BENJAMIN WALDMAN MICROBIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 412 77A ANKITA MEHTA BIOLOGY UMASS BOSTON 2:30-3:15 254 78A DEWAR TAN BIOLOGY UMASS BOSTON 2:30-3:15 262 79A KARELYN BONILLA BIOLOGY UMASS BOSTON 2:30-3:15 240 80A ANA COSTA BIOLOGY UMASS DARTMOUTH 2:30-3:15 243 81A ALEXANDER DILLS BIOLOGY UMASS DARTMOUTH 2:30-3:15 245 82A ALEXANDRA MICHALOWSKI BIOLOGY UMASS DARTMOUTH 2:30-3:15 255 83A CHRISTIAAN REES BIOLOGY UMASS DARTMOUTH 2:30-3:15 257 84A JOSEPH MATRISCIANO BIOLOGY UMASS DARTMOUTH 2:30-3:15 253 85A TIMOTHY BOARDMAN BIOLOGY UMASS DARTMOUTH 2:30-3:15 239 86A JESSICA BEROTH BIOLOGY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 238 87A STEPHEN LIPTAK BIOLOGY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 251 88A VERONICA ADAMS BIOLOGY WORCESTER STATE UNIVERSITY 2:30-3:15 237 89A ALEXANDER SIMOLARIS BIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 260 90A CAROLINE ADAMS BIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 236 91A EDD RICKER BIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 258 92A ERIN STOCKMAN BIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 2:30-3:15 261 93A FABIOLA ABISSA BIOLOGY BUNKER HILL C.C. 2:30-3:15 235 94A HASSAN MIRZA BIOLOGY BUNKER HILL C.C. 2:30-3:15 256 95A JULIET BUTEME BIOLOGY BUNKER HILL C.C. 2:30-3:15 241 96A MATTHEW FORD BIOLOGY BUNKER HILL C.C. 2:30-3:15 246 AFTERNOON SESSION 5: 3:30-4:15 AUDITORIUM (BOARDS 01A TO 48A, 77A-96A) AND CONCOURSE (BOARDS 49C TO 76C) BOARD # PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 01A CHRISTOPHER ROY MICROBIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 410 02A DANIEL FLYNN MICROBIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 408 03A ANDREW DAVEY MATHEMATICS & STATISTICS UMASS DARTMOUTH 3:30-4:15 397 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 26 Poster Sessions BOARD # PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 04A CATALINA JAMES MARKETING UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 394 05A ANGELA TANNER CHEMISTRY UMASS BOSTON 3:30-4:15 283 06A EKATERINA SHAIKOUSKAYA MOLECULAR BIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 418 07A SMBAT DEFTERDERIAN MARKETING WORCESTER STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 392 08A JULIE BRODERICK MANAGEMENT WORCESTER STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 389 09A JESSICA ROYAL MOLECULAR BIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 416 10A MILES SARILL MOLECULAR BIOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 417 11A BARBARA MELLO CHEMISTRY UMASS BOSTON 3:30-4:15 279 12A MYLINH NGUYEN CHEMISTRY UMASS BOSTON 3:30-4:15 280 13A DANIELLE FALCON COMMUNICATION DISORDERS UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 293 14A STEPHANIE TOMPKINS COMMUNICATION DISORDERS UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 294 15A JAMES WEST PHYSICS QUINSIGAMOND C.C. 3:30-4:15 437 16A FRANK KETTENRING PHYSICS UMASS BOSTON 3:30-4:15 435 17A OLIVIER DANTISTE PHYSICS UMASS BOSTON 3:30-4:15 432 18A CHRISTOPHER SEYMOUR PHYSICS UMASS DARTMOUTH 3:30-4:15 436 19A KHAYLA ENGLAND PHYSICS UMASS DARTMOUTH 3:30-4:15 433 20A OLIVIA CAMPBELL PHYSICS UMASS DARTMOUTH 3:30-4:15 431 21A JILLIAN GILES PHYSICS UMASS LOWELL 3:30-4:15 434 22A BRENDAN DECOURCY MATHEMATICS & STATISTICS UMASS LOWELL 3:30-4:15 398 23A LAURIE MURPHY MATHEMATICS & STATISTICS UMASS DARTMOUTH 3:30-4:15 400 24A NICOLE MCCAFFERTY MATHEMATICS & STATISTICS UMASS DARTMOUTH 3:30-4:15 399 25A ALEX OSEI BONSU ACCOUNTING QUINSIGAMOND C.C. 3:30-4:15 218 26A BRENDA HERNANDEZ ACCOUNTING UMASS BOSTON 3:30-4:15 216 27A CHARLES LU ACCOUNTING UMASS DARTMOUTH 3:30-4:15 217 28A KEVIN CUNNINGHAM CHEMICAL ENGINEERING UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 265 29A DAN GANZ CHEMICAL ENGINEERING UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 268 30A ERINN DANDLEY CHEMICAL ENGINEERING UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 266 31A NICHOLAS CADIROV CHEMICAL ENGINEERING UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 264 32A NICOLE RAIA CHEMICAL ENGINEERING UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 269 33A BRITTANY FORKUS CHEMICAL ENGINEERING UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 267 34A ZACHARY BRENTZEL CHEMICAL ENGINEERING UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 263 35A JOHN FALLON COMPUTER SCIENCE UMASS LOWELL 3:30-4:15 304 36A FAISAL YOUSUF COMPUTER SCIENCE BUNKER HILL C.C. 3:30-4:15 313 37A TODD HOLLAND COMPUTER SCIENCE QUINSIGAMOND C.C. 3:30-4:15 308 38A CHRIS GARRY COMPUTER SCIENCE UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 306 40A ANDREA FARNWORTH COMPUTER SCIENCE FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 305 41A CHRISTOPHER GOSSELIN COMPUTER SCIENCE FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 307 42A JOSEPH MONTILLO COMPUTER SCIENCE FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 310 43A CHRISTOPHER LETENDRE COMPUTER SCIENCE FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 309 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 27 Poster Sessions BOARD # PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 44A ROBERT PIANTEDOSI COMPUTER SCIENCE FRAMINGHAM STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 311 45A EVAN SHELHAMER COMPUTER SCIENCE UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 312 46A ELIZABETH METRANO PUBLIC HEALTH UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 567 46A ANDREW ERWIN MECHANICAL ENGINEERING UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 403 47A JOHN GILBERT GEOLOGY UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 354 48A DERICK TAH FORESTRY BUNKER HILL C.C. 3:30-4:15 347 49C SARAH PIERCE ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 341 50C MICHAEL JOCELYN ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 333 51C SARAH SHEARER ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 343 53C ROBERT LAROSE ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 336 54C KARL JENSEN ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 332 55C KASEY BASCETTA ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 325 56C TIMOTHY JUDD ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 334 57C PATRICK DESMOND ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 328 58C EMILY ASP ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 324 59C RYAN NOYES ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES BUNKER HILL C.C. 3:30-4:15 340 60C LETICIA DOPRADO ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES BUNKER HILL C.C. 3:30-4:15 331 61C JORDAN PIPER ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 342 62C LAURA MOLYNEAUX ECONOMICS UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 315 63C MAX BODDY LEGAL STUDIES QUINSIGAMOND C.C. 3:30-4:15 384 64C CHARLES GALE POLITICAL SCIENCE UMASS DARTMOUTH 3:30-4:15 446 65C LAM TRUONG MANAGEMENT BUNKER HILL CC 3:30-4:15 391 66C CORINNE BAZZINOTTI MANAGEMENT UMASS BOSTON 3:30-4:15 388 67C ELENA SVETLOV MANAGEMENT UMASS BOSTON 3:30-4:15 390 68C CASEY FINIGAN MARKETING UMASS BOSTON 3:30-4:15 393 69C ERICA SHERMAN MARKETING UMASS BOSTON 3:30-4:15 395 70C EYAL STEIN MARKETING UMASS BOSTON 3:30-4:15 396 71C RYAN DUNN GEOGRAPHY UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 349 72C KAELEIGH CHARTRAND GEOGRAPHY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 348 73C NATHAN WOJCIK GEOGRAPHY WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 350 74C AMY GOLDMAN GEOLOGICAL SCIENCE UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 353 75C DEVON COLCORD GEOLOGICAL SCIENCE UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 351 76C JENNIFER FARDY GEOLOGICAL SCIENCE UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 352 77A KEITH MACWILLIAM MECHANICAL ENGINEERING UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 404 78A ROSE BENG MECHANICAL ENGINEERING BUNKER HILL C.C. 3:30-4:15 401 79A ANDREW COSTAIN MECHANICAL ENGINEERING UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 402 80A OBESEBEA AYE-ADDO CIVIL ENGINEERING QUINSIGAMOND C.C. 3:30-4:15 285 81A KELLY BATISTA CIVIL ENGINEERING UMASS DARTMOUTH 3:30-4:15 286 82A WILLIAM MAY CIVIL ENGINEERING UMASS DARTMOUTH 3:30-4:15 287 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 28 Poster Sessions BOARD # PRESENTER FIELD OF PRESENTATION CAMPUS TIME ABSTRACT # 83A MAJDOULINE TOUIL INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 361 84A JOSH SPINNER LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 383 85A ASHLEY SULLIVAN ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 345 86A KATHLEEN DOHERTY ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 330 87A RACHEL CALDERARA ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 326 88A STÉPHANIE ARCUSA ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES UMASS AMHERST 3:30-4:15 323 89A AMY CLARK ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 327 90A ROBERT LAROSE ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 337 91A SARAH LAFLAMME ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES BUNKER HILL C.C. 3:30-4:15 335 92A GERTIAN XHAFA ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES BUNKER HILL C.C. 3:30-4:15 346 93A EDWARD DIMITRI ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 329 94A ERIN MURRAY ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 339 95A JEREMY MCKINSTRY ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 338 96A GABRIEL SIEGEL ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES WESTFIELD STATE UNIVERSITY 3:30-4:15 344 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 29 Abstracts • Oral Sessions ANTHROPOLOGY 1 Room 811 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Samantha Bailey, Robin Robinson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Sociology, UMass Dartmouth Resistance to Women Who Veil: A Pilot Study in America Islamic women who choose to wear the veil encounter widespread resistance among western communities, primarily Western Europe, Canada and the United States. The term Islamic veiling refers to any head covering worn by a Muslim woman, however for the purposes of this study the term veiling is considered as face covering veils such as the niqab (cloth that covers the entire head and face except for the eyes) and the burka (all-enveloping cloak that covers the entire head and face). This study posits that resistance to the veil comes in two forms, informal and formal. Informal resistance to the veil is manifested as stereotyping, stigma, and even simply ignoring the veil. These emotional responses to the veil may lead to formal resistance, which refers to policy and law pertaining to the veil. This thesis explores why there is such a strong resistance to the veil, and how this manifests in the United States. Recent resistance to the veil has come in the shape of European policies, e.g., recent legislation regulating veiling in France, Germany and Belgium. A pilot study employed an original survey completed by students and faculty (n=200) at a state univer sity in Massachusetts to examine specifically how resistance can be expressed in the United States, seeking to gain an understanding of the future of veiling in America. Findings explore perceived deficits in Islamic women’s participation in the public sphere as well as American ideals of womanhood, combined with recently increased fears of terrorism. Impact and implications include new discussions about western resistance to the Islamic veil, and about ways to bring Islamic women into western community through critical examination of western expectations of the modern woman and normality. 2 Reading Room 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Sarah Kelley, Gloria DiFulvio (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Access to Public Higher Education The American Dream, an ever-evolving term since the founding of our country, is based on a definition of freedom which indicates that everyone, regardless of class, religion, race, or ethnicity, can succeed through participation in society. While a high school diploma was considered a passport to the American dream for millions of Americans in the early 1970’s, the net job growth in America today is generated by positions that require at least some post-secondary education. However, in an era where higher education is the key to economic success, the cost of college is climbing at a steep, historically unprecedented rate. The first part of my Capstone focused on the current lack of access to higher education for undocumented students. I highlighted the policy implications of legislation that would allow student immigrants to afford higher education and achieve citizenship, such as the DREAM Act. In the second part of my capstone I plan to expand my focus to access to public higher education for all students in Massachusetts. More specifically, I plan to1) research and evaluate the reform options for increasing access to higher education state-wide 2) increase student awareness and strengthen student voice on the importance of higher education through public narrative, both written and spoken, and 3) attend and help plan a Lobby Day to at the Statehouse where students will petition our representatives to increase funding for public education. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 30 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 3 Room 176 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Julia Ratzlaff, Amy Todd (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Anthropology, UMass Boston Social Business: How a Local Business is Part of the Global Business Paradigm Shift The role of business is in the midst of a paradigm shift as the profit-first model is being replaced by the triple bottom line approach which adds environmental and social responsibilities in addition to profit. Some of the ways businesses approach these issues is through changing their relationships to suppliers, publishing responsibility reports, drafting mission statements and even changing their management strategies. In this paper the nature of this emerging global business practice is examined through government policies, supportive efforts such as work being done toward social business stock exchange, and consumer reports. To put the new paradigm in local perspective I conduct a case study of a local business, More Than Words, and examine the ways in which they display social responsibility through their human value chain and how their efforts show that the social business is the new business. 4 Room 811 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Jennifer Rolenz, Nancy Muller (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Anthropology, Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts Finding A Voice: The Native American Peyote Ceremony The Native American Peyote Ceremony has been apart of native culture since the late 1800’s. Throughout the years it has evolved and changed with the changes in laws and culture. The peyote ceremony incorporates music, performance, art and ritual. It has allowed natives to not only find their voice as specific tribes, but also as a common people. The ceremony has also helped to develop and nurture new forms of art such as the peyote or gourd bead work stitch. 5 Room 811 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Kristina Tams, Sherrill Harbison (Faculty Sponsor) Department of German, UMass Amherst Danish Prison Systems in the Wake of Penal Excess and Increased Immigration Denmark is well-known for its “exceptional” prison conditions, whereby prisoners are given many of the same rights as regular citizens. For example, prisoners are allowed to cook and clean for themselves, attend school, vote in political campaigns, and are even allowed to sunbathe. Many Americans who have been raised in a country driven by penal excess are stunned by the prison conditions in Denmark. Danish prisons are driven by the notion of “normalization,” meaning that life inside prison should better represent life outside of prison. Prisoners are supposed to develop a sense of self-regulation, as Michel Foucault defines it, and to be inspired by the desire to become contributing members of society. Whether these “normalized” prison conditions reduce the level of punishment intended for the prisoner is up for debate. However, this type of prison system was developed for a country with extreme social cohesion. With the recent influx of new immigrant populations over the last thirty years, the Danish prison system is in danger and may eventually disappear. Prisons that have been comfortable (and are often compared to college dormitories by Americans) have become overcrowded. Denmark’s prison population is overly represented by the the immigrant populations. This paper will examine Denmark’s “exceptional” prison conditions in the wake of penal excess and increased immigration. My aim is to show why culture-bound understandings of the goals of punishment suggests that Denmark will need to adapt its policies to accommodate prisoners who do not share Danish culture and Denmark’s extreme social cohesion. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 31 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 6 Room 811 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Veronica Tays, Deborah Fairman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Anthropology, Holyoke Community College Crimes of Culture: Morality in the Battle for the World’s Artistic Heritage This research project studies the act of looting and the damage of material pillage, in both a historic and modern context; it also investigates the effect of restitution in repairing the harm of cultural theft. From the famous case of the Parthenon Marbles to the modern day looting of Peruvian burial grounds, this project examines the pain and humiliation that cultural theft causes to source nations, and explores the efforts of said nations to have their artistic heritage returned. Conversely, the research details the fears that our great museums and art historians have for the possibility of negligence and even destruction of artifacts when under the guardianship of developing or politically volatile regions. Methods of research include print and academic journal sources, as well as personal interviews. Though there is no easy solution to this complicated issue, the concept of cultural restitution as a component of reparations for past and present injustice is presented, and a proposal that these restitutions are not merely possible, but even practical steps towards the improvement of global relations. ART 7 Room 168 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Steven M Ward, Emily Lane, Robert Carr (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Communication, Fitchburg State University Fitchburg Urban Renaissance Documentary Our thesis project is a documentary about the arts and culture in downtown Fitchburg, focused on the urban arts renaissance. While showing the past and present states of the area, we’re revealing to the audience the bustling, thriving cultural city Fitchburg used to be and what’s happened to it to create the somber, dilapidated downtown it currently is. The majority of our presentation is focused on the new energy local artists and residents have for reviving downtown and what plans they have come up with to create an urban renaissance. While there has been talk of a revival for many decades now, we’re giving new hope to the residents and students in the community that things are happening, plans are in motion, and with their support, belief and encouragement, Fitchburg can be a successful cultural hub once again. Through interviews with Jerry Beck, the Director of Marketing/Community Engagement; Lisa Wong, the Mayor of Fitchburg, and several other key figures, we will demonstrate the process Fitchburg is entering in order to restore the community and give hope to other cities attempting to do the same. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 32 Abstracts • Oral Sessions ART HISTORY 8 Room 168 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Daniel Healey, Laetitia La Follette (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Art History, UMass Amherst Roman Cult Worship and the Temple of Isis at Pompeii The Temple of Isis at Pompeii, preserved by the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius in 79 CE, affords rare insights into the lives and worship practices of the ancient Pompeiians. The sanctuary marks the focal point for local worship of Isis, the Hellenized Egyptian goddess who attracted a sizable and diverse following in the Graeco-Roman world. As the center for initiatory rites and worship practices – intentionally secret – it served an exclusive group of devotees, both the goddess’s priests and followers. Besides its nearly intact structural elements, Pompeii’s Iseum also boasts a number of frescoes (now in the Museo Archaeologico in Naples), statues, and votive offerings that depict the goddess in her Graeco-Roman form. My study of the temple at Pompeii will consider what the extant remains reveal about cultic activities and those who practiced them. I will also draw from ancient texts by Herodotus, Apuleius, and Plutarch, as well as a rich body of secondary sources pertaining to Roman cults and Isis-worship. I will employ the temple and its decorative elements as a lens through which to analyze Roman worship practices and the conception of Isis among her Graeco-Roman devotees. ASIAN STUDIES 9 Room 908 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Seth Petsching, Doris Bargen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Japanese, UMass Amherst Self-Sacrifice in Japan My paper explores the topic of self-sacrifice among the Japanese in two separate periods, before and after 1600. My research question is: What were the reasons for the different types of self-sacrifice, expressed in a willingness to die, among the different classes of Japanese society? In order to answer this question I turned to a number of primary sources, including Japanese film, theater, and historical fiction, and to secondary sources, such as scholarly articles and books on the history, literature, and film of Japan. I wonder if peasants, not having a reciprocal vassal-lord relationship, allowed their self-sacrifices to be more heavily motivated by traditional religions than the samurai, whose self-sacrifices, often upon the death of their lord, were mostly motivated by the high value placed on honor. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 33 Abstracts • Oral Sessions BIOCHEMISTRY 10 Room 162 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Evan Watters, Jin Xu (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemistry, UMass Lowell Characterization of Talactoferrin N-Linked Oligosaccharides using HPLC and Mass Spectrometry N-Linked glycans were removed from asparagine residues on the denatured recombinant human lactoferrin, Talactoferrin. Utilizing normal phase high performance liquid chromatography (NP-HPLC), the high mannose glycans were separated and profiled. Online NP-HPLC/ESI-TOF-MS (electrospray ionization time of flight mass spectrometry) allowed for LC peak identification and glycan characterization. The protocol for deglycosylation, LC separation, and MS peak identification were optimized and verified. Continued work is focusing on glycan removal under native conditions with yields of 90% or better. Once a protocol is established, the potential biological effects of both the glycosylated and deglycosylated native protein will be studied. Finally, the terminal saccharides will be analyzed for the presence of galactose, allowing for a complete glycan characterization. BIOLOGY 11 Room 162 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Rachael Bonoan, Felecia Clodius, Guillermo Paz-y-Mino (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Dartmouth Dominance Hierarchy Formation and Potential Applications in Laboratory Research using a Model Organism, the Zebra Finch (Taeniopygia Guttata) Social animals often form dominance hierarchies to avoid costly agonistic encounters resulting from competition for resources with conspecifics. We demonstrate that zebra finches are able to form a dominance hierarchy in the laboratory by using a food competition setting. Birds were put into single-sex groups and competed against each other for food in repeated dyadic encounters. The dominant and subordinate behaviors each bird displayed towards another were recorded and analyzed in order to determine the dominance hierarchy of each group of birds. Each hierarchy was further validated by analyzing differences in feeding behaviors of dominant and subordinate birds. As zebra finches are a model organism used in genetics and neurobiology, further studies can examine the link between proximate mechanisms behind dominance behaviors. Studying dominance hierarchies in the lab can also further understanding of the evolution of social structure and related cognitive abilities. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 34 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 12 Room 162 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Jesse Gutierrez, Ken Thomas (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, Northern Essex Community College Could Bull Sharks inhabit the Merrimack River? Could Bull Sharks Inhabit the Merrimack River? Jesse Gutierrez PURPOSE: The purpose of this study is to determine if the Merrimack River of Massachusetts could sustain a bull shark. Little is known regarding the biology of the bull shark but the extraordinary physiological adaptations that allow it to live in both fresh water and salt water make it a fascinating subject to study. Through examining the key factors- salinity, temperature, dissolved oxygen, turbidity, pH, and food supply- that must be met in determining a suitable aquatic habitat for all marine life, it can be concluded if bull sharks could quite possibly inhabit the Merrimack River. METHODS: Research through online search engines to find the physiology, means of reproduction, threats, food supply, and distribution of the bull shark. Interviews with the Merrimack River Watershed and Central New England Fishery Resources Office gained background information about the river and the man-made obstructions, and water quality data of the Merrimack River. The data of the bull shark was then analyzed against the data of the Merrimack River. RESULTS: Comparing the physiological needs of the bull shark with the qualities of the Merrimack River, it is clear that food supply, dissolved oxygen, pH, turbidity, and salinity are not going to prevent the bull shark from inhabiting the Merrimack River. Temperature and the question of whether or not it is possible for a bull shark to pass through the restriction points that are 1-2 feet within the obstruction of the fish lift (Essex Dam- Lawrence, MA) are still viable factors in determining a conclusion. According to the data from the Merrimack River Watershed Association the temperatures recorded in the Merrimack River meet the range for the tropical water regions. This is a theoretical study that needs to be further researched. CONCLUSION: Bull sharks are a species that is little known about due to the fact that they have not been studied in depth over a period of time. In the field of biology new discoveries and further research allows for new growth and what we know to be scientific theories, facts or laws to be challenged and improved if needed. 13 Room 162 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Erin Stockman, Brenna Haynes, William Manning (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Plant, Soil, and Insect Sciences, UMass Amherst Effects of ambient and increased levels of temperature and ozone on the common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) PURPOSE: With rising temperatures and higher concentrations of ozone in the troposphere, it is critical to understand how plants will be affected by the changing climate. It is known that plants are negatively affected by high concentrations of ozone, but research on effects of both increased temperature and ozone on plants is scarce. In this study, we compare the effects of ambient and increased temperature and concentrations of ozone on Phaseolus vulgaris, the common bean. METHODS: The effects of high levels of temperature and ozone on the common bean are being analyzed using a randomized block design of sixteen chambers. Live plants are being tested for stomatal conductance and photosynthetic rates. Four destructive harvests will also take place to find physiological variations between beans grown in different conditions. RESULTS: We expect to see that plants in chambers with both high temperatures and high concentrations of ozone will show lower stomatal conductance and photosynthetic rates, and higher ozone damage. CONCLUSION: Rising temperatures and higher concentrations of ozone damages plants and will negatively impact production of crops. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 35 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 14 Room 168 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Rondy Malik, Rick Kesseli (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Boston Are Populations of Cosmopolitan Weeds All the Same? A Case Study of Chicory Invasive weeds cause millions of dollars worth of damage to agricultural fields and natural habitats. Cichorium intybus (chicory) is known to be a domesticated, weedy and invasive species. Chicory is a member of the Sunflower family and native to Europe and Asia, and has invaded the United States. Chicory can be found in fields and roadsides throughout Europe, Asia, Northern Africa, North America and Australia. Taking a closer look at the population structure can reveal the species invasion history. This knowledge may enable us to manage the invasion, and develop an understanding of other invasive weeds. There are two extreme possible invasion scenarios - single introduction versus multiple introductions. With a single introduction all populations in the invaded region would be genetically similar. As a preliminary study, we compared chicory populations coming from Eurasia, and populations from ranging from New England to California (32 individuals per population). We performed DNA extractions, followed by amplification of microsatellite DNA regions. PCR products were then run on a gel followed by fragment analysis. We scored six DNA loci in each individual. Peak Scanner software was used to view the fragment analysis data. We then further analyzed our data with program Structure. Individuals were grouped into clusters based on shared alleles. Our results suggest that there have been multiple introductions of chicory into the USA, and even local populations appear to have been founded by different sources from Eurasia. CHEMICAL ENGINEERING 15 Room 168 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Sarena Horava, Susan Roberts (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemical Engineering, UMass Amherst Spatiotemporal investigation of cell-seeded alginate hydrogels Understanding the microstructure of hydrogel matrices is necessary for designing three-dimensional scaffolds for tissue engineering. The ability to quantify the mechanical microenvironment surrounding encapsulated cells provides fundamental knowledge of the role of mechanical properties on cell behavior. Previous studies focused on the relationship between bulk mechanical properties and cell function; however, bulk properties do not account for variability within the encapsulation matrix. Our goal is to develop a technique to probe the internal material microstructure near the surface of cells within a three-dimensional construct. Cavitation microrheology is a novel technique to probe internal microstructure of matrices on a cellular scale (~2-200 μm). Our study applies this technique to evaluate alginate hydrogels containing human aortic smooth muscle cells (HASMCs) that secrete extracellular matrix (ECM). Alginate hydrogels are seeded with cells and monitored for 7 day cycles to measure the mechanical contribution of ECM secretion by encapsulated HASMCs. In addition, cavitation results are compared to bulk rheology to determine measurement sensitivity. The novelty in this investigation is the application of cavitation microrheology to cell-seeded biomaterials, which is important for improving the design of tissue engineering devices and drug delivery systems. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 36 Abstracts • Oral Sessions CHEMISTRY 16 Room 168 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Trinh Dinh, Wei Zhang (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemistry, UMass Boston Convertible Fluorous Linker-Assisted Synthesis of Tetrasubstituted Furans The three-step synthesis was used to prepare tetrasubstituted furans. Condensation of fluorous benzaldehyde with an acetophenone was done first and followed by the Michael-type [3 + 2] cycloaddition, then the last step is the 1,3-diketone and Pd-catalyzed coupling reaction for fluorous linker cleavage. The reaction was performed under fast and high efficient microwave irradiation. and fluorous solid-phase extraction (F-SPE) technique was used to purify the intermediate. CLASSICAL LANGUAGE & LITERATURE 17 Room 168 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Heather Pastushok, Eric Poehler (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Classical Language & Literature, UMass Amherst Four Sculptures: an analysis of exterior wall ornamentation in Pompeii The corpus of ornamentation preserved at Pompeii is vast. It is typically analyzed as smaller collections that are determined by an object’s form or function, such as herms, oscilla, or the varied styles of wall painting. There are four examples of exterior wall ornamentation, however, that have yet to be considered as a singular group. These four sculptures, albeit a small collection, are unified by their status as repurposed facial sculptures, and they comprise the total number of extant examples of repurposed exterior wall ornamentation in Pompeii. The study of each of these sculptures so far has consisted of minimal speculation about them as individual objects, and has hindered any meaningful proposals for their collective function. Working with data collected in two campaigns of field research in conjunction with scholarship accessed through the University of Massachusetts Amherst library database, the Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum, and Latin literature in translation this paper examines each of the four sculptures in various contexts, including epigraphic and architectural, as well as in comparison with other types of exterior wall ornamentation, such as street plaques. The holistic analysis of these sculptures will help better understand the use and presentation of exterior space and the nature of repurposed objects in general. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 37 Abstracts • Oral Sessions COMMONWEALTH HONORS COLLEGE 18 Reading Room 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Aviv Celine, Gloria DiFulvio (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Higher Education Accessibility and Affordability: Finding an All-Encompassing Solution In this presentation, I will address the issue of access and affordability in public higher education. A large part of the American population, chiefly minority and low socioeconomic status students, lack the opportunity to attend a higher education institution despite its reputation as a public good. Obtaining such an education will not only provide these misrepresented populations with an improved chance to find better jobs and salaries, but can fulfill the United States’ promise of equal opportunity and a fair playing field. Consequently, this project demonstrates that there are two causes in the current issue: first, an insufficiency in funding for schools coupled with poor academic achievement in areas where minority and low socioeconomic class populations reside. Secondly, a general lack in financial ability to pay for a postsecondary education, resulting in a university population that is unrepresentative of our people. Conclusively, I will illustrate three alternatives that will try to alleviate these problems, according to two criteria: the improvement of primary and secondary education as well as better funding for low socioeconomic students. The policy solution I will then suggest will show how using the criteria to judge the alternatives can provide a resolution that can foster successful and powerful American peoples. 19 Reading Room 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Avery Fuerst, Gloria DiFulvio (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Addressing the Achievement Gap In the United States privileged students outperform their underprivileged peers in academics by a significant margin. This phenomenon is otherwise known as the achievement gap. I define privileged students as students who are white and/or Asian and whose families do not qualify for food stamps. I define underprivileged students as students who are non-white, non-Asian or do qualify for food stamps. The gap in academic performance between privileged and underprivileged students has wide reaching negative effects on both the welfare of the American population, which has an ever-growing non-white and non-Asian population, as well as on the American economy. The American economy has been a knowledge based economy for decades and therefore it would increase the U.S.’s GNP as a whole if all demographics of the American population were achieving their academic potential. Although the achievement gap has decreased overall in the U.S. during the past few decades, there is still a significant gap between privileged and underprivileged students. The continuation of the gap is evident by the substantial gap in 4th and 8th grade Math and English scores as well as significant gaps in SAT scores between privileged and underprivileged youths. In this presentation, I present research on the achievement gap. I also present three policy alternatives to address this problem. Using three criteria (accessibility, financially possible, expansive scope) I will discuss the policy solution that can best address this important issue. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 38 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 20 Reading Room 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Tracy Gebhart, Gloria DiFulvio (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Access, Ability, and Allyship: Addressing different abilities in postsecondary education PURPOSE: Over the past half-century, postsecondary students with disabilities have increasingly been subjected to both overt and unintentional instances of discrimination in postsecondary institutions. Current federal policies and protections for these students are inadequate, and the resulting discriminations have effectively barred students with disabilities from achieving proper education. This project aims to address the current failures of federal systems and to further more comprehensive federal measures while promoting more inclusive higher education atmospheres. METHODS: Using federal laws and statues, this project will identify the current protections offered to students with disabilities. Secondary sources, including reports from federal government agencies and court cases, will be used. Personal testimonies will measure the dissonance between federal policies’ intentions and their flawed implementations. This research will be analyzed to interpret and further positively influence postsecondary cultures surrounding ability issues. RESULTS: Though there have been minor victories, current federal systems are too inconclusive and under-researched to meet the needs of the United States’ present and growing population of students with disabilities. Overall, these students are facing an alarming amount of barriers to an effective education. These jarring results will begin to provide a basis from which students can create and demand more inclusive educational settings. CONCLUSION: If order to ensure students with disabilities will not face isolation from fair and reasonable access to higher education, there must be a federal policy reform. This reform must protect the interests of students with disabilities. 21 Reading Room 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Allison McGrail, Gloria DiFulvio (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Confronting the Contradiction: Policy Solutions for Massachusetts’ Working Poor An American meritocracy in which one’s effort is met with equal reward implies that one who works steadily should earn enough money to support one’s self and one’s family. This notion is the foundation of the much revered “American Dream,” which affords a person of any socioeconomic class the ability to work hard and earn a decent living. Yet among the 46.2 million Americans currently living below the federal poverty line are 10 million who are employed either part or full time. This national trend is reflected in Massachusetts where thousands of employed citizens are unable to provide for their families. In this presentation I will explore policy solutions for Massachusetts’ working poor, considering wage and education reform as potential solutions for those who work yet live in poverty. In a state with one of the highest costs of living in the country, the issue is particularly salient. In this presentation I will highlight legislative solutions that may alleviate the burden that has been placed upon Massachusetts’ working poor and the American concept of social mobility. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 39 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 22 Reading Room 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Amy O’Regan, Gloria DiFulvio (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst The Power of Inner Beauty I completed the first portion of my senior capstone on education opportunities for teen mothers. I focused on programs in mainstream American public high schools that allow mothers to complete their high school degree while still taking care of their children. I noticed that many women did not feel powerful enough to fight for what they needed. For my organizing project, I have decided to expand on the notion of women helping themselves to general female empowerment. Women and girls everywhere feel inadequate and constantly tested to fit an ideal image of beauty. For my project I am organizing young women in the Amherst community to feel empowered and satisfied by their minds and bodies through pledges and projects. Gender balance is completely skewed by mainstream media and women feel forced to reach unattainable goals. In this presentation, I will discuss how over the course of the semester, I tried to help women feel confident and secure in their own bodies by coordinating activities that encourage a positive body image and female empowerment. 23 Reading Room 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Hannah Rapp, Gloria DiFulvio (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst A Smart Investment: Promoting Educational Opportunities for the State’s Youngest Citizens The first few years of life constitute an essential period of growth and development, where children learn skills necessary for success in school and in other areas of life. Although the United States believes that all children are entitled to a free public school education starting in kindergarten, preschool education, when crucial development occurs, is not accessible to many children. While some children have access to high-quality early childhood education programs that support school readiness skills, many children miss out on this opportunity, and as a result, the entire community suffers. Massachusetts has recently shown an interest in improving preschool opportunities for all children in the state, but there is still a lot of work to be done. I examined a number of sources to understand the benefits of early childhood education and the scope of the problem in Massachusetts. In this presentation, I provide an overview of the problem and suggest three potential policy alternatives to address it. These alternatives include the implementation of An Act Relative to Early Education and Care, the universal preschool model in Oklahoma, and the universal early educational system in France. I evaluated each of these options based on accessibility, high quality, and political feasibility. I will discuss the policy solution that best meets these criteria. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 40 Abstracts • Oral Sessions COMMUNICATION 24 Room 903 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Kelsey Cintolo, Michael Morgan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Communication, UMass Amherst Gender and class stereotypes: Do media influence belief in stereotypes of working-class and middle-class mothers and fathers? This study will look at people’s perceptions of class and gender in families, and if those perceptions align with television depictions. Multiple studies in media research have focused on the content of television shows, finding consistent stereotypical patterns of depictions of middle and working class fathers and mothers. Yet, no research has shown whether these consistent patterns have any effect on viewers’ attitudes or beliefs. Based on the theory of cultivation analysis, I will be looking to see if people who are heavier viewers of television have attitudes about middle-class and working-class mothers and fathers that match up with the images of these groups that are dominant on television. I will measure people’s perceptions of characteristics of middle-class and working-class mothers and fathers using a survey. The participants will be given a series of bi-polar opposite adjectives on semantic differential scales, and asked to choose the degree to which each adjective fits a working-class father, working-class mother, middle-class father, or middle-class mother. The survey will also ask about general attitudes about class and gender separately, as well as how much television the participants watch. There are no results yet, as the data are still being collected. I expect the results to show that heavier television viewers’ perceptions are more strongly aligned with what is shown on television. The implications for such findings could be an increased awareness of how media affect stereotypes, and how to combat the reinforcement of negative stereotypes. 25 Room 903 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Sara Clarke, Michael Morgan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Communication, UMass Amherst Marriage Italian Style, From the 1960s and Today While families have often been studied in American film, the wife role in Italian film has been largely ignored in scholarly works. This study will compare interaction patterns of the wife figure within the family in 1960s films to films from the 2000s. Possible findings may detect a change in how family members communicate with the wife figure in ways that reflect larger social shifts. Using an adaptation of fourteen communication behaviors examined in earlier content analyses, this study codes women’s interactions with family members from seven Italian films from the 1960s and seven Italian films from the 2000s. By honing in on these female roles in Italian cinema in the 1960s I will be able to reflect on patterns that were taking place culturally at this time regarding communication behavior patterns in family life. I will then be able to compare this decade with the present, and comment on any trends that have evolved from this revolutionary decade in Italian cinema. Notable limitations include a restricted sample of films based on availability and time constraints. This study will serve to examine some of the theoretical or social implications of the image of the Italian family by examining communication behaviors between wives and other family members in Italian films from the 1960s and 2000s. It will show important trends in wives’ communication behavior patterns in the context of the family during these decades. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 41 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 26 Room 808 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Sebastian Clarkin, Joyce Fernandes (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Communication, Bristol Community College Sell It To Me: The Poetry of Advertisement This presentation will demonstrate how advertising communicates ideas to us in a way that no other medium can, and argue that advertising satisfies an itch that no other medium can scratch. Specific attention will be given to the communication model (source, encoding, message, decoding, receiver), Aristotle’s studies on persuasion (ethos, logos, pathos), and Abraham Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs. Specific advertisements will illustrate the notion that ads can and should break past the communicational barriers of cynicism and apathy and connect with an audience emotionally. 27 Room 163 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Kaitlin Hicks, Mary Baker (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Communication, Fitchburg State University Changes in Film Distribution The purpose of this research was to create an overview of film distribution history and analyze changes in distribution for patterns. This was done by researching major events in film distribution history such as theatrical, television, homeviewing, and digital distribution and discussing how each method of distribution was affected by shifts in audience expectations and changes in technology. Based on the patterns observed, possible trends for the future of film distribution are discussed. 28 Room 903 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Samantha Kennedy, Michael Morgan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Communication, UMass Amherst Parental Opinions on Television Genres for Middle School-Aged Children Middle school is a time of transition for the average child. Because of this, parents often have particular views about what their children should be watching on television. The purpose of this study is to determine if there are common characteristics in parents and/or their children that lead to similar opinions. In addition, this study will compare the parents’ opinions about violent, sexual, and other programs to their opinions about shows regarding pregnancy, which have recently become a kind of fad in the media. A target number of 100 parents with children between the ages of 11 and 14 will be surveyed regarding their opinions about various television genres, among which are violent, sexual, pregnancy-based content, and others. Parents will also be asked for demographic information about themselves and their child. They will also be asked to compare how appropriate various genres are for their child to how appropriate they are for other children. Data are currently being collected. It is expected that parents will find the comedies, pregnancy-based shows, violent shows, and sexual shows inappropriate, especially for younger children. Demographic patterns (in terms of race, age, etc.) that produce differences in parental opinions will be explored. This study will determine what parents believe to be inappropriate for children, which may cause the television ratings for programs to be questioned. Implications of demographic information on parents’ views will be determined. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 42 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 29 Room 903 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Kyle Lunt, Michael Morgan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Communication, UMass Amherst Exploring Facebook’s Relationship to Parental Attachment, Independence, and Academic Adjustment of College Students In a culture of ever-emerging social media technologies, our interpersonal interactions with those around us are in a constant state of change. It is important to monitor that change in order to analyze and understand its societal and cultural implications. This study seeks to investigate how the use of Facebook relates to a number of critical variables important to the parent-college student relationship, including parental attachment, overall independence, and adjustment to college. Existing research explores how and by whom Facebook is used, and even how college students feel about their parents using Facebook. Other studies have looked at attachment and independence in relation to collegiate adjustment; however, there remains a gap in the research, in that these variables have not been previously connected to Facebook use. The data for this study will come from a 45 question, multiple choice survey administered to undergraduates at UMass Amherst. Data will be collected and analyzed over the Spring 2012 semester. The results from this study could support one end of a “two tailed” hypothesis: that Facebook use with parents correlates with healthy attachment, the promotion of individuation, and subsequently adjustment and success, OR that it correlates negatively with healthy attachment, leading to increased dependence, suppressed individuation, and subsequently undermining adjustment and success. Independence, parental attachment, and ability to adjust to the collegiate academic environment are all important factors that can impact the future success of students. This study hopes to investigate the potential role Facebook plays in this process. 30 Room 903 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Allison Messier, Michael Morgan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Communication, UMass Amherst Generational Communication: How Cell Phones Shape Parent-College Student Relationships As cell phone technology continues to evolve, the use of cell phones by college students seems to be extremely widespread. There is extensive research on information and communication technologies (ICTs), but little regarding the ways in which these devices facilitate communication between university students and their parents. This study aims to delve into the patterns of cell phone usage and implications on relationships between university students and parents while the students are away at school. Using both conventional and online surveys, patterns of cell phone usage among undergraduate UMass students and parents of undergraduates are analyzed. In addition, students and parents are asked about their perceptions of their own parent-child relationships. Data are being collected. I hypothesize that more frequent communication goes with perceptions of closer relationships. Students who contact their parents more often using their cell phones while away at school should report their relationships to be closer. Gender and age of the university students may serve as significant variables impacting their communication patterns and their feelings of closeness with their parents. Limitations of this research include the small sample size being only undergraduate students at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. This research adds another dimension to understanding the role of new technologies in shaping communication patterns among family members. A child living away at a college ultimately affects the relationship between a parent and child. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 43 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 31 Room 903 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Elizabeth Mullane, Michael Morgan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Communication, UMass Amherst Shared Social Media Between Parent and Child as a Preventive Measure to Cyberbullying “Cyberbullying” is modern form of harassment that has become alarmingly more prevalent within the last 10 years, with recent data indicating that over a third of children have been cyberbullied. In the worst case scenarios, this harassment has led victims to suicide. The purpose of the study is to evaluate the effectiveness of a proposed parental mediation technique: shared social media. The hypothesis is that shared social media and overlapping interests between parent and child while browsing the Internet can act as a deterrent to cyberbullying threats. By putting the parent in a position to be more aware of these threats, they will be in a better position to understand and react to them. This study will examine the typical Internet activities of both high school freshmen and parents. As many as 100 child and parent pairs will be surveyed about shared social networking sites, frequency of use, ease/areas of access, and prior cyberbullying experience. Data are currently being collected from high schools in the greater Boston area. Limitations include a small sample size. The data collected will provide insight into the validity of the stated hypothesis, particularly through the lens of other relevant factors, such as age, sex, and accessibility. This study will also reveal the extent of overlap between parent and child Internet usage, especially in regards to social networking. 32 Room 808 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Sara Pedersen, Diane Prusank (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Communication, Westfield State University Still Matter Facebook users generate far more photographic content than users of other social network sites. Each of the 845 million users currently on Facebook (2012) presents their own identity through their profile pictures. Building on previous research on identity and social network use (Marwick & Boyd 2011; Boyd 2007) this study further explores what types of pictures users are posting and the reasons they make particular choices about their photos. A qualitative content analysis of profile pictures of a sample of nine subjects, whose ages range from 17 to 47, was performed to identify trends and patterns among the users. This study also utilized an electronic, open-ended survey on a sample of twenty-five Facebook users inquiring as to reasons for selecting the photos that they post. Similar intentions for posting photos appeared among all of the users. Patterns emerged among smaller subsets of the users, and these patterns presented differences between the particular groups of the users. It is clear that users post photos keeping their audience in mind and the desire to keep viewers interested in them, but the guidelines and rules that users follow to achieve this varies greatly. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 44 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 33 Room 903 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Rebeka Robillard, Michael Morgan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Communication, UMass Amherst Adoption Attitudes and Media Exposure Televised representations of adoption tend to be exceptionally dramatic, often depicting this institution in a negative light. Adopted children are often presented as unstable, abandoned, and second best to a biological child. Similarly, adoptive parents are incapable of being “real” parents, while birth parents are frequently described as abandoning their child. Cultivation theory suggests that such portrayals may affect society’s perspective on adoption, yet there is surprisingly little research linking the two. This study was conducted to determine if greater levels of television exposure are correlated with more negative views about adoption. Students at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, were asked to complete a survey to measure opinions about adoption as well as other family values. The survey also includes questions that measure amount of television exposure in general as well as exposure to genres such as sitcoms, reality shows, talk shows, and the news. Data collection is still in progress. If the hypothesis is to be supported, students who spend the most time watching television will have more negative and stereotypical attitudes towards adoption. Media, especially television, may subtly influence cultural attitudes by perpetuating negative and stereotypical images of adoption. This may be a source of stigma for adopted individuals and their families. 34 Room 903 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Stephanie Viens, Michael Morgan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Communication, UMass Amherst Communication and Closeness in the Grandparent-Grandchild Relationship Many variables come into play when discussing the interpersonal relationship between a grandparent and grandchild. This study examines intergenerational communication between grandparents and young-adult grandchildren in relation to closeness of the relationship. Contact frequency and several communication technologies are examined to see how forms and frequencies of communication intersect with emotional intimacy in the relationship. Knowing whether certain technologies are related to feelings of closeness or distance is pivotal for intergenerational relationships. Using questionnaires distributed on the University of Massachusetts Amherst campus, data were collected from college-age students that describe contact and closeness with their grandparents. The data will reveal associations between frequency of contact and closeness within the GP-GC relationship. The usage behaviors of seven different communication technologies will reveal whether certain forms are associated with more or less frequent contact and the degree of relational closeness. Students’ answers may be restricted by which grandparents they provide information for. Students’ grandparents may have recently passed away, or a student may have more than the four examined grandparents. Implications of this study involve a potential change in which communication technologies are selected by members of an intergenerational relationship, and the knowledge of how contact frequency may be related to closeness. It may support research claiming that low contact frequency is associated with low relational quality. If certain forms of communication technology are related to close or distant relationships, it may be suggested that some technologies enable more intimate communication than others. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 45 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 35 Room 903 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Kathryn Walsh, Michael Morgan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Communication, UMass Amherst Effects of Digital Video Recorders on Cohabiting Couples This study aims at assessing whether having a DVR in the home leads to a happier romantic relationship. This study focuses specifically on women in heterosexual relationships. Consequently the research question for this study is two fold: (A) does owning a DVR lead to less conflict over what to watch on television? and (B) does owning a DVR allow women in a relationship the ability to explore separate interests from their partners without having to sacrifice “together time”? For this research, a survey is being administered to women in heterosexual cohabiting relationships. A general comparison will be made between those who own DVRs and those who do not in terms of their overall happiness in their relationships. For those women who do have DVRs further questions will be asked in the survey to try and assess what these women are getting out of their DVRs that leads to a happier relationship overall. Data are currently being collected, but it is predicted that overall women with DVRs will be happier in their respective relationships and agree that the DVR allows them time and opportunity to explore separate viewing interests from their partners without conflicting with “together time.” Once all of the data have been collected this study will scientifically examine the many claims from the news media and DVR manufacturers that having a DVR is beneficial to couples. 36 Room 903 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Emily White, Michael Morgan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Communication, UMass Amherst Problems Affecting the Television Family: A Longitudinal Study Psychological and sociological theories hold that what is portrayed by the media can have profound effects on its consumers and those surrounded by it. The goal of this study is to examine the differences in what the media have presented as normative family problems over the course of several decades and the differences in how the problems were resolved. This study will be a content analysis of television sitcoms and dramas from the 1950s through the 2000s. Shows will be obtained through online sources and will be randomly selected from a list of all episodes available. Each episode will be coded for several variables. Problems and solutions within the episodes will be described and collapsed into categories. Data will be analyzed to determine if the types of problems and solutions affecting television families have changed and in what ways. Problems affecting television families are expected to increase in complexity and seriousness over the course of the decades studied. This change is expected to be more marked in television dramas that deal with more serious subject matter. The change may be evident in the types of problems presented in episodes or the length of time it takes to resolve those problems. The results of this study will reveal media messages about normative family life that many real families use to gauge their own experiences and could shed light on important cultural shifts and changes in institutional practices. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 46 Abstracts • Oral Sessions COMMUNITY OR PUBLIC SERVICE 37 Reading Room 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Raquel Boudreau, Gloria DiFulvio (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Fighting Infection: Injection Drug Use, HIV/AIDS and Springfield’s Latino Population Raquel Alves Boudreau PURPOSE: In recognizing the tremendous rate of HIV/AIDS infection within Springfield’s Latino demographic, along with national population projections estimating the racial demographics anticipated growth in the year 2030, my project reviews alternatives for reducing rates of HIV transmission and infection within the Hispanic population. Focusing on Springfield’s Latino demographic, this project also acknowledges injection drug use as a leading form of viral transmission. In so doing, this paper specifically focuses on comprehensive policy alternatives aimed at reducing the rate of HIV transmission through injection drug use, with the intent of containing infection rates within Springfield’s Latino community. METHODS: Information was accessed through University of Massachusetts Amherst library databases, government reports, as well as personal communications with current HIV prevention operatives. RESULTS: Social stigmas regarding drug use inhibit injection drug users from seeking vital HIV treatment, while national statistics show that poverty and lack of education limit health care literacy among Latinos specifically. The most comprehensive policy solution would, therefore, provide culturally specific services tailored to the socio-economic needs of the racial demographic—consequently decreasing rates of infection, transmission, and viral progression to AIDS. CONCLUSION: In order to promote and protect the health and wellness of Springfield inhabitants and ultimately, the nation at large, action must be taken in order to reduce HIV infection and transmission within the growing Hispanic population. By increasing accessibility through the provision of affordable and harm-reductive services, such as personal counseling and needle exchange programs, Springfield’s Latino community of users can receive the education and treatment necessary for prevention. Transferring research into action, this project also bridges the gap between research and study by recognizing HIV transmission as a salient issue for UMass students. Steps were, therefore, drafted in prospects of organizing UMass students to take action in ensuring the health and safety of the UMass campus, by committing to talking about comprehensive sexual education-in light of the existing danger HIV/AIDS poses to members of the growing Latino population, and ultimately, the UMass community at large. 38 Reading Room 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Hanan Bumpus, Gloria DiFulvio (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Ensuring that All Communities Have Their Voices Heard: Community Education and Engaging our Elected Representatives A major factor in the construction and perpetuation of the sub-prime lending crisis was the lack of consumer education and awareness of the predatory practices that many banks and other institutions were engaging in. In addition to this, many individuals do not have the resources or support to be engaged in the political processes that make decisions concerning this issue and many other decisions that affect us so greatly. Education and empowerment is one form of consumer protection. Many of the community members at the Amherst Survival Center face situations such as home foreclosure, an inability to afford food and health insurance, unemployment, and other circumstances that we often hear our elected representatives deliberating on. This organizing project is designed to allow these community members to engage and interact with their elected representatives in order to voice their opinions and tell their stories. In this presentation, I first identify the community’s needs gathered through dialogues and surveys. I then discuss the strategy developed to organize a community education event about the positions of different politicians on the particular issues of most interest to the community. In addition to this, I will describe a letter writing/calling in session campaign to inform our elected officials about this issue and how it affects our respective community. Finally, I hope to organize and describe a voter registration event for the Amherst Survival Center community. The ultimate goal is to give community members voice during election season. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 47 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 39 Reading Room 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Erica Rothschild, Gloria DiFulvio (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Reducing Recidivism though Stronger Social Re-entry One in two-hundred Americans are incarcerated. With such a statistic, our corrective system should be dedicated to rehabilitation. Our country’s punitive justice system, ex-offenders face many challenges as they try to integrate back into mainstream society with their criminal record. Unfortunatelythe re-entry programs fall short of rehabilitation. Interested in organizing around this issue, I decided to focus my efforts on the social aspect of reintegration into society. This is important to me because I do not think people who have made mistakes once should be penalized for the rest of their lives. Given my skill set, I want to use communication and diverse views to affect change in the social realm. The discrimination ex-offenders face can be discouraging, but more difficult to shake is the psychological hurdle of being an unwanted presence. I am organizing local leaders and community members for a dialogue summit, to discuss their thoughts on these issues and actively help ease the reentry process for ex-offenders. My goal is to empower each individual to realize his or her agency to help ex-offenders readjust to society through positive social interactions. COMPARATIVE LITERATURE 40 Room 163 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Karl Rozyn, Keja Valens (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Salem State University Lenny Bruce is Not Afraid: Profanity in the Post-Modern World Our parents’ cursing seems mild. The same words that blacklisted Lenny Bruce have been fired across the floor of the Senate. Critically acclaimed films – Reservoir Dogs, Boondock Saints, The Big Lebowski, to name a handful – can now average an f-word every 30 seconds or less. In every place and time, language has contained words that are considered taboo or offensive, words with the power to shock and appall. Profanity in American English has traditionally been associated with sexual, scatological, and racial or gender themes. As we’ve moved into the post-modern world, those themes have shifted in both their importance to popular culture and the meanings contained within them. As Americans, we haven’t failed to shift our perceptions of offensiveness to follow suit. In the face of the banality of repetition, is it even possible to be broadly offensive? Is there any word I can reach for that actually adds vulgar emphasis? Does the era of Civil Rights, feminism, gay marriage, and political correctness reduce the impact of some curses or does it just enhance others? This paper explores cultural and artistic change and its impact on the vulgar and the profane. I am looking at film and music as cultural indicators of acceptability, in conjunction with FCC and MPAA guidelines. Additionally, I am conducting interviews (formal and informal) and accumulating survey data regarding perceptions of vulgarity and key words in particular. My data is currently limited regionally to New England, but with an eye to expanding scope across the nation. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 48 Abstracts • Oral Sessions COMPUTER SCIENCE 41 Room 162 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Anna Gavrilman, Duc Tran (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Computer Science, UMass Boston Data Storage for Social Networks Online social networking has become ubiquitous. For a social storage system to keep pace with increasing amounts of user data and activities, an intuitive solution is to deploy more servers. An important problem then is how to partition the data across the servers so that server efficiency and load balancing can both be achieved. This problem is especially challenging for social data storage because we have to take into account the data’s social relationships which imply how often certain data are accessed together in a transaction. Many partitioning schemes already exist but they are not socially-aware; they do not take into account these social relationships. We undertake a novel approach which models data partitioning as a socially-aware optimization problem. Specifically, we propose SPUT, an efficient socially-aware partitioning solution which factors in not only how actively users read and write data but also how often sociallyconnected users want the data of each other. S-PUT’s desirable properties are substantiated in our evaluation study. 42 Room 162 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Freddy Pietter, Vanessa Diana (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Computer Science, Westfield State University Cloud Computing in the Educational Environment PURPOSE: Teachers and students face a number of challenges based on time, geographic, and economic factors that often minimize the learning experience. This study argues that several Internet-based resources can help overcome such limitations. METHODS: This study surveys some of the most-used services, tools, and platforms offered in the worldwide network. Through comparison and description of the available options, the study evaluates best practices for using on-line tools to enhance teaching and learning. RESULTS: Services like cloud storage can be implemented individually and/or collectively as aids to limit time conflicts among peers and the obstacle imposed by distance. Other services that facilitate and reinforce the learning experience include, but are not limited to, e-Books, micro-blogging, on-line learning suites, and web casting. Most of these services are either free or very affordable. While there are some drawbacks to these services, they represent advantages to teachers and students. CONCLUSION: People use cloud computing on a daily basis for many tasks, from banking to shopping to socializing with others. However, most people underestimate that using technological tools to improve learning and collaborative work in schools, colleges and universities boosts students’ engagement with the material and provides professors a wider range of possible teaching tools . 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 49 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 43 Room 162 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Gary Savoie, Larry Griffith (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Computer Science, Westfield State University Understanding the World’s Transition from IPv4 to IPv6 PURPOSE: Every Internet-capable device requires an Internet Protocol address in order to access the Internet. For years there has been a constant debate surrounding when all of the existing IPv4 addresses will be exhausted, forcing the world to transition to the newer protocol of IPv6. This is a world-wide issue, with multiple countries facing the same challenges proposed by the transition. METHODS: Using scholarly literature accessed through the Westfield State University library database, as well as other recently published technology articles, this paper examines the world’s issues, solutions and benefits of making the conversion from IPv4 to IPv6. RESULTS: The transition from IPv4 to IPv6 will cause changes on multiple levels including hardware, software, technician support. The most drastic alterations will be for Internet Service Providers and companies; however, the benefit of the additional address space which IPv6 offers outweighs transitional expenditure. The cost for both companies and ISPs to make the transition will be extreme, but the services and additional benefits which IPv6 provides will allow for the annual saving of millions of dollars. Additionally, the transition is also a time-sensitive issue; therefore, companies must also determine the proper time to make their move. In recent years, the transition from IPv4 to IPv6 has ignited into a global issue as countries add more devices to the Internet, exhausting address space faster than ever before. CONCLUSION: The transition will be much slower than anticipated; estimates suggest that the transition will develop over a twenty-five year period before reaching completion. The reality is that in order to sustain the exponential growth of the Internet, all users will have to make the transition to IPv6. 44 Room 162 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Daniel Stubbs, Andrew McGregor (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Computer Science, UMass Amherst Visualization of Algorithms for Massive Data Sets PURPOSE: Incredibly fast and efficient methods for processing large amounts of data in real time are of enormous utility in the internet age. We developed a pedagogical and research tool that demonstrates visually the workings of these sublinear data stream algorithms for users who want to understand, explain, or develop them. METHODS: We used streaming algorithms literature to identify likely targets for visualization. The graphical, input, and data processing portions of the project are all implemented in the Java programming language. RESULTS: The streaming algorithm visualizer was successfully implemented, and is seeing use in a number of contexts. It’s being used to display sketches for estimating point and range values in UMass Amherst’s graduate streaming algorithms course. It’s also seeing use in ongoing research on the development of data stream algorithms here at the university. Further, one of the changes made to the CountMin algorithm to simplify it for display purposes seems to produce more accurate results in practice than the version presented in the original paper. CONCLUSION: Visualization of the normally invisible processes of large data set processors is useful to anyone who deals with them or wants to deal with them. The process of translating an algorithm into something that can be visually displayed frequently offers new insights into how it works and how it could be improved. The visualizer is available online at cs.umass.edu/~dstubbs/streaming/visualizer. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 50 Abstracts • Oral Sessions ECONOMICS 45 Room 176 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Matthew Denny, Ryan Acton (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Sociology, UMass Amherst Networks and Endogenous Segmentation Understanding the network dynamics and relational properties of an evolutionary process are essential to drawing valid inferences about individual behavior. One of the main goals of evolutionary microeconomics has been to explain and understand the persistence of cooperative human behavior, often in the face of better payoffs to non-cooperative behavior. While the models of evolutionary microeconomics capture the importance of relative payoffs in an evolutionary process, by and large, the models employed by economists do not include network dynamics. This paper seeks to meld together the insights of network analysis and evolutionary microeconomics with the hopes of both better understanding emergent social structures and the evolution of individual behaviors. A central focus is placed on the role of community structure in supporting cooperation. A model is developed where “network homophily” (Centola et al., 2006) and community structure bound a process of payoff-based differential replication. 46 Room 176 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Neil Masiello, Weichu Xu (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Management, Framingham State University The Mismatch of Skilled Labor in the Work Force The main purpose of this study was to investigate and identify the key factors that have influenced the current and projected mismatch of skilled labor in the work force of New England. The primary focuses of research were of trends in education, population migration, public policy and the demand for labor. Each area has been carefully researched, analyzed and examined with current population data and the results are the basis of the thesis. The methods used to validate the information were quantitative and statistical in nature. The population and labor demand data have been extracted from local government websites as well the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The Educational data has been collected from local and national surveys conducted by accredited firms and the public policy data has been inspected from the many local governments’ public archives as well as the national archive of public policy. The results of the study revealed each area has attributed in some way to the ever-growing gap between highly skilled labor and the lower skill requiring positions. The issue that has been discovered is this, the demand for positions of middle to low skill labor is increasing faster than the supply from the labor force, if there is no public intervention the future of all the skilled labor force may be in danger. 47 Room 176 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Samuel Offei, Susan McPherson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English Literature, Quinsigamond Community College Conscious Capitalism: A New Way of Business Model This research describes the concept of “Conscious Capitalism,” a new, more tolerant approach to business management. It describes how the context for business has changed in principle in the past forty years, calling for a new way of business that deals with consciousness among customers and employees. It is vital that business get on the right side of society rather than habitually adding to societal burdens, as is generally the case since the adoption of capitalism in the western world. A conscious approach to business is based on the adoption of a higher purpose that goes beyond profits and a shareholders--a conscious, service-oriented leadership. Corporations do not owe society any capital investment but they have a moral responsibility to society. Since the introduction of compassionate capitalism in the late sixties, more private corporations are conforming to the notion as a model for most businesses realizing that, compassionate capitalism, or conscious capitalism, does not necessarily mean socialism although they might have some parallels. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 51 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 48 Room 176 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Thomas Peake, Rus Janis (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Economics, UMass Amherst Industrial Organization of Massachusetts’ Craft Beer Industry The craft beer industry has seen a massive resurgence in the United States since the industry emerged from virtual extinction in the late 1960s. Even as overall global demand for beer actually decreases on a yearly basis, many regional craft breweries have experienced startling growth, with output growing on average by 11% in 2010. But some regions are more attractive places to get a foot up in craft brewing than others. Any map of craft breweries will show that they tend to cluster in areas like Southern Maine, Denver, Seattle, Greater Boston and, indeed, the Pioneer Valley. Using the most recent official data on the industry (2009), my project will test the hypothesis that regional factors such as age, income, ethnicity, and political affiliation have a correlation to whether or not a geographic region will become a host to a craft beer industry cluster or not. EDUCATION 49 Room 809 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Brandon Agnew, Shastri Akella (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, UMass Amherst The Gap Year: Bridging the Gap The purpose of the research paper is to investigate how programs such as “Where There Be Dragons”, in offering high school students a foreign experiential learning in their gap year (between secondary and university studies) equips them with the soft skills necessary to succeed in the professional working environment. The paper builds on anecdotal research from organizations that run gap programs and on statistical data mined from educational institutions and global marketing and technology organization to make a claim: that the exposure gained by students over the gap year enhances their performance in both their academic and professional lives by bridging the disconnect between their adolescent self – prevalent in high school and the adult – who is expected to be responsible for achieving academic and professional excellence. Finally, the paper also suggests alternatives available to those students who have already ventured into their college education without a gap year and to those who cannot travel to a foreign country. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 52 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 50 Room 809 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Lauren Denio, Laura Baker (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Education, Westfield State University Universal Design for Learning: Challenging One-Size-Fits-All Curricula Purpose: I will explain the goals and principles of Universal Design for Learning (UDL) and argue the value of its use in every classroom setting. UDL is an educational framework that challenges and engages students without limiting their skills by always having to work with their academic weaknesses. I argue that, based on the research, UDL supports individualization in a way that is manageable for educators and promotes student success. Methods: My primary source used to gather information on Universal Design for Learning is The Center for Applied Special Technology, the organization that originally developed the framework and outlines the research as well as defines the standards. For continued support of my presentation, the National UDL Center helps implement UDL by providing resources and information about it to the community and supports advocacy. Results: The outcome of UDL has been the rejection of homogeneous curricula for all students. Standardization is not beneficial when it forces students to try to learn something in a way that does not work for them. UDL has shown that when educators allow students to have autonomy by giving them choices, they naturally are inclined to choose a method which suits their needs and works with their strengths. Conclusion: Universal Design for Learning is one of the methods that despite having survived the ultimate test of real use in the classroom, has not been fully implemented everywhere. In order for educators to plan for variability as the norm, the realization must be made that the disability lies within the curriculum, not our students. 51 Room 803 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Daniel Teo, Henry Pineda, Justin Diamond, JOSEPH MODUGNO (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, North Shore Community College The Impact Mutual Interaction between School and Student Has on Mutual Success Purpose: There is much controversy over the comparison of positives and negatives regarding two-year community colleges and four-year universities. The vision of this study is to portray the qualities from both educations as a tool of enlightenment to high school students uncertain of a path that may be right for them. The depth of the study is an observation of the current ways in which the schools interact with the students beyond classrooms, as well as the potential steps that can be taken to ensure the most student success. Methods: Supportive research in this evaluation includes analyzations concerning components of multiple two-year and four-year schools. The components most heavily reported on comprise of schools’ academic records, instructor rating as well as courses and the endeavors of curricula and students. Results: Through the research and comparison of the aforementioned components in various educational institutions, the instructors often held a high percentage in the success of a student in a specific course. Contrary to that, a course’s scope itself often posed as a hindrance to a student’s success. Indications regarding the correlation of student success and student involvement with institutional activity arose supporting the idea that students and schools alike must work together for mutual success. Conclusion: The collaborative work between students of communities who have been historically marginalized and educators promote a vision of education that counters the multiple forms of oppression, promotes community activism and generates spaces of love, hope and success. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 53 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 52 Room 809 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Corinne Glennie, Glen Brewster (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University Not Another Worksheet! Bridging the Gap between Mathematical Research and Current Practice Across the United States, mathematics teachers often rely on traditional lecture-style format when instructing their students. The average teacher in the United States spends over fifty percent of class time reviewing content and only twenty-three percent of time introducing new concepts (Brahier, 2009). However, as pressure mounts on school districts for students’ performances to improve on standardized tests, research continues to tout the benefits of hands-on, inquiry based learning over lecture format (Brahier, 2009). This presentation first describes contemporary math education research and current conditions in the classroom, and then investigates the division between research and methods in current practice. Finally, the presentation will conclude with suggestions for the future and with a demonstration of how teachers can incorporate simple activities to further advance their students’ understanding of mathematical concepts. 53 Room 809 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 James Madigan, Vanessa Diana (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Education, Westfield State University State of the Arts: Weighing Threats to Arts Education in the U.S. 1. PURPOSE Arts Education programs in the United States are in constant peril of being cut. This would be devastating both for students and for the cultural future of America, and must be prevented. 2. METHODS This study draws on the work of education scholar Sir Ken Robinson, PhD, an advocate of educational reform, and author of several books on the topic of educational theory and implementation in modern society. In addition to Robinson’s work, it utilizes education journals, investigations into the effect and effectiveness of standardized tests, and news reports on the impact of the recent economic difficulties on school budgets, and arts programs. 3. RESULTS The current crisis can be traced to both economic and social factors. Sweeping financial crunches have led to the elimination of arts programs, despite advocates’ arguments to the contrary. In addition to economic woes, the educational focus has shifted in recent years to meet the requirements of standardized tests, and prioritizing test-related subjects often eclipses support for arts programs. This support is desperately needed, as arts programs imbue students with critical thinking, co-operation, and analytical skills not taught elsewhere in the curriculum. 4. CONCLUSION: In order to save arts programs, the nation must rethink how it views the impact they have, both on students and society as a whole. By overhauling a failed system, America can not only save arts programs, but improve the education system as whole, greatly benefitting future generations. 54 Reading Room 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Alexandra Martines, Gloria DiFulvio (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst The War for the Internet In January 2012, the Stop Online Piracy Act was shelved due to immense public outcry. That day, the people of the Internet breathed a collective sigh of relief. However, we had won the battle but not the war. With the Protecting Children from Internet Pornographers Act and the recent shut down of content-hosting website Megaupload, it has become clear that the Internet’s freedom is under threat. My presentation will explore the ways people across the United States organize to protect the Internet through campaigns to vote anti-Internet freedom legislators out of office and produce legislation that protects Americans from government censorship of Internet content and surveillance of lawabiding individual’s information and Internet habits. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 54 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 55 Room 803 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Nicholas Moreau, Michael Lee (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Communication, Fitchburg State University Food Allergies in Schools I will be presenting a short video documentary that I made on food allergies and how they affect children in schools. Through the video, I will be exploring the policies that schools put in place to help children with their allergies and their effectiveness, and determining whether or not school policies go far enough to make children with food allergies feel safe and comfortable in the environment. The documentary will contain interviews of professionals and school faculty, as well as children with food allergies and their parents in order to thoroughly examine the issue at hand. I will attempt to determine which policies make children with allergies feel the most safe and comfortable at school, and create the most healthy and effective learning environment. 56 Room 809 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Ceira O’Brien, Janara Abramsen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Education, Westfield State University The Game of School As children progress through the school system, many lose the spark and interest they once had for learning. They become obsessed with grades, resumes, and being considered the “best” in the class. The students rush to get work done and will do whatever it takes to get the best grade they can, even if that means cheating, lying, or plagiarizing. Teachers become stressed out by the pressure to get their kids to pass the MCAS and other standardized tests. They begin replacing valuable lessons with MCAS preparation days. Teachers are put under pressure because of evaluations and classroom observers who may even have the power to take away their job. There are many causes for students’ loss of interest in school such as the disappearance of hands-on activities replaced by lectures and notes and the exchange of the term “learning” for “working.” The children have to master “the game” to get by. They must do all the work teachers ask even if it’s pointless or boring, achieve high grades by any means, and pass the tests to show that they have “learned” the material that has been “covered.” These issues have been brought up and explored in “The Game Of School” by Robert Fried, and we are going to explore a little deeper and see what kind of resolutions may be possible to avoid putting children through “the game of school.” 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 55 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 57 Room 809 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Katelyn Sassorossi, Robert Maloy (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Education, UMass Amherst Investigating Use of Online Tutors in 4th and 5th Grade Mathematics: Conditions and Constraints in Web-Based Learning This research explores the use of a web-based tutoring system by selected 4th and 5th grade classes to promote learning success with mathematics word problems. The web-based program, 4mality: 4-coach Mathematics Active Learning Intelligent Tutoring System, provides practice and preparation for 3rd through 6th grade students in understanding and solving mathematical word problems, such as those on standardized math achievement tests like the MCAS. Each module in 4mality consists of a pre-test, practice questions, and post-test exploring a topic from the Massachusetts math curriculum framework. Each practice question in the module is accompanied by four different tutoring strategies. The strategies represent the 4mality tutors: Estella Explainer, the language coach; Chef Math Bear, the math book coach; How-to Hound, the strategy coach; and Visual Vicuna, the chart, graph and animation coach. The purpose of all four tutors is to help students of different academic strengths. Collectively, the tutors provide language, computation, strategy, and visual information. Students may choose to view strategies from 4, 3, 2, 1 or none of the tutors. Each of the students’ choices is tracked electronically to help us identify the more popular and/or most used tutoring methods. This presentation will highlight results from the use of 4mality by 4th and 5th graders in Massachusetts, Georgia, and Maine during the 2011-2012 school year. Use of tutors will be discussed, including the following topics: 1) examining preferences of students who are struggling math learners compared with students who are performing on or above grade level; 2) differences in tutor use by gender and grade level; 3) similarities or differences between students with and without IEP designation. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 58 Room 168 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Rojay Wagner, Aura Ganz (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Electrical Engineering, UMass Amherst Portable Gait Analysis System Using an Android Smartphone Gait analysis systems are powerful tools in the monitoring and rehabilitation of many health conditions which result in an altered gait (such as Parkinson’s disease and rheumatoid arthritis), along with the injury of lower limbs. However, current systems that provide accurate gait monitoring and analysis are large and expensive, and therefore are available only in professional settings. The goal of this research is to develop and test a Portable and Accurate Gait Analysis System, denoted PAGAS, which enables patients to monitor their own gait and track their progress and improvement over time. Moreover, PAGAS will enable therapists to follow the progress of their patients over time without the need for multiple visits required at a rehabilitation facility, thus saving significant healthcare costs. PAGAS includes footswitches and a microcontroller, which connects to an Android Smartphone using Bluetooth communication. An application on the Smartphone analyzes the raw data to produce temporal gait parameters that are displayed to the user through a graphical user interface. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 56 Abstracts • Oral Sessions ENGLISH 59 Room 163 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Jennifer Boyd, Vanessa Diana (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University Sibling Rivalry: A Short Story Purpose: The purpose of this presentation is to share the creative process of writing a short story in a creative writing workshop class, and to read the story to show the outcome of the process. Methods: The presenter will explain the origin of the story, which was inspired by an apocalyptic nightmare. She will then explain the revision process for the story and how she came to incorporate the opinions of her peers and professor. Writing strategies to display the intensity of a nightmare situation include realistic characterization, vivid description, and allusions to both biblical and Greek mythological elements. Finally, the presenter will read the short story. Results: The result of the creative process was a short story about a goddess who, after fighting with her brother, a god of destruction, comes to earth to find it obliterated and underwater. She then embarks on a search to find her son, a demi-god, who she believes can overthrow her brother. The images and themes of the story parallel those found in Greek mythology, the Bible, and the Epic of Gilgamesh. Conclusion: This short story includes the ageless archetypes of the battle of good and evil, creation and destruction, and sibling rivalry. However, the goal of the creative process is to take these timeless ideas and morph them into a new, original story. 60 Room 163 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Hannah Clifford, Vanessa Diana (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University Memoirs of a Former Crybaby: A Narrative on Verbal Bullying Purpose: The narrative shows future teachers and parents that bullying does happen, but it can be overcome and one can grow and learn from the experience. The story also offers some practical suggestions for how to deal with bullying. Methodology: A story about bullying in middle school, this narrative uses first-person perspective, description, and a reflective and informal voice to get its message across about bullying. It also uses a light, comical tone to address the serious issues of bullying in schools. Observations: Parents play an important role in addressing bullying. The narrative describes advice the writer’s mother gave her about dealing with verbal bullying. The narrative also notes how her teacher’s failures to notice and intervene in the bullying in his classroom made it that much worse for her. Finally the narrative demonstrates that bullying has a lasting negative effect on academic performance. Conclusions: It is important for teachers to pay close attention to verbal exchanges between students and to assess how those exchanges are impacting the comfort level of students in their classrooms. What may appear to be harmless teasing could actually something worse. Often verbal bullying is not as obvious as others forms, and teachers need to be prepared to pick up on this subtle bullying. The narrative also shows the importance of parents paying attention to the subtle clues and offering their children guidance. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 57 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 61 Room 101 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Kaila Cummings, Michael Filas (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University Jackson Ryan The purpose of my creative writing piece was to tell a story about the transgressive love between two unconventional characters in the tradition of Robert Frost’s narrative poetry style. I used poetic form to convey a full story in a less familiar way. Narrative poetry is similar to a short story; however, it conveys a story in fewer words. It also has line breaks and repetition to add more depth to the poem. I repeat the subject’s name throughout the narrative--“Jackson Ryan, Jackson Ryan, Jackson Ryan”--because the repetition of adds drama and emotion to reading the poem. This narrative poem is about the forbidden love between a high school teacher and a student. The danger of the love between them makes it even more exciting for them to disobey clearly known rules and to attempt to hide their secret. 62 Room 163 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Molly Fitzell, Vanessa Ramos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Salem State University The Factory: A Dreamt Psychosis Here at Phante Productions we take pride in being the world’s number one supplier of artificial humanoids. We do everything possible to satisfy our customers. Whether you buy a significant other, test child, or just manual labor, we want to provide you with perfection. To ensure your satisfaction, our products are carefully assembled by trained professionals using the latest technology. Our onsite psychoanalysts test humanoids for quality and life span. Every humanoid we sell desires nothing but giving you the life of your dreams. You can have the perfect spouse, the star athlete valedictorian super child, 24/7 help, or the friend you always wanted! Live your dream life among Phante humanoids. “The Factory: A Dreamt Psychosis” is a work of fiction which marries craft techniques and personal philosophy. The work explores structure and point of view, taking inspiration from common elements of magical realism and metafiction. 63 Room 811 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Nicole Godard, Vanessa Diana (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian: Water on the Brain and Controversy in the Classroom PURPOSE: Due to negative criticism and controversy surrounding Sherman Alexie’s young adult novel, The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, the book has been banned from several schools’ curricula, thus depriving students of a profoundly meaningful and relatable coming-of-age story – a decision that must be reversed. METHODS This argument considers the concerns of both scholarly readers and lay readers, Native American and non-Native, as well as the criticism and praise that Alexie’s novel has garnered since its publication. Evidence from the novel itself is used to support both sides of the argument, but ultimately to establish the novel’s validity as a valuable addition to a school’s curriculum. RESULTS The transitional years between being a child and being an adult are difficult for everyone, regardless of race, class, or creed, and yet most young adults are absolutely convinced that they are the only ones who feel the way they do. Alexie’s novel proves that they are wrong, and more importantly, that they are not alone. The novel, while controversial for its use of profanity, racial slurs, and representation of Native Americans, draws in students not only to read it, but to think about issues that have long been ignored and labeled as “too sensitive” to discuss in the classroom. To deprive students of the opportunity to read a message of hope and truth is not only a disservice, but a failure of their education. CONCLUSION Despite many reservations concerning some of the book’s content, the overarching message of love, hope, and growing up that Alexie offers will prove inspiring to young readers and will simultaneously encourage them to think for themselves, an invaluable skill as they march into adulthood. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 58 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 64 Room 101 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Christopher Goudreau, Leah Nielsen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University In the Ghost House Acquainted: The Poetry of Kevin Goodan Purpose: To explicate the themes, naturalistic and religious symbolism, and poetic distinction of Kevin Goodan’s work, In the Ghost-House Acquainted. Methods: Using a close-reading analysis of the poems, this paper traces the themes of mortality, human nature, and religious philosophy within Goodan’s In the Ghost-House Acquainted. Supplementary material within the analysis includes an interview conducted by Duncan Barlow of Astrophil Press and Psalm 23 of the King James Bible. Results: Kevin Goodan uses imagery from nature to show both the beauty and grotesqueness of life. His poetry is about balance, between a homo-centric viewpoint and one which is defined by the natural world. He speaks with an impartial voice, always an observer who captures the daily struggles of life within the confines of In the Ghost-House Acquainted. Conclusion: Goodan draws upon traditional sources to create a litany of sorts, to revere life with absolute conviction. His poetry combines past, present and future in a web of philosophical contemplation; all of which are tied together through his vivid nature imagery. 65 Room 101 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Rachel Lareau, Leah Nielsen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University Song of The Body - Poetry of Lovers, Fathers, and Faith This presentation is a reading and discussion of the poet’s poems written over the past two years. The poems address the difficult issues of racial identity, family, sex, relationships, self love, self harm, and Christianity. Not only is the poetry a reflection on the multifaceted themes of “the Body” but also an examination of how the writer’s voice has developed. 66 Room 163 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Jesse Mangan, Joseph Torra (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, UMass Boston Cling: A Portfolio of Poetry Exploring Dependency Purpose: Often, when people think about dependency issues, they think of extreme cases of alcohol abuse and drug addiction. This collection of free verse poetry was written to explore the relationships between, and consequences of, a variety of dependency issues linked not only to drugs and alcohol, but to relationships, technology, politics, religion and socioeconomic status. Methods: A great deal of observation went into this portfolio. Inspiration was drawn from news stories, memoirs, technology, poetry, fiction, pop culture and life experience. Each piece was written, rewritten, arranged and rearranged countless times in an attempt to leave a poignant impression on the reader. Results: This portfolio often blurs the lines between each of the running themes, begging the reader to question whether any of the vices explored are inherently dangerous, or if abuse is simply part of human nature. Conclusion: It seems that it’s part of human nature to yearn for something to hold onto. In the context of this desire, nothing is inherently dangerous—but anything can become so if misused. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 59 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 67 Room 163 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Ross Martin, Arthur Riss (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Salem State University “Benito Cereno” and Redefining the Detective We all know the archetypal detective story: a detective of superior acumen finds the hidden meaning that to everyone else went unnoticed; and, as such, reconstructs a series of events in order to solve the mystery. Herman Melville’s “Benito Cereno” (1855), however, places the notion of a detective story into question. He shows that to be a detective, to observe clues, and to present an understanding of the “true” meaning tells us more about the person detecting than it ever does about the event. Melville highlights the importance of rejecting the drive to seek an authoritative interpretation of meaning, but to first, and primarily, examine the structure of the argument that is being presented— who is presenting it—what their motives are; and, as a result, attempt to understand that we can never dig down deep enough to get to unadulterated facts; but that facts are always a product of interpretation. 68 Room 101 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Amber Pettell, Gregg Neikirk (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University Getting Away With Murder: The Psychological State of Miss Emily Grierson William Faulkner’s short story “A Rose for Emily” tells the tale of an outcast woman who goes to gruesome lengths to soothe her lonely heart. Desperate for eternal companionship, the aging maid murders her lover to keep him by her side. In most instances such drastic action would characterize Emily as a cold-blooded monster, but there are other explanations for the events of Miss Emily Grierson’s troubled life. Modern psychology has discovered certain socio-psychological forces that might drive an otherwise good natured and sane individual to violence. The power of conformity drives her to commit a horrid crime, which she then adjusted to through minimal justification, and selective exposure. These socio-phenomena allowed her to literally get away with murder physically, morally, and psychologically. These defense mechanisms made it possible for Emily not only to cope with her actions but effectively disassociate herself from the murders and consciously block them out. Miss Grierson’s disassociated mental state allowed her to commit otherwise atrocious acts without remorse or complete awareness. 69 Room 163 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Alexandra Pitzer, Marcella Marold (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, North Shore Community College The Unfair Stereotyping of All Homeschoolers Homeschooling became prevalent in the United States during the 20th century because many parents felt that the changes made in the public educational system were offensive or that it undermined their home values. This study will focus on the issue of socialization, one of the numerous myths held by many opponents of homeschooling, and show that children who are homeschooled are not socially awkward or isolated from interaction with other people and outside resources. Using Scholarly literature and field studies, in addition to my personal positive experience as a homeschooled student for 3 years, this paper will examine the strengths of homeschooling, especially as it relates to the development of highly socialized individuals. The three factors of socialization discussed are social activity, influence, and exposure. Homeschoolers interact with a wider variety of people than public school students, have adequate quantity of social interactions and are exposed to a variety of cultures and beliefs that make up the United States, and research shows that homeschoolers do not participate in society less than the general public. As of 2010 there are over 2 million people in the United States being homeschooled and universities such as MIT, Stanford, Harvard, and Notre Dame have begun to understand the positive results of homeschooling because they accept and even recruit homeschoolers on a regular basis. With the acceptance of homeschoolers into universities the general public will begin to truly comprehend the positive learning experiences different environments can offer. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 60 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 70 Room 163 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Christopher Robinson, Shastri Akella (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, UMass Amherst On Divination Explaining the clockwork of a literary collective is a difficult task, especially in the presence of such tremendous scientific, humanitarian, and rational progress. It is nearly impossible for any single person to make logical what it is we are truly doing, to quantify the musings of the soul. The Butterfield Literary Journal is, simply, the seeker in a complex tangle of hide n’ seek. We are a group of like-minded individuals, searching for the buried sanctums of our peers. Some freely share their work, bleeding profusely the songs of their heart and mind. Others hide their works from us, fearing persecution from a world seemingly dominated by the left side of the mind. What we’re trying to capture is the voice, the essence of the students of this university. Each one of the young adults here dabble in an ink unique to his or her own life, but whether that hand is scribbling the skeleton of an adenine triphosphate molecule, perfecting the language of a mathematical proof, or endowing a page with wispy lines of enamored thought, a uniqueness is being bottled in the framework of personal literary achievement. Students submit to us their work, and if it meets our standard – as pompous as that sounds – then we weave that voice in with the others. We are attempting to carve out lives for the writers among us, to help make flourish the creative spark of the pen. We are researchers, bound to the mind and soul. 71 Room 101 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Lyndon Seitz, Glen Brewster (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University Crafting the Spoken Word This presentation focuses on the differences between written poetry and spoken word poetry, or slam poetry. It gives a brief background on the history of slam poetry, including its origins and development into a widespread cultural phenomenon. Slam poetry emphasizes the rhythm, emotional intensity, and the phonetic devices in the poetry. There is also a strong performance aspect to the style, giving it another dimension not found in written poetry. I will perform several original pieces to illustrate the form. The first poem, “Synthesized Jazz,” demonstrates the importance of rhythm and sound. The second one, “Eclipse,” was designed for a more emotional performance and illustrates the theatrical aspect of the genre. Both examples show the importance of diction, pace, and expression in slam poetry. The genre of slam poetry has been growing in popularity and influence throughout the United States. The two poems, “Synthesized Jazz” and “Eclipse,” serve as examples of the genre. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 61 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 72 Room 101 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Jennifer Shakshober, Marilyn Sandidge (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University The Consequences of Beauty: Sexual Deviance Through Textual Emendation in Early Modern Literature PURPOSE: This paper examines the ways by which past editors have imputed alternative meanings to Shakespeare’s sonnet twenty and Marie de France’s “Lanval,” thus demonstrating the unintended effects of beauty on the speaker and addressee. METHODS: I synthesize critical sources from the field to show how repudiating the Petrarchan framework has allowed early modern writers to explore nonconformist views about sexuality. Meanwhile, I account for the possibility of liberal emendation of these texts at the hands of period editors. RESULTS: Works of British literature during the early modern period connect beauty to such alternative sexual practices as homoeroticism, fetishism, polyamory, and effeminacy. As recent scholarship indicates, however, editors of the Renaissance period would seem to project these aspects on the sonnets of Shakespeare and the lais of Marie de France through their deft manipulation of textual evidence. Shakespeare systematically deconstructs the blazons of his fellow poets, while Marie de France commutes male and female roles, to both undermine Petrarchan convention and renovate the social context in which they write. CONCLUSION: Beauty provides the impetus for gender division rather than coalition, deliberate gender ambiguity, justification for encounters beyond the mere homosocial, and the roots of aberrant sexuality. Early modern editors, while certainly held responsible for their manipulation of period texts, do not assign these meanings but emphasize the nuanced content therein. 73 Room 163 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Sarah Tourigny, Vanessa Ramos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Salem State University Beneath the Stars of Salem “Beneath the Stars of Salem” is a piece of historical fiction in which good does not always conquer evil. Set during Salem’s Maritime history, the story works from firsthand accounts and newspapers of the period located through Salem State University’s library as well as draws inspiration from the maritime collection on display at the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Mass. “Beneath the Stars of Salem” aims to explore the dynamics of how people interact in a society, and how “unjust” actions committed by one individual affect numerous others. So who gets punished? The individual committing the bad deed? Or those affected by it? “Beneath the Stars of Salem” is written in a style that reinforces the idea that there isn’t always a straightforward path of good defeating evil. Instead it asks the question, does justice have the strength to prevail every time? ENGLISH LITERATURE 74 Room 101 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Jessica Andreason, Jeanette Riley (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, UMass Dartmouth V For Vendetta: The Graphic Narrative As Literature The graphic narrative has long been a disputed medium. Through recent criticism, however, a new field is beginning to emerge in which the form is being analyzed critically. Pictures, once thought to be a sign of juvenile comprehension, transform a simple narrative into an experience when used effectively by a team of artist and writer to convey a complete story. V For Vendetta, a British graphic narrative, contains formal elements suitable to critical literary analysis. Coupled with its graphic presentation of emotion and narration, metaphor and satire shine through to create a full sensory experience that can be termed “literary.” V For Vendetta is a successful example of what the graphic narrative can do and where its potential as a critical medium lies. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 62 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 75 Room 101 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Caitlin Larracey, Derek Leuenberger (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English Literature, Bridgewater State University Carlyle, Arnold, and Wilde: Art and the Departure from Humanism to Aestheticism and Decadence in the Victorian Era While much criticism examines Victorian literature in its ties to Romanticism, this examination of the literature traces its roots from Renaissance humanism toward the decadence and aestheticism that characterize late nineteenth-century works, and reveals the shifting philosophies toward both the role of literature and the author and the mechanized and industrial society of London. The transitions from humanism to aestheticism were not simple, nor are the two forms completely distinct from each other, as seen through a close-reading of several key texts. Toward the beginning of the Victorian era, Thomas Carlyle argues in Past and Present (1843) that there is a separation between the individual and the community that only grows over time. Similarly, Victorian literature details its separation from virtue. Matthew Arnold’s “Sweetness and Light” from Culture and Anarchy (1869) relies on the humanist principles of imitatio and the belief that the critic should create art that reflects the artist’s values and moves society toward virtue, and his poem “The ScholarGipsy” (1853) demonstrates these principles. Yet, towards the end of the era, Oscar Wilde seems to abandon humanism in The Importance of Being Earnest (1894) in favor of aesthetically pleasing art that may not have any purpose beyond its self-fashioning of reality. Through the Victorian era, humanist principles dissipate in importance from Carlyle to Wilde as the societal focus shifts from a reaction against the new mechanized society to an acquiescence with industry and self-interest and a desire to enjoy what one can experience within this cultural frame. 76 Room 101 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Katelynn Larson, Rosanne Denhard (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts Following Faust: Evolution of the Faust Legend The Faust legend, that of a man so obsessed with obtaining knowledge that he trades his soul to the Devil for limitless knowledge, has been used since the Middle Ages to challenge the accepted cultural and societal order. Through examining various manifestations of the Faust legend, the subversions of their authors become apparent and can be linked to a broader contextual understanding. Four texts – the anonymously authored “The English Faust Book” (1592), Christopher Marlowe’s “The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus” (1604), Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s “Faust” (1829), and Gertrude Stein’s “Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights” (1938) -- serve as the basis for a contextual close reading and examination. Each text offers a distinct subversion of accepted cultural norms. “The English Faust Book” offers a key to the Reformation, Marlowe questions the authority of academic learning, Goethe separates from the rationale of the Enlightenment, and Stein contemplates the value of technology while diverging from expected gender roles. Although each text takes a different approach to discussing and exploring the Faust legend, the underlying ethos, that of subversion, remains the same, accounting for the Faust narrative’s broad application to challenge Reformation ideals in one century and industrial conventions several hundred years later. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 63 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 77 Room 163 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Alex Marshall, Rosanne Denhard (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts Margaret Cavendish’s Blazing World: The Legacy of World-Building Stories, particularly in the fantasy and science-fiction genres, often make use of an “alternate world” setting— a different history or another dimension. Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle (1623-1673), dared to breach the borders of reality in the creation of her own “imaginary world,” which she called the Blazing World (_The Description of a New World, Called the Blazing World_, 1666). In fashioning her world, Cavendish employing several components since deemed necessary to contemporary fantasy world-building. My project acknowledges Cavendish’s _The Blazing World_ as the masterwork and foundation of world-building that it is, a precursor to more recently-created worlds like C.S. Lewis’s Narnia or L. Frank Baum’s Oz, and draws connections between it, its antecedents, and modern-day fantasy fiction. 78 Room 101 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Derek Pietras, Carolyn Maibor (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Framingham State University Finding the Hidden Intelligence Nathaniel Hawthorne and Louisa May Alcott are not commonly read together, since they tend to write in different styles and genres. And, at first glance, their novels The Scarlet Letter and Little Women could not be more different. However, upon a closer reading, some similarities make themselves known, especially in relation to the youngest characters in each, Pearl and Amy. These two girls have a startling number of similarities between them, including a blunt honesty, a high level of intelligence, and a startling understanding of the world around them. These trends continue into the realist age, with authors such as William Dean Howells and Henry James finding similar ideas between their characters. In Howells’ The Rise of Silas Lapham, one of Lapham’s daughters, originally thought to be dull turns out to have a surprising inner strength and logical ability. Similar ideas make themselves known in Henry James’ The Portrait of a Lady. In a number of ways, protagonist Isabel Archer is a combination of the two sisters within Howells’ text. By reading these books together, I find that these authors embrace the new ideas of children and childhood that were emerging during the time of their writings. 79 Room 101 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Merrill Sunderland, Scott Nowka (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Salem State University Henry Mackenzie’s The Man of Feeling: The Protagonist as a Narrative Device This paper explores the role of the protagonist in Henry Mackenzie’s The Man of Feeling. Mackenzie’s intention for his protagonist, Harley, seems to oppose the traditional usage of a main character. Rather than be the glue that holds reader interest, the main character, for Mackenzie, serves a very different purpose: that of a narrative device, through which the reader can objectively see into an aggrandized eighteenth-century society. This unique disintegration of the main character’s traditional role suddenly shifts the focus off of Harley and onto the episodes of other people, allowing for a truly diverse collection of sentimental interactions. By examining critical responses from Patricia Spacks, John Richetti, Maureen Harkin, and Stephen Ahern, we learn exactly how Mackenzie transformed the protagonist’s traditional role into that of a narrative device. I argue that this untraditional role for the protagonist effectively stimulates an emotional response from the book’s readership. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 64 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 80 Room 101 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Jessica Thelen, Lou Caton (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University The Immortal Soul And The Inherent Equality of All People: Whitman’s Leaves of Grass Many of the poems contained in Walt Whitman’s 1855 poetry collection Leaves Of Grass, especially the poem that would become “Song Of Myself,” focus on the immortal soul and the inherent equality of all people. Whitman believed that everyone--no matter what race, creed, or social standing--is interconnected. This interconnectedness means that everyone shares the same emotions, wants, and desires; the soul connects all of humanity. One of Whitman’s core beliefs was that the body and the soul are equally important; one is no greater than the other. As a poet, Whitman’s goal was to expand on this belief and show that he too was no greater than anyone else; he was just another part of humanity “en masse.” People should be celebrated, loved, and accepted, since everyone shares a soul. Since all people are interconnected, they share the same thoughts and emotions, regardless of anything that may separate them. Whitman could see himself in all people: “Askers embody themselves in me, and I am embodied in them.” Not only are people interconnected, but they share an immortal soul as well. Whitman embodies the inherent equality of humanity in his spiritual connections to all people. Throughout Leaves Of Grass, Whitman tried to make people realize that they all belong to humanity “en masse” and should treat each others as equals. 81 Room 163 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Nolan Wetherell, Michael Filas (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University Solving Reality with Satirical Storytelling: Kilgore Trout in Breakfast of Champions ABSTRACT PURPOSE: Within Breakfast of Champions, Kurt Vonnegut’s character, Kilgore Trout represents the modernday, media-fed American who has lost control over his life and reality. Moreover when dissatisfied with this reality, Trout is forced to use his imagination or “storytelling” to act as a satirical panacea against the inability to express himself sexually, politically, and intellectually in his present world. METHODS: Using literary criticism, found through the Westfield State University Library database, media analysis from political scientist, Michael Parenti, and research concerning the benefits of therapeutic story-telling, this paper examines the psychology of the fiction-writer, through the protagonist of Kurt Vonnegut’s 1973 novel, Breakfast of Champions. RESULTS: Kurt Vonnegut’s character is seen as representing present-day artists and writers who feel culturally appropriated and must use their art as a way to escape the dominant viewpoint voiced by the mainstream media—specifically the pornographer, social critic, and intellectual. Vonnegut’s character’s science-fiction writing, as well as the writing of the contemporary cultural minority examined, criticizes the present while also dreaming of a hopelessly unrealistic future. CONCLUSION: Concisely, within Breakfast of Champions, Vonnegut’s Kilgore Trout uses his imagination or “storytelling” to solve his dissatisfaction and incapability to articulate himself sexually, politically, and intellectually in his media-controlled reality. His stories are altogether satirical and internally contradictive of the world presented to him, challenging the dominant viewpoint and eventually defeating the monopoly culture’s constructed reality. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 65 Abstracts • Oral Sessions ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES 82 Room 908 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Lindsay Barron, Ceren Soylu (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Economics, UMass Amherst Implications of Imposing Drinking Water Management Systems on Previously Open-Access Water Sources and the Effects on Gender Roles The idea of human-environmental interaction has switched from the view that exhausting the world’s resources is an inevitable tragedy, to the outlook that these resources can be carefully and strategically managed and sustained for generations to come. Common pool resource management systems have been researched and applied across many types of sources to ensure the sustainability of the resource, however it is important to consider the potential shift in power based on who holds responsibility of these management systems and allocation of the resource. In this paper, I examine the effectiveness and limitations of imposing common pool resource management systems on open-access drinking water sources as a tool to empower women in developing countries. In these regions, it is traditionally the role of women to spend hours of their time sometimes walking over 6 km to the nearest water source which may be contaminated and unsanitary. To enable the world’s poorest people to gain access to clean and safe drinking water, organizations have been installing water pump systems. I examine how the regions are chosen and how the communities are able to transition successfully to managed water sources focusing on its implications for gender roles. I provide a background of economic history of the regions, specifically focusing on the respective roles of men and women in each community. Finally, I present an analysis of the condition of the communities after the water system has been established for a period of time noting the positive and negative impacts. This study aims at understanding implications of common pool resource management systems and to point out the successes that should be continued as strategies for future projects. 83 Room 908 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Ann Grilli, Diane Beers (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Environmental Studies, Holyoke Community College Fracking Within the Ecosystem Fracking Within the Ecosystem Hydraulic fracturing, commonly known as “fracking,” is a controversial process for natural gas extraction in which gas companies drill down through aquifers and shale formations and pump in millions of gallons of fracking fluid consisting of water, sand, and toxic chemicals. Investigation into fracking necessitates discussions about environmental issues, but also about the housing market, legal loopholes, landowner rights, unemployment, health costs, education, and corporate personhood. Drawing from popular media sources and official documents from industry websites and grass-roots environmental organizations, this paper examines the strategies employed by proponents and critics of hydraulic fracturing, and assesses fracking’s environmental, economic, and social impacts. I conclude that although some people benefit from fracking, the practice imposes grave injustices and economic hardship on many individuals and communities. When one defines the ecosystem to include the neighbors of people who lease to gas drillers and are opposed to pipes under their property, townspeople whose taxes are raised to repair highway damage caused by diesel trucks, parents of asthmatic children whose illness is worsened by exposure to diesel exhaust, landowners left without potable water or clean air, and farmers with unfarmable farms, it becomes clear that fracking is not worth the environmental cost. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 66 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 84 Room 908 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Caroline Mayotte, Jennifer DiGrazia (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University A Throwaway Society: Going Green is Easier Than You Think Some people view waste as a part of life, but it’s possible to become a waste free society, and it must start at local level. The excessive waste that characterizes our society has a number of negative social, medical, and environmental impacts that include global warming, cancer, and smog. There are a lot of great ideas out there on how we can reduce our waste and help the environment. By combining ideas discussed by innovators in the field such as the EnergyXchange Company (Renewable resources), Jess Clarke (Centers for hard to recycle materials), Stephanie Rogers (Wind Power), Judith Stock (Municipal drop-off recycling centers), and Rhodes Yepson (Composting), I argue that it is possible to become a waste-free society. By starting with children in our public school systems, I suggest that education can have a ripple effect. Individual awareness and action spreads to the town, and then to the state, and beyond. Despite arguments that people think such a transition requires a systematic overhaul, I emphasize that such a transformation starts at a grass-roots level, with individuals, and can be easily executed. No one has attempted to combine all of these ideas, but that is the only way to truly become a waste-free society. 85 Room 908 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Stephen Pike, Jennifer DiGrazia (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University What happens when we have too many people?: Implementing population controls without challenging cultural values. Never has earth had as many people living on it as it does today. Because our world population could grow as large as eleven and a half billion people within forty years and we are struggling to feed our current population, it is clear that we need some form of population control. However, implementing such population controls as contraceptives and passing laws that limit how many children are allowed is problematic because such measures are culturally insensitive and felt as immoral. Cognitive scientists like Jonathan Haidt and Steven Pinker help show why people view these population controls as immoral. They, and environmental scientists Jay Withgott and Scott Brennan, who conducted a study on the need to introduce population controls into overpopulated areas, support that we need to enforce population controls without violating people’s moral instincts. I argue that we can encourage population controls only by working within specific cultural contexts. In other words, we need to understand cultural values and beliefs and work within in them, not impose laws or other forms. I suggest that rather than a top-down approach we use a system in which the people teach themselves. If women in Indonesia are being taught the value and necessity of contraceptives from other women in their town, they are much more likely to listen and put it into practice than if they were told by people that they have never seen before. In this way perhaps we can curb our population growth to a steady, sustainable level. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 67 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 86 Room 908 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Jessica Ryter, Ceren Soylu (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Economics, UMass Amherst Recycling Rates at UMass Amherst: A Case Study on improving Campus Recycling Rates through Infrastructural Changes and Educational Support The University of Massachusetts Amherst is a national leader in environmental sustainability among institutions of higher education. In recent years, the university has renewed its commitment to sustainability, taking significant measures to encourage sustainable practices on campus. As consumption on college campuses rises and space in landfills dwindles, waste reduction and diversion are becoming extremely important aspects of sustainability. Despite its high ranking in overall sustainability relative to many other schools within the United States, UMass Amherst reports a recycling rate of only 56 percent as of 2011. Although recycling still requires the transport of waste (and thus still contributes to CO2 emissions), it turns waste into inputs for new products, which in turn protects the environment from further exploitation that would otherwise be needed to obtain these inputs. In addition, as landfills all over the globe reach capacity, recycling provides a productive alternative way to get rid of waste without further burying trash in our land or polluting our seas. My research at UMass, through surveys, observation, and completion of an internship with the Campus Sustainability Initiative, has revealed that there are some gaps in the recycling process that are likely responsible for the lower than optimal recycling rate. This paper utilizes my own research and research done at other institutions to explore the gaps in the areas of infrastructure and education and how they affect recycling behavior. I analyze these gaps and make recommendations about how UMass can alter its recycling infrastructure and educational outreach techniques in order to raise the recycling rate on campus. FINANCE 87 Room 176 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Devansh Bajaj, Jeffery Keisler (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Finance, UMass Boston Performance of IPOs backed by Corporate Venture Capitalists vs. Traditional Venture Capitalists Many Companies that IPO are overpriced and end up causing their investors to lose money due to inexperience in organizational structure and /or not having the expertise of existing corporations. This study was conducted to find a difference in quality among IPOs to lead to better investment decisions. Suitable companies were identified for which I obtained and categorized information on their backers. Company performance was then measured over a period of time using several financial indicators. The preliminary data comes from LexisNexis and includes companies that IPO between a certain number of years and information on their capital backers. Additional relevant data regarding companies and their financial information will be obtained from CompuStat. This study will reveal the degrees of correlation between aspects of different sources of venture capital backing and company performance, and life term of listing. These may vary by industry, in that venture capitalists may have more success investing in companies within their area of specialization. This study is important to investors because it will help them in identifying more successful companies when investing and provide them with a tool set to help them make a more informed decision with regard to the life of a company. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 68 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 88 Room 176 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Tyler Buccetti, Jeffery Keisler (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Finance, UMass Boston Risk Aversion and Former Collegiate Athletes as Financial Investors Financial investors have individual levels of risk aversion when making investment decisions. This study looks to find if past participation in collegiate sports has an impact on an individual’s risk aversion when making investment decisions. To test this impact, subjects are given an experiment where they are presented with six different stock investments. It is their job to select one stock they would invest in, as well as rank all six investments on their level of risk. Following the experiment there is a survey in order to gather background information about each investor. The results will show whether those investors who used to play collegiate sports will have different levels of risk aversion as compared to other investors, or that playing a collegiate sport will have no effect on the risk aversion of a financial investor. This information will be beneficial because it could show that there are even more personal factors that affect an individual’s risk aversion. The results will be relevant for athletes as they manage their finances or enter financial careers. HISTORY 89 Room 911 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Lauren Bishop, Gayle Fischer (Faculty Sponsor) Department of History, Salem State University Hidden Agendas in Renaissance Art: Piero de’ Medici’s Influence through Art Patronage Piero de’ Medici, also known as Piero il Gottoso, is a man who has been laid by history’s wasteland. While bearing the name and triumphant crest of the Medici line, Piero is an easily passed over member, usually occupying a few pages, or more commonly, a few lines within the family’s history. Piero was a man who no one suspected would rise to the head of the Medici line and was therefore allowed to occupy his thoughts with more artistic endeavors. Through the artistic works commissioned by Piero for the entirety of his life, the absolute importance of this man is resonant. He used paintings and sculptures alike to foster within his people the pride of Medici quasi-rule. By referencing both historians and art historians this thesis serves as a reference point for the everlasting significance of this man. The conglomeration of varying sources and the use of the enduring works of art assist in validating the assertion that Piero de’ Medici is an invaluable link in the Medici line and a member that should never be swept into the shadows of history. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 69 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 90 Room 911 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Sean Doherty, Daniel Sarefield (Faculty Sponsor) Department of History, Fitchburg State University Forging Christian Rome With the rise of Christianity in the fourth century, Romans began to re-interpret sexual depictions. As the Christian religion came to be established in the Roman state, the acceptance of sexual imagery also gradually disappeared because these images became inherently problematic. This occurred because Christianity changed the culturally constructed way these images were perceived. Christianity, as the ascendant religion in the Mediterranean, promoted a new set of beliefs about acceptable social behavior and as a result, the way people thought about Roman life changed. This transformation is evident in the changing notions surrounding the image of the black African. This new doctrine also problematized bathing at the baths. This paper seeks to explore the Roman social constructions of sexual imagery prior to Christianity and their subsequent re-interpretation that was strongly expressed in the explicit injunctions of monastic writers. In order to understand the events which led to Christianity dictating these new cultural norms, it is important to begin by tracing how Christianity became the religion of the Roman state. This will be accomplished in Part I. In particular, this section will address the conditions during the pax Romana or “Roman peace” (ca. 1st and 2nd centuries CE) and following. The Roman interpretation of the image of the black African and its Christian reinterpretation will be explored in Part II, Section I. This section will assess the meaning of hypersexuality as it related to the Aethiops by looking at the contemporary writings of John Clarke, Frank Snowden, Lloyd Thompson and others. The “ironic change” to the understanding of the black African’s nature during the transition from paganism to Christianity will be the focus Part II, Section II. This transformation has not been adequately explored in current scholarship. In Part III, the change in the way that sexual images were viewed and understood in Roman society will be addressed. To illustrate the connotations that depictions of sex had for Romans, John Clarke’s idea about the difference between modern perceptions of the depiction of sexuality and how ancient viewers perceived them will be discussed. Their ideas of modesty, paired with the sexual imagery and the magic practices associated with bathing complexes created the basis for their abhorrence to bathing. This evidence will illustrate the effects that Christianity had on certain aspects of Roman culture. Namely the change of the black African, and how early Christians began to problematized bathing at the baths. These alterations to preconceived notions that Roman’s held shows that what it meant to be Roman changed with the advent of Christianity. 91 Room 909 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Ryan Fitzgerald, Alexandros Kyrou (Faculty Sponsor) Department of History, Salem State University The Use of Superior Tactics in Overcoming Superior Numbers: The Russo-Finnish Winter War of 1939-1940 The Use of Superior Tactics in Overcoming Superior Numbers: The Russo-Finnish Winter War of 1939-1940 Ryan Fitzgerald ABSTRACT PURPOSE: Despite the enormous disparity in force size between the Finnish defense forces and the Red Army, the much smaller Finnish army was able to successfully defend against the Soviet forces for a remarkable period of time. This was a result of the tactical superiority of the Finnish forces, which stemmed from their small unit flexibility and their use of guerilla warfare. METHODS: Using literature acquired through the NOBLE Library Catalog, which consists of both primary and secondary sources, and recorded interviews, this paper examines how the tactics of the Finnish forces were able to hold back the might of the much larger Red Army. Soldiers’ accounts of the fighting from both sides serves as the main look into what allowed the Finns to accomplish this feat. RESULTS: The Finn’s effective tactics compensated for their lack of troops and succeeded holding back Soviet Army for much longer than the Soviets anticipated. The Finnish Army had a more appropriate command structure and strategy for the terrain and type o war they were fighting. The Soviets were too rigid and centralized to be an effective fighting force in unfamiliar territory. CONCLUSION: The Russo-Finnish War showed the world how effective guerilla warfare can be. More importantly at the time, it showed Nazi Germany that the Soviet Army was quite weak despite its size. The incompetence shown by the Soviet Army and its officers was a key factor in Hitler’s decision to invade the Soviet Union in June of 1941. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 70 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 92 Room 163 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Lydia Gravell, Richard Elia (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Salem State University The Victorian View of Lady Jane Grey: The Revival of a Tudor Princess 300 Years Later This paper examines the causes behind a renewed interest in Victorian English literature on the subject of the “Nine Day Queen,” Lady Jane Grey. There is a definite trend in her presence in literature written by female authors for a mainly female audience. These can be interpreted in three ways: as instructive literature on proper moral behavior; as an outlet for trapped upper middle class ladies to express themselves; or as examples against the stereotype in an effort to gain support for the advancement of their sex. In every example Lady Jane takes on a new persona with different aspects of her character highlighted to suit the author’s purpose. This serves as an insight into Victorian society, rather than to a study of Lady Jane’s life. What the authors valued most for an important female role model is clearly visible in their manipulation of the young Tudor Princess Lady Jane Grey. 93 Room 811 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Meaghan Halfpenny, Brooke Orr (Faculty Sponsor) Department of History, Westfield State University African Americans in Antebellum, Civil War, and Reconstruction America African Americans in Antebellum, Civil War, and Reconstruction America The Transition of Social Status for African Americans Meaghan N. Halfpenny ABSTRACT PURPOSE: To determine the peoples responsible for the full enfranchisement of African Americans on a social and political level throughout the United States from 1815-1877. Despite the apparent political support from the nation’s capital, the African American community was not respected purely as a result of the Emancipation Proclamation, but rather it was on a local, social, political, military level from which the idea of social equality was conceived and enforced. METHODS: I compare various primary and secondary materials compiled by the professor and collected in historian Eric Foner’s text Ordeal By Fire. These include testimonies illustrating the struggle, cruelty, and racism that African Americans faced throughout the United States, as slaves, runaway slaves, freedmen, abolitionists, Union soldiers, widows, mothers, and politicians. RESULTS: Through the analysis of these sources, I realized that the majority of admiration for the African American community at this time came from the examples of bravery, patriotism, and comradery illustrated by African Americans fighting within the Union regiments. It was also the growing numbers of abolitionists throughout the North and South that gained overwhelming support, which in turn helped them establish an increasing amount of literacy and faith amongst the African American community. CONCLUSION: It was the African Americans on a local, political, and military level that brought upon the improvement of status for their race and for their eradication from slavery. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 71 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 94 Room 909 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Kyle Hodnett, Paula Stamps (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Red Germs: A History of the Soviet Biological Weapons Program After the Soviet Union’s collapse in 1991, reports of the existence of a biological weapons program that trumped the size of any in history began to leak. The purpose of this paper is to examine the relationship between the military, scientific, and communist party organizations in the creation of the biological weapons program. Moreover, it will examine the continuity of such structures after the fall of the Soviet Union and try to assess whether any threat of biological weapons production still exists. In order to gain a better understanding of the context in which the Soviet biological weapons program developed, this paper will include a description of the Cold War, along with the role that the Communist Party played in the military and defense industry. The continuity in the domestic and foreign policy of the Russian government will be explored in relation to that of the Soviet Union. Due to the secretiveness of the biological weapons program, it is difficult to obtain a wide variety of objective sources and to ascertain the true scope of the program. Therefore, the history of the program will be drawn mostly from the accounts of defectors; a special emphasis will be placed upon the Sverdlovsk outbreak in 1979 in order to highlight international conceptions of the program’s existence as well as Soviet attempts at secrecy and deception. This paper will demonstrate that it is not clear whether Russia is taking all necessary precautions to end the remnants of the Soviet biological weapons program. 95 Room 911 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 GerryAnne Jean, Avi Chomsky (Faculty Sponsor) Department of History, Salem State University The Tragic Three: Linking Health, Environment, and Economy in Devastated Haiti While other countries have managed to recover in the aftermaths of their natural disasters, Haiti, the poorest country in the Western hemisphere is still struggling to make progress two years after a catastrophic earthquake shook the country. Ravaged by centuries of greed, violence, and a lack of direction, Haiti’s problems were only worsened by the January 12th, 2010 earthquake. Three of Haiti’s biggest long-term issues are in healthcare, the environment, and the economy. These sectors will be examined in detail, showing how the disorder and destruction in and around Port-au Prince postearthquake have been heightened by the lack of an adequate healthcare system, poor environment, and a struggling economy. The research conducted on the health, economic, and environmental infrastructures of Haiti showed some connections among the three like a Venn-Diagram. This paper will provide many examples of the relationships among these sectors, and eventually stress the idea that these three weak sectors that have developed over many years set the stage for turmoil in the wake of a crippling natural disaster. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 72 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 96 Room 909 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Daniel McDonald, Joel Wolfe (Faculty Sponsor) Department of History, UMass Amherst Nunca mais: Media Resistance and Reaction to Military Dictatorship in Argentina and Brazil Mass media played a critical role in abetting and resisting military dictatorships in Brazil and Argentina. Their influence on the popular conscience drew from experiences during their respective dictatorships and affected their action in the post-dictatorship accordingly. Using scholarly material accessed through the University of Massachusetts library database, the Archivo de la Memoria in Buenos Aires, Argentina, the Skidmore collection at Brown University, and archived newspapers, this essay examines how media resistance or compliance with the military dictatorship affected its tenor with regards to the newly deposed military juntas. Brazilian media in all forms operated with varying states of impunity during the military regime. While many media outlets did abet military efforts, significant portions successfully defied military censorship. Argentine media of the period faced harsh repression while resistance centered on publications by fringe or violent groups. Brazil’s media response to the end of the dictatorship did not attain the level of politicization of its Argentine counterpart. Rather, the participation of moderate media outlets with broad bases of support kept the agendas of radical or violent groups from gaining significant traction in the national dialogue. These groups typically called for greater punishment with regards to the crimes of the members of the deposed military governments In sum, the distinct experiences of the Brazilian and Argentine medias illustrate the effects of government repression has on their treatment by those sources once their government has fallen. 97 Room 811 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Lauson Ode, Vanessa Diana (Faculty Sponsor) Department of History, Westfield State University Diamonds are Forever: Sierra Leone’s Civil War PURPOSE: This research presentation enhances understanding of Sierra Leone’s Civil War by showing the how conflict diamond sales by the rebel group Revolutionary United Front (RUF) increased the scope of violence and brutality during the years 1991–2002. The horrifying legacy of that war is still felt by the people of Sierra Leone today. METHODS: The study draws on a documentary film that recorded numerous primary sources painting a horrifying image of war, articles from multiple humanitarian organizations and news agencies, scholarly works, photo galleries, and two books. RESULTS: Research reveals a strong symbiotic relationship between the rebel group RUF and the sale of diamonds on the international market. The deadly relationship helped to sponsor sadistic mutilations of women and children, sexual abuse of two hundred thousand women, and the use of over 20,000 child soldiers. The combination of psychological and physical damage brought by the Civil War has taken away the healthy development of Sierra Leone as a nation, bringing to light the true price of “eternal love” depicted in commercial ads for the diamond industry. CONCLUSION: The sale of conflict diamonds in the international market was the driving force behind Civil War in Sierra Leone. Millions of Sierra Leone people felt victim to the outcomes of the Civil War and still are in the shadows of its legacy today. In order to fully overcome the legacy of war and promote a positive future, the government of Sierra Leone should invest in the development of the social, economic, and political infrastructure of the country, with an emphasis on education and health care systems. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 73 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 98 Room 911 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Genevieve Ramos, Stephan Martin (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Astronomy, Bristol Community College Alien: Historical Events, Jungian Archetypes, and the Abduction Encounter Reports of extraterrestrial encounters have greatly increased during the 20th century, both in complexity and number. Shifts in human thought and perception of major events during this period have been reflected by changes in unconscious thought and cultural archetypes. Major events over the past 50 years such as the Cold War and technological advancements like space flight and the PC have influenced the message, aesthetics, and cultural perception both of extraterrestrials and of contactees. As different events alter humanity’s perception of itself, perceptions of extraterrestrials shift inversely and proportionately. This study will attempt to correlate major events and paradigm shifts in human history with how abductions by extraterrestrials were reported and perceived during each period. It also examines how the phenomenon has evolved culturally, and the possible symbolic explanations for these changes. Using first person accounts of contact and the body of scholarly literature already devoted to the phenomenon, this study seeks to further establish the connection between events on earth, and those of a professedly unearthly origin. 99 Room 811 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Stephan Rochefort, Anthony Daly (Faculty Sponsor) Department of History, Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts The 1981 Hunger Strike in Northern Ireland: Motives and Impacts In the 1970s, republican paramilitaries in Northern Ireland, most notably the Irish Republican Army (IRA), fought a low-level civil war with loyalist paramilitaries and the British Army. The IRA sought an end to British rule and hoped to unite with the Republic of Ireland. By 1981, thousands of civilians, police, soldiers, and paramilitaries had been killed or injured. Many republican paramilitaries were imprisoned in the late 1970s, and they continued their struggle with the government. After a series of bitter and escalating protests, they decided to attempt a hunger strike, hoping to be recognized as political prisoners rather than common criminals. Ten men died on hunger strike in 1981, including the leader of the IRA prisoners, Bobby Sands, who was elected to the British Parliament while on strike. The hunger strike attracted enormous media attention and caused a worldwide outcry against the British government and Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. This presentation, drawing on sources such as diaries, memoirs, interviews, and newspaper reports, will examine the reasons for the paramilitaries’ decision to mount a hunger strike, as well as analyze the reactions to the strike in Northern Ireland and abroad, including the growth of Sinn Fein, the political wing of the IRA. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 74 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 100 Room 909 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Briana Sicard, Paula Stamps (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst The Enigmatic Ishii: A Man with a Vision for the Use of Biological Warfare in Japanese Military Expansion Human medical experimentation has been and will remain to be a highly politicized issue. One facet of such experimentation involves the testing of weaponizable biological agents on human subjects. Rarely hearing about these topics in school, it is stunning to discover that Japan had a biological weapons program, Unit 731, whose controversial applications were heavily based on involuntary human experimentation. The purpose of this paper is to analyze the circumstances that made it possible for that secret, high-risk program to last for more than 13 years. In particular this investigation will focus on the personality of Unit 731’s architect, Shiro Ishii, and the relationships he formed with his academic, military and government supporters. Also to be analyzed is the way in which medical ethics in Japan influenced the success of his program. While it had its detractors, the forces that allowed for the creation and survival of the program will be highlighted. Sources to be utilized include various historically based books and journal articles whose content is specifically related to Ishii and his biological warfare empire, although there is a lack of primary sources. The paper will be organized in a way that will demonstrate how Ishii’s opportunistic personality, his both loyal and coerced supporters as well as the lack of a distinct set of medical ethics at that time all united, allowing for a strong biological warfare program. These results help in understanding the necessity of a nation’s own code of medical ethics. 101 Room 909 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Sarah Stoe, Jon Huibregtse (Faculty Sponsor) Department of History, Framingham State University Terror Alert: RED The terrorist attacks of September 11 had a profound psychological effect, instilling new fears and anxieties into many American citizens. This paper explores how the Bush administration made use of that atmosphere of fear to pass legislation that severely limited civil liberties in the United States. It investigates how the September 11 attacks affected the American psyche by shattering two important American myths: that the U.S. is loved and respected by the other nations of the world, and that its borders are impenetrable. Fear is a powerful motivator, and it has historically made people more willing to give up their civil protections in the name of security. This paper examines the civil liberties that were taken away from the American public by the USA Patriot Act which President Bush signed in response to the September 11 attacks. The Patriot Act allows law enforcement agencies to bypass several of the protections guaranteed to Americans by the U.S. Constitution and Bill of Rights. I argue that the Bush administration was successful in pushing through these restrictive measures by amplifying the fear of terrorism and capitalizing on Americans’ anxieties in the months after the September 11 attacks. The Bush administration used this atmosphere of heightened anxiety, to promote legislation that curtailed the civil liberties of Americans as it moved the country toward a more militaristic state model. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 75 Abstracts • Oral Sessions INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES/BDIC 102 Room 911 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Nicole Braden, Rosanne Denhard (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts The Symbiotic Relationship and Common Goals of Philosophy and Literature A common aim of literature and philosophy is to say something true about the human condition and how we should live our lives. This paper will explore the idea that all written works we classify as “literature” have a philosophical core. The philosophical content in important works of literature always contributes to their proper classification as literature. Although other elements certainly figure in the difference between a “good book” and something of literary value – such as the quality of the prose, the novelty of the plot, or the development of the characters, the setting, and other aspects – the purpose and effect of literature will always transcend mere entertainment or aesthetic considerations. Literary fiction, at its best, combines aesthetic pleasure and story-telling with philosophical insight or commentary on some abiding aspect of the human condition. This paper will be an account of my work-in-progress toward my Commonwealth Scholar Thesis to be defended in December 2012. My work will be interdisciplinary, focusing on literature, literary devices, criticism thereof, and traditional philosophical texts. The literary aspect will focus mainly on narrative fiction, while the philosophical side will mainly discuss ethics – broadly conceived to encompass human relationships at all levels as well as existential dilemmas – though I intend my thesis to have more extensive applications. 103 Reading Room 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Noelle Kellicker, Gloria DiFulvio (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst From Blood donation to homelessness My policy project was on the law enforced by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) that bans any man that has had sex with another man since 1977 from donating blood. I learned about the different discriminations that the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) community face in their daily lives. The FDA’s ban is based on the fact that men who have had sex with other men are at a greater risk for HIV. With current technological advances in science, HIV has gone from an untestable disease to the point where it can be detected in blood within 10 days of contraction. I am going to take the inequalities that I learned about the LGBTQ community and use that as the focus of my organizing project. The specific inequality that I am going to focus on is the issue of homelessness among LGBTQ youth. LGBTQ youth face a greater rate of homelessness compared to straight youth in America. This is often a cause of the lack of support that this youth demographic receives as well as issues they face with being accepted into a shelter with their identity. Some individual steps that I am going to take with my organizing project is to call the House and Means committee in order to declare that I want them to support Bill 3838, which gives more support and housing options for homeless youth. Another step I am going to take is to lobby for this Bill at the state house. These two steps are going to help the homeless youth community in Massachusetts, which is predominantly made up of LGBTQ youth. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 76 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 104 Room 911 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Shota Kobayashi, Todd Crosset (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Management, UMass Amherst Staging the Olympic Games in Miyagi, Japan as a Catalyst of Disaster Reconstruction This project explores the possibility of employing the Olympics as part of the process of rebuilding Northeast Japan. The Olympics have been used as a catalyst of urban development in the past. However, no cities have intentionally utilized the Olympics as a catalyst of disaster rebuilding. A year has passed since 3/11 M9.0 earthquake and tsunami that devastated northeastern Japan. Basic city infrastructures such as housing and transportation still need to be restored. The restoration process will take years to complete Academic literature of Olympics studies and Japanese city planning were reviewed in English and Japanese. Field research was conducted in Tōhoku, investigating all the potential sporting venues, temporary housings, transportations, and other basic city infrastructure. This proposal suggests that disaster rebuilding could be fast-tracked by integrating Olympic planning into the reconstruction process. The city of Sendai and Ishinomaki would be designated as two main clusters, which are connected by several means of transportation. Temporary housing units will be converted into the Olympic Village. Besides the existing venues that are being restored and renovated, only temporary facilities would be built to avoid heavy costs. For this proposal to become a real Olympic legacy, the combination of top-down and bottom-up approach will be an organizational model. The central, prefectural, and municipal governments, neighborhood associations, and machizukuri councils would be all involved from bidding phase to post-game phase. A digital draft for an Olympic plan is created by using Google Earth and Google SketchUp which could be used as a point of departure for community discussions. INTERNATIONAL STUDIES 105 Room 909 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Claire Bronchuk, Tim Lang (Faculty Sponsor) Department of History, UMass Amherst What does it mean to be American? This project explores what it means to be “American” and how studying abroad can affect students’ understanding of American identity. When studying abroad, students are often forced to recognize their national identity as a point of difference when compared to the national identity of the host country. Therefore, examining the components and conflicting values of American identity can be useful for students who are preparing to study abroad. Studies on the development of national identity and American identity have ignored the study abroad element and its impact on American students. Initial research included analyzing national survey data such as the 2010 Census and General Social Survey in addition to modern academic scholarship on American identity. This project shows that American identity is too ambiguous of a term to be used effectively within the US due to strong historical, social and political differences that create multiple experiences of American identity for different people. The first phase of research concludes by stating that it is only when abroad, in a foreign environment, that American identity becomes an all-inclusive term capable of uniting Americans under one defining label. In the final phase of this project, surveys were distributed to UMass students who have studied abroad and students who have not studied abroad, questioning their interpretation of American identity. This presentation depicts the findings of this data, showing how studying abroad changes a student’s perception of American identity. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 77 Abstracts • Oral Sessions JAPANESE 106 Room 908 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Elise Durville, Doris Bargen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Japanese, UMass Amherst The Historical Significance of Samurai Honor in Japan This paper explores the concept of honor in samurai and non-samurai culture. The core question for my research has is: How strongly were historical figures affected and pressured by their notions of honor into becoming the figures they are remembered as today? To answer this question, I examined primary sources such as films, plays, and historical fiction by Japanese authors, as well as secondary sources that synthesize the primary sources in scholarly research. Some of those sources were required course material, others were discovered through my own independent research. I found that while most historical figures were following a code of honor admired by their contemporaries, there was never any clear definition of the rules, and the code of honor was much more fluid and dynamic than I originally expected. The time period, a person’s social status, or even the circumstances themselves generated different modes of thought for actions that would be considered honorable. A samurai in the tenth century would find himself condemned for an action that led to an apparent challenge to the authority of the time, while a merchant in the sixteenth who held onto his beliefs in the face of authority would be remembered as much for his honorable conviction as for his dishonorable persecution. This complex and almost timeless dynamic contributes to our understanding of samurai culture and the roots of modern Japanese culture. 107 Room 908 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Shawn Flynn, Doris Bargen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Japanese, UMass Amherst Selective Application: Honor and Martyrdom Among Samurai Purpose: Intangible and abstract concepts have captivated mankind for millennia. When speaking of the samurai culture of Japan, words like “honor” and “martyrdom” get brandied about with abandon. However, to what extent did these concepts actually drive action, and to what extent are they applied retroactively? The purpose of this paper is to determine the importance of third party observation in establishing proper conduct, and to determine if it is actually possible for a lone actor to be a “martyr” or to be “honorable”. In essence, is there a point if no one is around to see? Methodology: To this end, a number of sources have been examined, including scholarly reports and books, traditional plays and mythology, history, and films. Results: While the paper is not completely finished, the research indicates that the presence of an outside observer was vital for an act of martyrdom, or an action undertaken for honor to be successful, because these acts are inherently undertaken for the sake of another person. Conclusion: For a samurai, honor is closely linked to reputation and reputation is spread by the stories which others tell. Likewise, a martyr only adds to his cause if someone sees his death, which implies that perception is more important than actual action. This is not to say that an individual’s actions are irrelevant or without value, but if preformed anonymously there is a lack of practical application. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 78 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 108 Room 908 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Soleil Le, Doris Bargen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Japanese, UMass Amherst Japanese Women from a Woman’s Perspective This paper explores the world of Japanese women and their diverse roles in samurai-ruled society from the pre-1600s era to the modern era. The question at the core of my paper is: How does the changing role of Japanese women in Japanese society affect their agency? In addressing this question, a variety of both primary and secondary sources were consulted. Some primary sources include Japanese historical fiction, plays, and films. These sources were also supplemented with secondary sources consisting of individual scholarly research articles, books, and papers. Over a period of about seven hundred years, Japanese women’s roles in society changed greatly over time, which consequently affected their mindset concerning their obligations and personal desires. Their actions, either directed at themselves or at others, are influenced, if not determined, by these many variable factors. Thus, in the peaceful Tokugawa period of much social constraint, we find dramatic instances of women protesting familial and society obligations. In ordinary circumstances, women’s agency is highly reliant on social rules imposed on them in the era. By looking in depth into this topic I hope to shed light on Japanese women’s ever-changing roles in society and cautiously to apply these findings to women in other cultures. 109 Room 908 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 John McLaughlin, Doris Bargen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Japanese, UMass Amherst Conflicts in the Japanese Cultural Code This paper explores the breaking of culturally-imposed rules by the Japanese people, ranging from high-ranking samurai to common peasants. There are many cases throughout Japanese history where cultural traditions, beliefs, and taboos come into conflict with one another, creating dilemmas for those involved in these moments. In some cases, the rules create an inner conflict; in others, the actor knows, and insists on, his course of action and proceeds diligently, regardless of the rules being broken. These are the questions I want to explore: where are the conflicts within the Japanese cultural code? Why do those involved in conflict choose to follow certain rules over others? By examining a variety of sources, including film, drama, literature, and scholarly works, I conclude that one’s personal sense of loyalty often leads him to act a certain way in a certain situation. Japanese society is hierarchical, and the Japanese person’s loyalty is supposed to be strongest to those at the top of the hierarchy. Despite this, the Japanese people frequently feel more loyalty to those closest to them; there are many cases, for example, where a samurai feels more loyalty to his own lord than to the shogun. While the rules say this is wrong, those who act in this manner are often revered for their behavior instead of ostracized, implying a cultural justification for this behavior. This unexpected outcome provides an interesting perspective on the Japanese reception of breaking the rules under certain circumstances. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 79 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 110 Room 908 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Sam McMahon, Doris Bargen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Japanese, UMass Amherst Abstract Title: Rebellion and Sacrifice in Japanese Society My paper focuses on the sacrifices of rebels in Japanese society. Specifically, it seeks to answer the question of what qualities a rebel needs to to achieve his or her goals, whether it is a simple quest to avenge a family member or a larger community-oriented attempt to bring about political change. Multiple primary sources such as movies, novels, and short stories were considered for specific examples of rebellion, while secondary sources were used to further explain and understand the ways in which the culture and political climate surrounding a given rebellion could influence it. I researched rebellions by both the socially powerful samurai and the less influential merchant and peasant classes. Throughout my research, I found a common theme. In nearly every rebellion that could be considered a success, no matter what the class, the rebels were able to succeed because they were willing to make a powerful sacrifice. This could range from a sacrifice of one’s life to a sacrifice of one’s honor or morals. This result can help us understand why certain rebels from history or fiction are so well-loved by their audience – perhaps they are not remembered because they defeated a “villain,” but because their dedication to their causes are inspiring to us. 111 Room 908 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Linda Phan, Doris Bargen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Japanese, UMass Amherst Rules and Conflicts Among Samurai, Women, Rebels and Martyrs Under the Influence of the Samurai Code This paper explores the rules and expectations of different classes of people and the conflicts that may arise from each group due to these customs. It relates different groups to one another concerning dramatic points of honor. My research question is about the specific rules for groups as diverse as samurai, women, rebels and martyrs and the consequences individuals face if they fail or refuse to abide by these rules. My research materials include both primary sources, such as historical fiction, Japanese films and plays along with secondary sources, such as scholarly studies, course materials, and research conducted independently. My findings indicate that there are numerous rules for samurai, women, rebels and martyrs. Although the rules may be well known to the parties in question, the reflection of each individual varies depending on his or her circumstances. For instance, a samurai’s main objective in life is to gain honor by obeying his master, thus one samurai rule is to obey his lord. However, if his lord was cruel, then it may not be dishonorable to act in defiance of the lord’s order. Thus an individual may be put to the test of obedience concerning the rules established by custom or law and be moved to protest them at the risk of death. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 80 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 112 Room 908 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Erina Sato, Doris Bargen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Japanese, UMass Amherst Family Influences in Rule Breaking Behavior from Ancient to Pre-modern Japan PURPOSE: Rule breaking actions often involve protesting societal norms and regulations. I examine the reasons, motives, and the manner of rule breaking in individuals of ancient to pre-modern Japan (1185~1912), while also considering family member influences. METHODS: Primary sources read and discussed in class, films viewed for class discussion, along with scholarly articles and other secondary sources either assigned in class or found through the UMASS library database were used to investigate rule-breaking behavior in a varied range of individuals. RESULTS: Maintaining a lordvassal relationship based on trust was essential for many samurai. Despite acknowledging the consequences they may face for disobeying orders or refusing to follow a master into death, some samurai chose to act based on the good for the family while others chose to pursue their lord to the end. Opposition against a higher authority figure is also notable in individuals besides the samurai and is often motivated by the influence of family members. However, some individuals chose to break the rules to express and carry out their beliefs regardless of family approval or disapproval. CONCLUSION: What an individual values most is variable as can be seen in different situations. Regardless, individuals who chose to break the rules have strong resolve; in most cases, the individual accepts or even seeks death following rule-breaking behavior. 113 Room 908 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Mary Whitebirch, Doris Bargen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Japanese, UMass Amherst Samurai Honor and Violence PURPOSE: The Japanese history is known for its violent samurai (warriors) who conduct wars with swords and bows and arrows. They also direct violence against themselves with their swords. Samurai culture is known for its sophisticated arts, literature, plays and tea ceremonies. This study was conducted to explore what the historically violent and fine cultures had shared in principle and what their messages had been. METHODS: Using Japan’s literature and films, I have investigated the Japanese culture from the Western point of view, mostly using published documents that were translated into English, and in comparison with the classical literature of Western culture. RESULTS: There are many corresponding expressions between the Western literature and the matters about Japan, such as the expression on the yellowish white in Hell described in Dante’s Inferno. The Japanese plays and tea ceremonies convey Japan’s messages about its diplomacy to the world. CONCLUSION: The display of the samurai honor and violence has been Japan’s diplomatic effort to shield itself from the dynamism in the Eurasian Continent for more than a thousand years. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 81 Abstracts • Oral Sessions KINESIOLOGY 114 Room 808 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Megan Colwell, Priscilla M. Clarkson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, UMass Amherst Interleukin-8 Expression in Cigarette Smokers after Eccentric Exercise PURPOSE: It has been suggested that altered inflammatory responses in chronic cigarette smokers may lead to an increased risk for physical disability following musculoskeletal injury. After a muscle-damaging eccentric exercise, neutrophils are drawn to the damaged site to remove debris, enhance inflammation by releasing cytokines, and promote further tissue damage, a necessary process for adequate tissue repair. In studies in our lab, neutrophils are extracted from the blood of smokers and non-smokers pre- and post-eccentric exercise, and inflammatory markers are compared between the two groups. The chemokine interleukin-8 (IL-8) is an important mediator of the inflammatory response via its function in increasing neutrophil chemotaxis. I hypothesize that IL-8 expression in neutrophil mRNA of smokers will be attenuated in comparison to non-smokers post-exercise, causing an abated inflammatory response that could explain the increased risk for physical disability following injury in smokers. METHODS: Fasted blood was taken from non-smokers and chronic smokers at baseline, 6 hours post-exercise, and every 24 hours for five days. Neutrophils were isolated via a density-centrifugation technique and mRNA was extracted. I plan to analyze IL-8 mRNA expression using a PCR Array and compare IL-8 expression between smokers and non-smokers at the aforementioned time points. RESULTS: Based on preliminary data, I expect that both smokers and non-smokers will have increased IL-8 expression 6 hours post eccentric exercise, yet this increase will be attenuated in smokers compared to nonsmokers. While I expect IL-8 expression to return to baseline levels by 24-48 hours post-exercise in non-smokers, I expect smokers to have a more prolonged elevation of IL-8 mRNA. CONCLUSION: If my hypothesis is correct, the finding that IL-8 has attenuated expression in smokers could explain, in part, an impaired inflammatory response and an increased risk for physical disability following musculoskeletal injury in chronic cigarette smokers. 115 Room 808 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Anna Fedorowycz, Barry Braun (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, UMass Amherst The Effect of Breaks in Prolonged Sitting on Perceived Appetite Purpose: Obesity increases the risk for chronic diseases such as type-2 diabetes, hypertension, and cardiovascular disease. A major contributor to the obesity epidemic is sedentary behavior (e.g. sitting). Excess time spent sitting may cause changes in appetite-regulating hormones (e.g. acylated ghrelin) and appetite, increasing the risk for overconsumption of calories, thus causing energy intake to exceed expenditure. Office workers are especially susceptible, because they spend a majority of their day sitting. No studies have directly examined how different strategies to reduce sitting time impact appetite and food consumption. The purpose of this study was to determine how lowering occupational sitting time with low-intensity “breaks” changes perceived appetite, acylated ghrelin and energy intake. Methods: Ten adult, overweight, men and women were studied at their workplace for 8 hours on 3 separate occasions. Time spent sitting, standing and walking in their workplace was systematically varied to create 3 different conditions; WALK (75% time spent sitting with 30 min brisk walk at lunch), BREAK (less than 20 continuous sitting with several standing and walking breaks throughout the day), and PAUSE (same number of “breaks” as previous but much shorter in duration). Diet was strictly controlled to ensure that energy intake was similar across conditions. Perceived appetite was assessed using a visual-analog scale during and after the workday. Blood concentrations of acylated ghrelin were measured in the fasted state after work, and post-work food consumption was assessed using a food recall questionnaire. The expectation is that acylated ghrelin, perceived appetite and food intake will be lower after the BREAK condition than after PAUSE or WALK. Results and Conclusions: Data collection is ongoing and results and their interpretations for all outcomes will be presented at the conference. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 82 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 116 Room 808 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Leah Katsos, Joseph Hamill (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, UMass Amherst Role of Auditory Feedback on Piano Performance Purpose: Pianists will be studied to assess the importance of auditory feedback during piano performance. Methods: Ten male or female piano majors or players of sufficient skill level will be recruited for this study. Subjects will complete a brief questionnaire to assess their music abilities. Each subject will have to perform a series of pieces on the digital piano. Before each of the four trials, the subject will listen to a metronome at a tempo of 100 beats per minute for ten seconds as they will be expected to play within a range of plus or minus 10 beats per minute. Condition one is playing a major ascending and descending D scale through two octaves with sound, and condition two is the same with the sound completely muted. Conditions three and four require the subject to play a complex piece of unfamiliar music with and without sound, respectively. The piano will be interfaced via MIDI cables to the computer with Sibelius 6 software, which will record the notes even during trials in which the volume of the keyboard is off. Proposed results/Conclusions: Data collection for this research is still in progress. The sheet music generated will be analyzed to determine differences in tempo, note accuracy and sound dynamics. This information will give insight into the role of the auditory system during piano playing. Significant differences between sound and no sound trials supports the necessity of auditory feedback during piano performance. 117 Room 808 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Kristen McLoughlin, Sofiya Alhassan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, UMass Amherst The Impact of Gender on Preschoolers’ Physical Activity Levels BACKGROUND: It is recommended that preschool-age children should accumulate at least 120 minutes of PA per day. However, most children do not meet these PA guidelines. Boys and girls have been found to engage in different kinds of gender-specific activities during outdoor playtime, which may result in different levels of PA. The gender difference in PA levels could be attributed to the different assessment methods of PA. PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to examine if there are gender difference in PA levels (assessed by direct observation and accelerometers) in preschoolage children during outdoor playtime. METHODS: This study utilizes baseline data from the Short Bouts of Exercise for Preschoolers Study (STEP). Preschoolers were (n=320) recruited from 10 preschool centers from Springfield, MA. Participants PA levels were measured with accelerometers and direct observation of PA. RESULTS: To date, baseline data collection has been completed and data analysis is in progress. CONCLUSION: This study will provide preliminary data regarding potential gender difference in PA levels of preschoolers during outdoor playtime. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 83 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 118 Room 808 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Hannah Moverman, Sofiya Alhassan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, UMass Amherst Preschool Physical Activity Policy and Preschooler Physical Activity Level BACKGROUND: The increased prevalence of obesity in preschool aged (2.9-5 yrs) children has been linked to reductions in their physical activity (PA) levels. Currently, over 58% of preschoolers attend preschool for at least 8 hours per day. The preschool setting, therefore, represents a great opportunity to increase PA in preschoolers. However, very little is known about how different PA policies of a preschool that a child attends impact his/her PA levels. PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to examine the association between preschoolers’ PA level and preschool centers’ PA policies. METHODS: This study utilizes baseline data from the Short Bouts of Exercise for Preschoolers (STEP) Study. Ten preschool centers in Springfield, MA were recruited to participate in this study. Within each center 30 preschoolers were recruited for the assessment of their PA level. Participants’ PA levels were measured using Actigraph accelerometers and preschool PA policy was assessed using a modified version of the Environment and Policy Assessment and Observation Audit Tool. Data will be analyzed using a Pearson correlation. RESULTS: To date, baseline data collection has been completed and data analysis is in progress. CONCLUSION: The results of this study could provide preliminary findings regarding how the PA policy of preschool centers can impact children’s PA level. 119 Room 808 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Anisha Patel, Sarah Witkowski (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, UMass Amherst The effects of estrogen and exercise on cardiac telomere biology The hormone estrogen plays a key role in the cardiovascular health of women which may be linked to maintenance of telomere length and delayed cellular aging. After menopause, drastic estrogen loss is related to reduced telomerase activity and inhibition in the telomere lengthening process in cardiac myocytes. Damaged telomeres can result in the destabilization of the Shelterin protein complex and T-loop structure, two major factors that prevent cellular DNA from being recognized as damaged and prevent the cell from initiating a DNA damage response. Shortened telomeres are correlated with increased cardiac morbidity and risk for heart disease. Conversely, exercise may be an effective countermeasure; physical activity has been linked to an upregulation in telomere stabilizing proteins and telomerase enzyme activity in circulating blood cells and myocardium. By studying the expression of certain telomere-regulating genes in mice, we aim to explore the relationship between the loss of estrogen and changes in telomere-related gene expression in the heart. Further, we plan to evaluate the influence of physical activity on changes in telomererelated gene expression with estrogen deficiency. Thirty-two 8 week old virgin mice were divided into three groups: Ovariectomized (OVX), Sham surgery (SHAM), and Ovariectomized with estrogen supplement (OVX-E2). All mice were housed in cages for 8 weeks and half of each group was provided with cage containing a wheel for voluntary exercise while the other half were housed in standard cages with no wheel. RNA was isolated from heart samples and reverse transcribed into cDNA. Gene expression was analyzed using realtime PCR. Data will be expressed as means ± SEM. Analysis of variance will be used to determine differences in gene expression between groups. Any significant interactions will be analyzed by post hoc testing. A P-value < 0.05 will be deemed significant. We hypothesize that OVX group will have greater expression of DNA damage markers while the OVX+E2 group will have greater expression of Shelterin-related genes. Further, we hypothesize that physical activity groups will have greater expression of DNA repair markers and Shelterin-related genes compared to sedentary groups. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 84 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 120 Room 808 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Lindsey Richard, Priscilla M. Clarkson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, UMass Amherst Alterations in Fatigue in Smokers After Eccentric Exercise PURPOSE: Smoking has been associated with a greater risk for injury, especially in the workplace. A recent study from our laboratory showed that smokers had prolonged muscle recovery after eccentric (muscle lengthening) exercise. The purpose of my research is to evaluate smokers’ and non-smokers fatigability by assessing peak torque over the eccentric exercise and differences in time to peak torque. The smokers may take longer to reach maximum force, and the torque produced may decrease over time. A longer time to peak torque for the smokers may indicate greater damage and help explain the prolonged recovery. METHODS: This study is part of an ongoing study of smokers and non-smokers. Smokers and non-smokers completed a knee extensor eccentric exercise that damaged the extensor muscles. The exercise consisted of ten sets of ten repetitions of isokinetic contractions of the non-dominant leg using a Biodex Dynamometer. Strength was measured on the Biodex Dynamometer pre- and post-exercise. RESULTS: I hypothesize that smokers will have an increased time to peak torque in comparison to non-smokers while performing the same exercise. This may be due to smokers having a greater percentage of a more fatigable fiber type, reduction in oxygen supply to the muscle, or change in nervous system signaling. The increase in time to peak torque may signify more damage of the muscle and therefore the muscles will take longer to produce maximal torque. CONCLUSION: These expected results will provide insight into why smokers have a prolonged recovery after exercise and why smokers also have greater incidence of injury. 121 Room 808 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Kristen Richard, Priscilla M. Clarkson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, UMass Amherst Alterations in of IL-6 Expression in Neutrophils in Cigarette Smokers After Eccentric Exercise PURPOSE: Cigarette smokers are more prone to injury and have a prolonged recovery time following damage-inducing exercise. It has been hypothesized that these effects of smoking may be due to an altered inflammatory response. After a damage inducing exercise, neutrophils invade the damaged muscle and release cytokines that promote further inflammation, a necessary process for muscle regeneration to occur. Interleukin-6 (IL-6) is an important inflammatory cytokine that works to sustain the pro-inflammatory response. I hypothesize that mRNA levels of IL-6 in chronic smokers after exercise may be decreased in comparison to non-smokers. This action could suppress the inflammatory response and may help explain the prolonged recovery time and increased risk for injury in smokers. METHODS: This study is part of an ongoing study of smokers and non-smokers. Ten smokers and 10 non-smokers completed a muscle-damaging knee extensor eccentric exercise. Neutrophils were isolated from blood drawn at baseline, 6 hrs post-exercise, and then every 24 hrs for five days post exercise. Neutrophil mRNA was extracted and will be analyzed using a customdesigned PCR-array and IL-6 gene expression will be compared between smokers and non-smokers at all time points. RESULTS: I expect that IL-6 mRNA will be increased in blood neutrophils in smokers and non-smokers during recovery from the eccentric exercise. However, I anticipate that non-smokers will have greater IL-6 mRNA expression in their circulating neutrophils post-exercise compared to smokers, peaking at 6 hrs. I further predict that IL-6 mRNA expression will take longer to return to baseline in smokers after exercise. CONCLUSION: If these findings are validated and IL-6 synthesis is blunted in smokers, then these findings would be novel and could support that smokers have an attenuated inflammatory response following a muscle-damaging exercise. An impaired inflammatory response may contribute to the prolonged recovery time observed in smokers after muscle-damaging exercise and could lead to increased risk for further injury in smokers. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 85 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 122 Room 808 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Samantha Santiago, Priscilla M. Clarkson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, UMass Amherst Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness in Smokers and Non Smokers After Eccentric Exercise Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness in Smokers and Non Smokers After Eccentric Exercise Samantha Santiago PURPOSE: Chronic cigarette smokers are at greater risk for musculoskeletal injury and physical disability. Strenuous work typically produces delayed onset muscle pain or soreness. High muscle soreness levels can cause individuals to move differently, have slower reactions times, and have trouble with coordination. These reactions to pain may be factors that predispose a smoker to musculoskeletal injury, especially in the workplace where strenuous physical exertion is required. Our laboratory uses a strenuous exercise model to induce muscle soreness lasting up to 5 days after exercise. The aim of this study is to determine the muscle soreness response to strenuous exercise in smokers and non-smokers. I hypothesize that smokers will have greater and more prolonged soreness after strenuous exercise. METHODS: This is part of an ongoing series of studies conducted in our lab. Ten smokers and ten non-smokers were studied after a single bout of a strenuous exercise consisting of 10 sets of 10 repetitions of eccentric exercise on their non-dominant leg using a Biodex dynamometer. Soreness was assessed using a 100 mm visual analogue scale pre- and for 5 days post-exercise. RESULTS: I expect to find that smokers and non-smokers perform a similar amount of work during the strenuous exercise, but that smokers will score higher soreness on the visual analogue scale during the 5 days post-exercise. Further, in smokers the soreness will last longer. CONCLUSION: If my hypotheses are correct, greater and more prolonged soreness in smokers may be a factor contributing to greater risk for future musculoskeletal injury. These data may provide an explanation for the increased risk for injury in the workplace as well as implications for physical disability after injury. 123 Room 808 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Hannah Stoops, Sofiya Alhassan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, UMass Amherst The Association Between Parental Physical Activity and Child Activity Behavior BACKGROUND: Preschool children’s (2.9 – 5 yrs) physical activity (PA) levels are declining, while the amount of time they spend engaged in sedentary activity is rapidly increasing. The reduction in PA has been linked to the rise in childhood obesity, which currently affects 10.4% of preschool-aged children. In order to prevent children from becoming obese, precautionary measures must be made both at school and at home. Due to a shared family environment, parental PA behavior could have a significant impact on preschoolers’ PA levels; however, very little is still known about the affects parental PA has on their child’s activity behavior. PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to examine the association between parental PA and the PA and sedentary activity levels of preschoolers. METHODS: This study utilizes baseline data from the Short Bouts of Exercise for Preschoolers Study (STEP). Preschoolers (n=320) and their parents were recruited from 10 preschool centers in Springfield, MA. Parental PA levels were assessed with the International Physical Activity Questionnaire. Child PA levels and sedentary behavior were assessed with an accelerometer and parental baseline report questionnaire, respectively. Data will be analyzed using Pearson correlation. RESULTS: To date, baseline data collection has been completed and data analysis is in progress. CONCLUSION: This study will provide preliminary findings regarding the association between parental PA level, child PA level and sedentary behavior. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 86 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 124 Room 808 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Salim Zerriny, Priscilla M. Clarkson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, UMass Amherst The Effects of Statins on Cholesterol, Creatine Kinase & Alanine Transaminase Levels PURPOSE: Statins, cholesterol lowering drugs, are currently the most prescribed medication in the United States. This study was conducted to determine the effects of a statin drug over the course of two separate medication trials. METHODS: Subjects who previously received the study medication (80 mg of Atorvastatin or a placebo) in a prior study were re-recruited after a period of 1-4 years and placed on an additional 6-month course of the study medication. Measurements, taken before and after statin treatment, were low-density lipoprotein (LDL), creatine kinase (CK) and alanine transaminase (ALT), CK is a measure of muscle damage and ALT is a measure of liver damage. RESULTS: The study is currently in progress. Based on current literature, there are no findings that suggest a change in the effectiveness of the statin medication between separate medication trials, although this has never been assessed. CONCLUSION: It is not uncommon for patients to abstain from statin medication for a significant period of time following an initial bout of therapy. Studying the effects that time off from statin therapy will have on LDL, CK, and ALT will provide a better understanding of statin medication. LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 125 Room 908 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Andrew Mack, Emily Round, Annaliese Bischoff (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Landscape Architecture, UMass Amherst Watch Us Grow: Student Driven Regenerative Gardening on Campus The UMass Permaculture Initiative is taking on the challenge of remediating a 3,000 square foot plot of compacted lifeless land into a productive food garden. Previously the plot has been used as a parking area for construction vehicles and as a dumping spot for plowed snow. The garden will build community, educate students about sustainable ecological design, and show the abilities of permaculture to remediate neglected land. Permaculture specialists are training interns to use permaculture principles in garden design. Community is built through campus outreach and including student volunteers in garden construction. Campus outreach includes presentations to students and the use of media. Education about sustainable food systems is happening through the training of interns, inclusion of the campus community, and through hands on garden work for volunteers. Student interns and volunteers have completed hundreds of hours of hands-on learning through this garden’s construction. They have built swales to redirect water and organic matter, sheet mulched the entire site, and designed a plan to de-compact the soil via carefully selected plants. The campus community has been educated about the project through dorm presentations, garden signage, media such as Facebook and radio PSAs, and student oriented workshops. The success of the Berkshire Permaculture Garden showcases permaculture as more than just a way to produce food. It is a method to regenerate land giving hands on education to students while it creates a community interested and engaged with its role in sustainability. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 87 Abstracts • Oral Sessions LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES 126 Room 909 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Samantha Ryan, Gloria Bernabe-Ramos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Latin American Studies, UMass Amherst Your Land for My Wallet: Investigating Tension and Ambiguities between the Peruvian government and Indigenous Andean Society Currently, indigenous groups in the Amazon are increasingly the subjects of territorial encroachment and removal from their land, and are submitted to systems of forced labor and exploitation. The Peruvian government promotes the exploitation of resources, in addition to supporting foreign investment and activity by transnational corporations. After spending time in the highlands of Peru working with indigenous groups, I wanted to examine this situation and understand its roots. I investigated connections between political and economic trends, and how these relate to objectives set forth in contemporary laws regarding land rights. Using scholarly literature accessed through the University of Massachusetts library database, and past and present Peruvian laws, this paper examines the ambiguous relationship and tension between the Peruvian government and the indigenous Andean peoples, as expressed in contemporary laws regarding land rights. Not only is the language of these laws often ambiguous, but the laws themselves are contradictory in treatment of indigenous groups. Moreover, I argue that the present systems of subjugation represent a continuity of historical trends of treatment of the native Andean population, diverging only under consideration of present economic objectives. LEGAL STUDIES 127 Room 903 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 John Park, Diana Yoon (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Legal Studies, UMass Amherst North Korea: Storytelling and Human Rights The use of storytelling and personal narratives has been a relatively recent phenomenon in addressing human rights issues among many human rights advocates and NGOs. Known as one of the most isolated countries in the world, North Korea or the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) has become notoriously known as a heinous violator of human rights in modern day. Ranging from defectors’ stories of punishing up to three generations of families and forced abortions in concentration camps, the Kim’s regime has developed a reputation of having no regard to human life and dignity. Well-received and commended by the West, the United Nations, and NGOs, each of the narratives have followed a series of transformation as they were connected with human rights platforms, discourses, agendas, and campaigns. Particularly, the transformations have occurred in the context of story production, circulation, and reception. The project examined, through literary analysis, the context these narratives arose, the particular frame it encompassed, the particular reality it attempted to convey, and the intended consequence or response it imagined to invoke. The project has also entailed sharing narratives through creative means and outlets in addressing human rights issues in North Korea. These personal accounts of suffering, invoking intense emotions upon audiences, have mobilized individuals and formed solidarity among groups with the hope of collectively ending the human rights crisis in North Korea. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 88 Abstracts • Oral Sessions LINGUISTICS 128 Room 911 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Katherine DeVane Brown, Alexandra Jesse (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst Learning to understand foreign-accented speech We examined whether native English listeners use knowledge about possible English words to adapt to a foreignaccented speaker, and if so, whether this would also help them to better understand new speakers with the same accent. Listeners heard a dialogue between three speakers who spoke English with the same artificially-created foreign accent. Critically, one speaker produced “th”-sounds somewhat “s”-like (e.g., “cloth” sounded like “closs”). The other speakers did not say any “th”-words. Listeners should identify the critical speaker’s “s”-like sounds as intended “th,” as only “th” and not “s” would form possible English words here. Before and after the dialogue, listeners categorized sounds on one continuum between “ooth” and “oos” spoken by the critical dialogue speaker and on one spoken by a new speaker, who for some listeners had no accent and for others had the same accent as the dialogue speaker. If listeners adapt to the dialogue speaker, they should categorize more continuum steps as “th” after hearing the dialogue than before. Prior research with native speakers showed that listeners do not transfer learning about sounds such as “th” to new speakers because individuals pronounce these sounds differently. Here, it would be advantageous, however, to generalize learning about one speaker to all speakers with the same foreign accent. If listeners do so, then they should categorize more continuum steps as “th” for the accented than for the unaccented new speaker. A shared accent would thus facilitate the appropriate generalization of learning across speakers with the same accent. 129 Room 911 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Kayly Tillman, Joseph Pater (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Linguistics, UMass Amherst Perception of Intrusive /r/ in Bostonian English The purpose of this research is to examine the perception of intrusive /r/ in Boston varieties of English; specifically, it will investigate the intuitions of native English speakers who do not speak the Boston dialect. It is hypothesized that native English speakers, even those unfamiliar with the Boston dialect, will be able to accurately judge the acceptability of intrusive /r/ in contexts involving function words. Although /r/ is inserted at the end of many vowel-final words when followed by another vowel in Bostonian English, intrusive /r/ cannot conclude function words due to prosodic boundaries. Since this phenomenon is dictated by the prosody of the English language itself rather than some feature of the Boston dialect, it is reasonable to hypothesize that non-speakers will judge r-inserted function words unreasonable more often than they will judge r-inserted non-function words in similar contexts. To test this hypothesis, participants will provide their intuitions of both non-function word and function word sentences. They will be read the same sentences in two different ways - one reading will add an intrusive /r/ before a vowel-initial word, while the other will be read without the /r/. This will be done with both vowel-final function words and lexical words. Non-Bostonian and Bostonian participants will judge which version is intuitively better in a web-based experiment. It is hoped that non-Bostonian participants will judge function words as inappropriate places for intrusive /r/, thereby adding to current research on prosody and how it affects our intuitions about phonology. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 89 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 130 Room 911 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Iliya Yanachkov, Xavier Echarri (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Spanish, UMass Dartmouth Selected Translated works of Hristo Peletev and Angel Karaliichev Iliya Yanachkov Selected Translations of Hristo Peletev and Angel Karaliichev Abstract Purpose: The purpose of this project is to translate selected and previously untranslated works of Hristo Peletev and Angel Karaliichev from their original Bulgarian text to English and subsequently Spanish. The project is an exercise in multilingual translation and demonstrates the student’s ability to work within three languages. Methods: The project requires a mixture of literal and oblique translation techniques, with the use of literal techniques preferred where possible. However, the intended goal is to create translations that remain true to the conceptual and stylistic character of the original work, which requires significant oblique translation. Results and Conclusion: The final product, roughly 20 translated stories, is the majority of the project. However, the project also includes a study of anomalies yielded during translation, literary analysis of specific allegorical works, and brief biographical and historical context to supplement the interpretation and analysis of the works. LITERATURE 131 Room 101 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Juliana Keil, Andrew Kozikowski (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English Literature, Westfield State University Mirror Image: “Rip Van Winkle” and “Tam o’ Shanter: A Tale” “Rip Van Winkle,” written by Washington Irving, and “Tam o’ Shanter: A Tale,” written by Robert Burns, are both classic works of literature written in two very different geographic locations. This study compared and contrasted the two works of literature, noting their many similarities as well as their reflections of the culture in which each was written. Within the study both works are analyzed to show an in-depth interpretation of the two main characters. Through a close reading analysis the themes, events, and characteristics of the two works were compared. The two works are parallel in some significant ways, sharing similar main characters who encounter similar obstacles and who face similar consequences. The consequences faced at the end are also very similar. Both main characters receive almost identical messages at the end of the work as well. The two works of literature were written at the same time but thousands of miles apart. It is evident that, although distant, these cultures had the same views and morals at this time. “Rip Van Winkle” and “Tam o’ Shanter: A Tale” both share eerily parallel storylines with each other even though they are written in different formats. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 90 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 132 Room 101 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Erin Putnam, Marcella Marold (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, North Shore Community College Geoffrey Chaucer’s Questionable Feminism Geoffrey Chaucer displays an understanding of women’s rights far beyond the social norm for his time, but his understanding of sexuality still fell sadly short of feminism. Using Chaucer’s own as well as historical records and scholarly works, this presentation will examine medieval views of sexuality and how Chaucer, while progressive in his views of women, did not fully grasp the intricacies of female sexuality. The character of the Wife of Bath is an empowered woman. She owns property, has her own money, openly enjoys sex, and goes where she pleases without a chaperone. However, her tale centers on a Knight of the Round Table (the hero) who rapes a young woman he meets in the woods. This young woman is mentioned once briefly, and only to move the plot forward. No further mention of his victim (whose life would have been ruined) is made, and the Knight is rewarded and lives happily ever after. Chaucer himself was accused of abducting and raping a young woman, but a monetary settlement was reached out of court. Geoffrey Chaucer, using the character of the Wife of Bath, demonstrated that he believed that women were intellectual equals of men. He also showed that he understood the psychological motivation behind rape by way of the moral of the Wife of Bath’s tale (the only thing women want is control of their marriage), but that he was not fully conscious of the plight of the victim or of the consequences. MANAGEMENT 133 Room 163 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Steven Avras, Jeffery Keisler (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Finance, UMass Boston The Effect of Demand History and Free Items on a Revenue-Sharing Contract in the Newsvendor Problem This paper focuses on how revenue-sharing contracts between suppliers and retailers can affect the ordering quantity of the retailer within a newsvendor problem dynamic. In the newsvendor problem, a supplier provides goods to a retailer who sells the seasonal product based on random demand (known distribution). We investigate the deviation of supply chain decision makers’ choices from the optimal solutions that are identified by theory. Finding the behavioral reasons behind this deviation will help us to suggest approaches for narrowing the gap between optimal solutions and the actual decisions. We use an experimental approach in which business students (subjects) respond to a carefully designed problem. Subjects play the role of a retail purchasing manager who responds to a contract offered by the supplier. Our hypotheses are that order quantity chosen by the retailer in a revenue-sharing contract can be improved by the supplier offering free items to the retailer as an added bonus. This helps the supply chain get closer to its optimal performance. We also hypothesize that the way that the demand distribution is presented to the decision maker has an impact on the decision maker’s ability to place an accurate order for the seasonal products. Although supply chain decision makers deviate from optimal decisions in a systematic way, our results could inform ways to improve the supply chain performance by modifying the contract terms and/or the way demand information is presented to the decision maker. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 91 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 134 Room 176 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Caroline Dorr, Lawrence Zacharias (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Management, UMass Amherst The Rise of Social Enterprises in a Global Economy Throughout the past 30 years, there has been a significant increase in the number of organizations dedicated to achieving philanthropic goals. Today, there are more NGOs, non-profits, and socially conscious businesses than ever before. This capstone project will examine the factors that have contributed to the rise of social businesses and current trends in this sector. By analyzing the differing structures of social enterprises and their impact, this project will attempt to draw conclusions about best practices in social entrepreneurship. Case studies, including the author’s personal experience working with an Ashoka fellow’s social enterprise in Guatemala, will be used to evaluate impact and analyze areas for improvement in the field of businesses with explicit social purposes. 135 Room 176 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Norilyz Figueroa, Jeffery Keisler (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Finance, UMass Boston ActiveX and Plug-in Awareness Impacting User Web Browsing Behavior The purpose of this study is to investigate the web browsing behaviors of computer users and how awareness about threats impacts their behaviors. This research will focus on how users behave towards web browser alerts which prompt users to install ActiveX controls and Plug-ins. ActiveX controls and Plug-ins have become common features for enhancing user experience. However, installing these controls overrides security mechanisms inherent in browsers and provides complete access to users’ computing resources. A survey will be administered to two separate groups of students from the University of Massachusetts Boston to collect data. The first group will take a survey after watching a short video that will introduce basic concepts needed in order to complete the survey. The same survey will be given to a second set of students after they have watched a different video. The second video will educate participants of the dangers of ActiveX and Plug-ins. This study will determine if increased awareness of the risks of ActiveX and Plug-ins will cause participants to behave differently. This study can inform management on effective training procedures to improve compliance with security. 136 Room 176 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Bertrand Muhire, Jeffery Keisler (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Finance, UMass Boston Employee Compliance with Information Systems Security Policy in Retail Industry. Case: Store Level Employees In this digital era, information has become a very important part of our daily lives. For some organizations it is not only an important component of daily routine operations but also required for competitive advantage. From big corporations to small businesses, non-profit organizations and governments, organizations need to safeguard and secure their information by implementing Information Security Policies (ISP) and to make sure that all their employees comply with such policies. This research addresses employee compliance with information systems security policy with a case study of retail stores employees. The research focus is on the impact of the level of education on employees’ ISP awareness and compliance behaviors. Findings will be used to support or reject the relationship between the level of education and the actual ISP awareness and compliance with ISP. Surveys are used to collect data and the analysis will provide the significance of the relationship between the three variables which are the level of education, ISP awareness, and ISP compliance. Recommendations will address issues of ISP non-compliance and will help managers to understand some of underlying factors to employees’ compliance behaviors. Results will serve as a managerial reference in terms of organizational interventions through trainings and sanctions to improve employee compliance. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 92 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 137 Room 176 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Daniel Muwamba, Jeffery Keisler (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Finance, UMass Boston Sustainability of Micro-finance Institutions through Good Governance Policies PURPOSE: As microfinance continues to expand internationally as a sector in the financial industry that caters to the poor and financially marginalized individuals, the need to better understand the governance policies that are necessary to ensure sustainability of the organizations and the sector at large grows as well. The sustainability of an MFI demands not only financial viability but it also requires a clear strategic organization that is regulated, transparent, efficient, and understood by all the stakeholders involved. This study investigates the above issues grouped together under the concept of governance. Cross-country comparative analysis of scholarly literature accessed through the University of Massachusetts Boston library database and Google Scholar, selected Policy guidelines by governments for the MFIs and the sector, and selected MFI governance reports will be used to investigate whether good governance (or its lack of) relates to the performance of MFI organizations and the sector in various countries The expectation is that there will be a relation between governance and the sustainability of MFIs and the sector in general. Given the resources invested in the MFI sector, it is not only prudent but also wise to investigate the importance of good governance by both MFIs and the governments of the countries in which they operate. Therefore this work will develop and synthesize insights about the relation between governance and the sustainability of MFIs and the sector in general. MARKETING 138 Room 176 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Michael Spiro, Easwar Iyer (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Marketing, UMass Amherst The Investors of Tomorrow: The Future of Socially Responsible Investing The majority of research on socially responsible investing has focused on the behavior of current investors. This study focuses on the perspectives of current college students, who as the investors of tomorrow, will determine the future development of SRI. Through ten depth interviews of student investors and an online survey, this study tested the factors that play the largest role in this age group’s investment behavior. Can students, who are stereotypically perceived to overly value financial factors in any decision-making process, grasp SRI as a concept? Is the current generation of students more inclined to SRI as instantaneous, worldwide, 24-hour-a-day communication has catapulted the speed and volume of information about pollution, global warming, disease, and poverty? With $25.2 trillion in total professionally managed assets, increased SRI usage could generate significant social change. MATHEMATICS & STATISTICS 139 Room 162 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Matheus M Lelis, Kevin Giardini, Sigal Gottlieb (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Mathematics & Statistics, UMass Dartmouth The Power of Social Networking: using Facebook’s Open Graph data to quantify user activity on the world’s largest social network This application is designed to systematically and mathematically quantify the continuously growing activity that occurs on Facebook, the world’s largest social network. The goal is to develop a numerical rating system by the use of mathematical and computer analysis to rank the level of user activity. The idea is to simplify individual user activity into a numerical value which can later be used to compare and contrast the differences among certain demographics as well as represent the mathematical trends and statistics of the Facebook community. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 93 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 140 Room 162 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Jill Moore, Nathaniel Whitaker (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Mathematics & Statistics, UMass Amherst Modeling the Epidemiology of the Human Papilloma Virus Vaccine ABSTRACT PURPOSE: Recently there has been a great amount of discussion as to whether legislators should make the Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) vaccine a requirement for young girls in the United States. The most common HPV vaccine, Gardasil, protects against four types of HPVs, two of which cause 70 percent of cervical cancers. This study was conducted to determine whether the requirement for the vaccine is a necessary measure or whether other methods of disease prevention would be able to produce comparable results in reducing the percentage of infected individuals over time. METHODS: A mathematical model was developed based upon the common epidemiology SIR model which represents the infection of a population as a system of ordinary differential equations. This model was implemented into Matlab and solved using a variety of different parameters including percent of the population vaccinated, number of sexual partners, and condom usage. RESULTS: An increase in the percentage of the population vaccinated greatly reduced the percentage of infected individuals at equilibrium and even with 75 percent of the population vaccinated (both men and women) the equilibrium percent of individuals infected is almost zero. Additional parameters such as regular condom use and the reduction of partners also reduced the percentage of infected individuals at equilibrium but did not have as strong of an effect as the vaccine did. However, by combining both a reduction in partners as well as regular condom use, similar reductions in the percent infected were achieved compared to those achieved with vaccination. CONCLUSION: While the HPV vaccine does protect individuals against potentially harmful HPVs, it should not be made a requirement for young girls. While a serious reduction was seen in the equilibrium percent infected with vaccination, similar results were obtained through alternative safe sexual practices. The HPV vaccine should remain optional for young girls and safe sexual practices, which prevent a variety of other STDs and complications in addition to HPV, should be promoted. 141 Room 162 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Keith Resendes, Sigal Gottlieb (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Mathematics & Statistics, UMass Dartmouth Heat Conduction in a Rod Keith Resendes MTH499 2/13/12 The project I am working on is on an area of Fourier Series, specifically heat conduction on a rod. Heat is concentrated at one end of a rod with length (L) and radius (r). The equation is ut=αuxx u = u(x, t) is a function of two variables x and t. x is the space variable, so x ∈ [0,L], where L is the length of the rod. t is the time variable, so t ≥ 0. I have come to learn that, like energy, heat flows. Heat flow is a time dependent vector. The classical problem of the temperature distribution in a rod has been well studied. In this talk, Fourier Series is used to evaluate the problem and then compare numerical methods for the solution of the problem under many physical conditions. The material of the rod is one of the important factors but is neglected for ease of solving a generic problem. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 94 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 142 Room 162 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Hilla Rogel, Farshid Hajir (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Mathematics & Statistics, UMass Amherst From a Math Major to a Math Teacher Many believe that there are two types of people, those who “get” math and those who do not. This commonly heard idea is reinforced through years of schooling. Many primary school math teachers did not major in math in college, and many math majors do not become elementary or middle school math teachers. This disconnect may be the reason that kids believe they are math people or not. As a math major who wants to be a teacher, I decided to intern at the Crocker Farm Elementary School in Amherst, MA to see the connection between the upper level math that I learned learning and the basic skills students are learning. I assited in two different sixth-grade classrooms, provided math interventions, and looked at the overall math curriculum, I gained an understanding of the development in mathematical ideas. The interaction with the students helped provide an insight in their thinking in terms of what is easy and what is not. The progress between this and my thinking in college math classes helped me understand the connection between the two and how I can use my knowledge to teach primary school math. Math is not only about facts and numbers, and there are not only two types of math people in the world; it is a way of understanding and thinking that everyone can understand if presented in a certain way. This presentation will discuss my observations in the way that majoring in mathematics affects being able to teach and explain math to elementary school students. MECHANICAL ENGINEERING 143 Room 162 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Rishi Singh, Kourosh Danai (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Mechanical Engineering, UMass Amherst Detection of Cracks in Aircraft Fuselage by Shape Comparison of Dynamic Response Measurements There is high demand for a non-destructing testing method that can detect and characterize damage in thin structures, such as those found in aircraft wing and fuselage components. Previous methods, which analyze changes in modal frequencies or guided Lamb waves, are either not sensitive to the damage size or are limited to linear structures. The method proposed in this research has the advantage of evaluating the raw vibration data, thus avoiding the cost of modal computation or the drawbacks of feature extraction associated with Lamb wave analysis. In this method, the acceleration of a damaged plate is compared with that of an undamaged plate at different locations. Damage signatures are then extracted in the time-scale plane after the vibration time histories are transformed into surfaces in the timescale domain via continuous wavelet transforms. A binary system is used to label each location at which signatures are extracted for the corresponding acceleration pairs. The results indicate that the crack detection is dependent on the actuation frequency and that given a suitable frequency the method can locate the position of the crack. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 95 Abstracts • Oral Sessions MICROBIOLOGY 144 Room 176 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Kathleen Jwanowski, Suzanne Walsh (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, Westfield State University Reducing Hemolysin Production in Staphylococcus aureus by Blocking Quorum Sensing with Hamamelitannin Quorum sensing is the communication system that bacteria use to ‘talk’ to cells of their own species, as well as other species of bacteria. Chemicals are released at specific population densities, designated as a quorum, and detected by receptors on the surface of members of the population, resulting in activation of genes. A number of processes, including the production of biofilms and virulence factors have been shown to be regulated through quorum sensing. Numerous research efforts have focused on using chemical analogs to block communication resulting in reduced virulence, and inhibition of biofilm formation on medical devices. In this study hamamelitannin, an extract of witch hazel bark, was used to block hemolysin production by Staphylococcus aureus. S. aureus can promote disease in almost any tissue of the body. Hemolysins contribute to the organisms’ virulence by causing direct damage to host cells. Cells were grown in Trypticase Soy Broth (TSB) and TSB with 50 -200 ug/ml hamamelitannin for 18-24 hours at 37oC. Two-fold dilutions of the resulting culture supernatants were then incubated with 2% washed sheep red blood cells overnight at 4oC. At the end of incubation, the tubes were gently centrifuged and the hemolytic titer (HAU/ml) determined using the highest dilution that caused 50% hemolysis. The hemolytic activity was calculated as a ratio of titer to growth (HAU/OD425). The results of this experiment show that there was an increase as opposed to a decrease in the production of hemolysin in the presence of hamamelitannin at 50ug/ml, 100ug/ml, and 200µg/ml. This suggests that the hamamelitannin was acting as an inducer of quorum sensing instead of an inhibitor. These results are contradictory to the study done by Kiran et al who suggest hamamelitannin is an analog to the quorum sensing inhibitor molecule RIP. MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES 145 Room 811 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Nacik Sadiq, Jeffery Keisler (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Finance, UMass Boston The Impact of the Arab Spring on Social Ventures in The MENA Region In the year 2011, several nations in the Middle-East and North Africa underwent political reforms as a result of a wave of street demonstrations and heavy protests the region experienced. The political changes were generally instantaneous, but the economic reforms were expected to take longer to put in place. This paper investigates the potential impact of these new economic trends on social ventures. In order to better understand the implications of the Arab Spring on social enterprises, a case study of Morocco was done. The choice of this country is strategic since the country is chronologically advanced with respect to the development of the events that shook the region. Several interviews of key figures from the financial, economical and social sector of the Kingdom were conducted. Connections between the interviews were made; and a matrix of the data gathered generated. The results of this study imply that the most important concern for this new administration is to prevail over the inherent corruption that the old regime was based on. All agree that the business sector could only benefit from such initiative. Moreover, one of the major points the different actors agreed on is the use and spread of micro-financing institutions as a key to the success of social entrepreneurship in the region. The achievement of the economic reforms and their potential impact on the social business sector is considerable. It appears that such initiatives could have a significant positive impact on the region. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 96 Abstracts • Oral Sessions MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 146 Room 176 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Ariana Bevilacqua, Jesse Mager (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Animal Sciences, UMass Amherst Variability of Known Imprinted Genes Throughout Gastrulation Epigenetics, the study of DNA modifications that alter gene expression without changing the DNA sequence itself, is characterized by many specific phenomena. One such mechanism is imprinted gene expression, where monoallelic gene expression occurs in a parent-of-origin specific manner. This opposes normal, biallelic, gene expression, where both the maternal and paternal copies of a gene are transcribed to mRNA. In the mouse genome, there are only about 100 known imprinted genes, and little is known about the timing of activation of imprinted gene expression. Though many genes are shown to be consistently imprinted from earliest activation throughout development, certain genes show aberrant biallelic expression at varying time points throughout development. Several known imprinted genes including Igf2, Igf2r, H19, Meg3, and Rtl1 all show some degree of biallelic expression during gastrulation, (embryonic day 6.5 to 7.5 in mice). We hypothesize that a pattern exists underlying this variant expression profile – it could be sex-specific, tissue-specific, time-point-specific, or simply random variation. Through various RFLP and SSCP assays, patterns of variability are assessed and characterized. Data is being collected and analyzed in order to evaluate the validity of our hypothesis. NURSING 147 Room 803 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Kelsey Dewey, Peter Blood (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Nursing, UMass Amherst The effects of nursing school on one’s resilience Resilience is the ability to carry on despite adversity and is an important concept when evaluating an individual’s response to stress. Although much has been written about high levels of stress in undergraduate nursing students, little is known about their level of resilience. In order to determine how nursing student resilience changes over the course of their education, I used a cross-sectional design to administer the The Wagnild and Young 25 Item Resilience Scale TM to nursing students at the Amherst campus of the University of Massachusetts. The instrument was given to all nursing students in October 2011 and March 2012. Research questions were 1) How does resilience change for student across the four years of undergraduate education and 2) how does resilience change between fall and spring for each year of undergraduate nursing education? The October 2011 response of freshman was used as baseline data for comparisons to answer question one, and the October data was used as the baseline to answer question. T-tests were used for data analysis. Understanding how resilience changes for nursing students during their undergraduate education may lead to targeted interventions designed to enhance resilience and thereby reduce overall stress in this population. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 97 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 148 Room 803 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Alexandra Giorgio, Kristen Sethares (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Nursing, UMass Dartmouth von Willebrand Disease & Pregnancy: Pre-conception, In Utero and Postpartum von Willebrand Disease is the most common bleeding disorder in the world. Unlike all other bleeding disorders, it affects men and women with the same frequency. This disease poses a particular threat to women who bear children. Special consideration and management must occur to ensure the safe outcomes for women with vWD during their pregnancy, labor and delivery of their child. There is a wide array of pharmacologic options available to aid in the care of a laboring woman with vWD and implications for delivery are vital to the safety of both mother and baby. A firm diagnosis of von Willebrand Disease based on diagnostic evidence and presence of symptoms prior to conception is vital in providing the most holistic care possible to a woman throughout her pregnancy. There is a wealth of knowledge surrounding von Willebrand Disease now that those who suffered from vWD in the past were not aware of, giving the advantage for proper treatment to those living with the disease now. With all that is known about vWD and the current management recommendations, labor and delivery can remain the joyous occasion it is meant to be, with little fear of the untoward affects having a bleeding disorder formerly presented. The nurse plays an active role in assuring this positive outcome is achieved in their assessment and teaching of the woman with von Willebrand’s Disease. 149 Room 803 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Kristina Lundquist, Kristen Sethares (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Nursing, UMass Dartmouth Prevention and Early Recognition of Substance Abuse in Nurses Prevention and Early Recognition of Substance Abuse in Nurses Kristina Lundquist ABSTRACT PURPOSE: The purpose of this research study is to determine risk factors associated with the development of substance abuse and how those risk factors are distributed among freshman undergraduate nursing students. METHODS: Freshman nursing students were surveyed for risk factors for alcohol abuse using the Efinger Alcohol Risk Survey (Efinger, J.M. (1984). The development of a health risk appraisal instrument for alcoholism (Doctoral Dissertation #9008136, University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing). Participants also completed a survey of bio-demographical data that has been shown to contribute or deter individuals from the development of substance abuse. Participants were surveyed, with permission of the professor, during a first semester nursing course at a public university in the northeast. IRB approval was received and consent forms were signed. The final sample included 106 participants. RESULTS: Initial results showed that the mean age participants had their first drink was 15.4 (+ 2.6) years old, with 33% reporting hard liquor as their first beverage. The most common feeling experienced by participants was being less shy (52%) and only 8% reported not liking their first drinking experience. Subjects reported friends as their highest support system (93%), followed by mothers (89%) and fathers (74%). Complete findings will be available at the time of presentation. CONCLUSION: By achieving an understanding of risk factors, interventions can be created and implemented to prevent the development of substance abuse in nurses. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 98 Abstracts • Oral Sessions PHILOSOPHY 150 Room 911 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Shelby Giaccarini, Matthew Silliman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Philosophy, Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts Voices of Nature: Environmental Literature and the Imperative to Save the World Literary creativity is an indispensable component to solving the environmental crisis. Since nature largely lacks a voice with which to advocate for itself, we must craft new and more effective narratives on its behalf if we are to foster healthier relationships with it. Speaking through us by the powerful means of literature and other artforms, the natural world of which we are a part could help break through fixed habits of thought and behavior in ways that economic and technological responses have not done. Ethicists, scientists, and others with relevant understanding must therefore go beyond theory to apply and disseminate their ideas to the world, and they need to do this with a timeliness and persuasive power commensurate with the urgency of the threat. Moreover, their modes of expression must speak most compellingly to those not already convinced of the need for change. 151 Room 911 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Will Kidder, William Cornwell (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Philosophy, Salem State University Epiphenomenal Consciousness and Natural Selection This paper argues against epiphenomenalism, the view that consciousness is epiphenomena of the physical body and lacks causal efficacy. My paper advances an objection that focuses on the relationship between natural selection and epiphenomenal consciousness. I argue that, given its lack of a causal connection to the physical world, epiphenomenal consciousness could not have been selected for via the process of evolution. This raises a difficult question for the epiphenomenalist to answer: why then are our conscious experiences so nicely coordinated with our physical lives? It seems that if consciousness were causally ineffective, then there is no reason why we could not have evolved such that, for example, our feelings of pain coincided with beneficial physical behaviors. The actual agreement between our conscious experiences and our physical experiences would require some sort of special explanation that natural selection could not provide. This tension between the theory of natural selection and epiphenomenalism is especially problematic given that the epiphenomenalist view was originally proposed as a way of reconciling consciousness with Darwin’s theory. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 99 Abstracts • Oral Sessions PHYSICS 152 Room 168 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Ian Brown, Mark Tuominen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Physics, UMass Amherst Kosterlitz Thouless Transition in Two Dimensional Superconducting Films The phenomenon of superconductivity has been the subject of much interest and consequent study over the past 100 years. Its properties have been studied under various conditions and constructions. We aim to reveal some information concerning one of these properties, known as the Kosterlitz-Thouless (K-T) transition. The K-T transition is a thermodynamic phase transition in two-dimensional films of superconductors. At the K-T transition temperature, the film exhibits a vortex unbinding transition, observable in its current-voltage characteristics. In order to further understand the transition, we probed the current-voltage characteristics of two-dimensional layers of Al in a single layer and countercurrent bilayer construction under a range of temperatures subject to zero magnetic field. In doing so we were able to glimpse and analyze the properties and characteristics of the phase transition, as well as observe the affect of countercurrent structure on the transition temperature and other traits. This was all done as a pretext to hopes of further examining these constructions in an applied magnetic field. 153 Room 168 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Lawrence R Rooney, Andrew Caide, Chandra Yelleswarapu (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Physics, UMass Boston Simultaneous recording of Photoacoustic Z-scan and Optical Z-scan for the Measurement of Third-Order Nonlinear Absorption Coefficient The measurement of third order nonlinear optical parameters of materials is important for many practical applications. Several techniques have been developed to measure the nonlinear absorption and refractive index coefficients. Among them, the conventional optical Z-scan technique is widely used in view of its simplicity. It is performed in transmission geometry and offers high sensitivity. This technique can be used for measuring both the sign and magnitude of nonlinear refractive index and the magnitude of nonlinear absorption of optical materials. Recently we developed a novel Photoacoustic Z-scan (PZ-scan) technique to measure the nonlinear absorption coefficients of a wide variety of materials (Optics Express 18, 9020–9025, 2010). It combines the advantages offered by the conventional optical Z-scan technique and the highly sensitive photoacoustic detection. In PZ-scan, instead of measuring the transmitted optical signal as in the case of traditional Z-scan, we record the generated photoacoustic signal while the sample is translated along the focused laser beam. Since the signal strength is directly proportional to the optical absorption, PZ-scan displays nonlinear behavior depicting the nonlinear optical absorption of the material. As the generated acoustic waves are propagated outwards in all directions, including both the forward and backward directions, we performed PZ-scan in reflection geometry as well while the transmitted light is collected and measured using an optical detector. Thus simultaneously we were able to perform both optical and photoacoustic z-scan. This combined system will be useful to distinguish nonlinear absorption and nonlinear scattering materials. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 100 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 154 Room 168 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Gary Forster, Andrea Pocar (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Physics, UMass Amherst Darkside-50: Search for Dark Matter The presentation will cover the basics of the DarkSide (Depleted Argon cryogenic Scintillation and Ionization Detection) project, including what dark matter is and how we know it exists. It will address the different methods other collaborations use to try to detect dark matter particles and special emphasis will be placed on the detection strategy DarkSide uses which is based on measuring both scintillation and ionization for all events. The presentation will also describe the design of the first detector of the program, DarkSide-50, planned to start operations in early 2013. The fairly universal problem of weeding out background signals in the detector by first addressing what those signals are, and ways to minimize them or disregard them will be discussed. 155 Room 168 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Peter Jumper, Robert Fisher (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Physics, UMass Dartmouth Shaping the Brown Dwarf Desert: Predicting the Primordial Brown Dwarf Binary Distributions from Turbulent Fragmentation Brown dwarfs are failed stars, with masses too low to undergo hydrogen nuclear burning. While the first incontrovertible brown dwarf was detected observationally in 1995, their formation mechanism and the origin of many of their physical properties remain open questions. The absence of brown dwarf companions in close orbits (less than several AU) to solar-type primary stars in binary systems poses a major problem. Astronomers have termed this sparsity of nearby brown dwarf companions in binary systems the brown dwarf desert. We demonstrate that direct fragmentation of the parent gaseous turbulent giant molecular cloud cores naturally gives rise to widely-separated stellar-brown dwarf binary systems. We also show that this fragmentation produces narrowly-separated brown dwarf - brown dwarf binary systems. Additionally, these results support the observation that the minimum binding energy of systems increases with decreasing system mass. 156 Room 168 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Kevin Jumper, Robert Fisher (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Physics, UMass Dartmouth A Semi-Analytic Model of a Buoyant Flame Bubble Propagation During the Deflagration Phase of a Type Ia Supernova Type Ia supernovae are astronomical events in which a white dwarf, the cold remnant of a star that has exhausted its hydrogen fuel, detonates and briefly produces an explosion brighter than most galaxies. Many researchers think that they could occur as the white dwarf approaches a critical mass of 1.4 solar masses by accreting matter from a companion main sequence star, a scenario that is referred to as the single-degenerate channel. Assuming such a progenitor, we construct a semi-analytic model of the propagation of a flame bubble ignited at a single off-center point within the white dwarf. The bubble then rises under the influences of buoyancy and drag, burning the surrounding fuel material in a process called deflagration. We contrast the behavior of the deflagration phase in the presence of a physically high Reynolds number regime with the low Reynolds number regimes inherent to three-dimensional simulations, which are a consequence of numerical viscosity. Our work may help validate three-dimensional deflagration results over a range of initial conditions. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 101 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 157 Room 168 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Alexander Nemtzow, Laura Cadonati (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Physics, UMass Amherst New Methods for Identifying Alpha Particles within the DarkSide 10kg Prototype Dark Matter Detector Current models of the makeup of the universe predict that dark matter accounts for approximately 23% of the mass within the universe. Much of this dark matter is thought to be made up of weakly interacting massive particles, or WIMPs, which do not interact with electromagnetism or the strong nuclear force. DarkSide is a collaboration of physicists who are exploring new techniques for the detection of WIMP dark matter. The DarkSide 10kg prototype detector utilizes a dual-phase liquid and gaseous argon time projection chamber to detect WIMPs as they scatter on liquid argon nuclei. An algorithm has been developed to identify the signature of alpha particles in recorded data. We present on this new methods and evaluate how they may be implemented for the DarkSide10kg detector. 158 Room 168 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Zachary Nemtzow, Laura Cadonati (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Physics, UMass Amherst Chirplet Clustering Algorithm for Black Hole Coalescence Signatures in Gravitational Wave Detectors Within this decade, gravitational waves will become new astrophysical messengers with which we can learn about our universe. Gravitational wave emission from the coalescence of massive bodies is projected to be a promising source for the next generation of gravitational wave detectors: Advanced LIGO and Advanced Virgo. We describe a method for the detection of binary black hole coalescences using a chirplet template bank, Chirplet Omega. By appropriately clustering the linearly variant frequency sin-gaussian pixels the algorithm uses to decompose the data, the signal to noise ratio (SNR) of events extended in time can be significantly increased. We present such a clustering method and discuss its potential impact on performance and detectability of binary black hole coalescences in ground based gravitational wave interferometers. 159 Room 162 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Jodie Trivedi, Ronald MacTaylor (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Physics, Salem State University Physics Applied to Motocross Track Design Motocross is an extreme sport involving gravity defying jumps with high speed whoops and berms. Physics is a science that studies matter and its motion through space. Any object that has matter is an object of physics. This study is an attempt to bring physics out of the classroom and apply it to a popular activity. It allows students to understand the importance of physics in their lives and that it can be fun when applying it to sports like Motocross. All-Terrain Vehicles (ATVs) and Off Road Vehicles (ORVs) represent a popular and economically lucrative industry (the industry estimates the retail market value for all off-road cycles and ATVs is $14.5 billion a year). Track design is equally as popular for the extreme riders who wish to push the limits of their ATVs. As a senior Biology Major, Physics and Chemistry minor, a Commonwealth Honors Student at Salem State University and extreme ATV rider, I used basic-college level physics equations to design an operational thirty foot table top jump. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 102 Abstracts • Oral Sessions PLANT, SOIL, AND INSECT SCIENCES 160 Room 168 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Joshua Coomey, Om Parkash (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Plant, Soil, and Insect Sciences, UMass Amherst Characterization of novel gamma-glutamyl cyclotransferase family in plants for abiotic stress tolerance Heavy metal and metalloid contamination of soil and groundwater poses a serious threat to human health all over the globe. Toxic metals can be ingested directly from water supplies or through the consumption of food crops that have accumulated metals in their biomass. The mitigation of this threat through conventional remediation techniques can be extremely costly, but recent developments in genetically modified plant technologies offer a cheaper and more environmentally friendly option through the use of plants that accumulate and sequester toxic heavy metals in their aboveground tissues. These transgenic plants typically utilize phytochelatins and glutathione (GSH) to bind toxic metals and metalloids and store them in their vacuoles. GSH is the main redox buffer in the living cells and protect cells against various abiotic and biotic stresses. GSH is synthesized through the γ-glutamyl cycle, and one of the key components of this cycle is the enzyme γ-glutamyl cyclotransferase (GGCT), which is involved in the degradation of GSH and recycling of glutamate by converting γ-glutamyl amino acid to 5-oxoproline. In this study, we analyzed a recently identified gene from Arabidopsis thaliana for potential γ-glutamyl cyclotransferase activity. Overexpression and T-DNA knockdown lines for this gene were grown on media supplemented with a variety of thiol reactive compounds such as As, Cd, Hg, Pb, and Cr, as well as being subjected to other abiotic stresses such as abscisic acid and drought. Analysis of accumulation of toxic metals in the plants biomass showed that both the GGCT overexpression and knockdown lines showed greater tolerance under these stress conditions as compared to control wild type plants. These results suggest that overexpression of the Arabidopsis GGCT may speed up the γ-glutamyl cycle, improve GSH homeostasis, and thus provide enhanced protection against these heavy metals and other abiotic stresses . Efforts to purify the GGCT recombinant protein and analyze its enzymatic activity are in progress. POLITICAL SCIENCE 161 Room 909 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Jason Agress, Maurice Cunningham (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Political Science, UMass Boston The Rise of the Managers: Legislator Professionalism in Massachusetts PURPOSE: This study addresses how, over the last 50 years, change in the General Court of Massachusetts has appeared evident – especially in terms of legislator professionalism. It also addresses a related and recurring theme – Edgar Litt’s assertion of an increasingly manager-oriented political culture in Massachusetts. METHODS: Using original data sets on the composition of the General Court in both 1961 and 2011, several key areas are examined: legislator education level, length of tenure, and profession. The primary source for the 1961 data is the “Bird Book” published by the Commonwealth, while the 2011 data is mostly available on the legislature’s website. This data is contextualized and complemented by a survey of literature on state legislature professionalism and managerial political culture, as well as a discussion of Massachusetts industry today. RESULTS: Cross-sectional analysis reveals that the three key areas of study evidence significant increases from 1961 to 2011. These increases are illustrative of an overall increase in legislator professionalism in the legislature as a body – and reflects the parallel trend of an increasingly manager-oriented political culture. This conclusion is closely interconnected with – and supports – the concept that Massachusetts political culture is ever-evolving and that, while managers have become the dominant political force in the Commonwealth, this is no coincidence; rather, there are distinct, normative reasons based on longstanding values and traditions that are presently manifested. CONCLUSION: In comparison to state legislatures like New Hampshire’s, Massachusetts’ is overtly more professional; consequently, it is interesting and useful to understand which factors play – both individually and statewide – roles in such comparisons and judgments. Furthermore, as Massachusetts proves itself a 21st-century leader in areas like technology and education, one must not overlook the relationship between these defining characteristics of the Commonwealth as a whole and politically. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 103 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 162 Room 909 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 John Brosnan, Maurice Cunningham (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Political Science, UMass Boston Exclusivity in State Legislature: Massachusetts and the Educational Standard PURPOSE: Massachusetts state legislature has undergone a series of changes in recent years, both public and private. While the public face of state legislature has become more diverse both sexually and racially, the traditionally dominant positions of legislative leadership (house speaker, senate president and governor) in the state have become increasingly insular and exclusive in terms of who is elected to these offices – particularly on the grounds of educational qualifications and local ties. This paper seeks to explore the development of this trend between 1928 and 2012, as well as the implications and origins of this emerging development. METHODS: Demographic data was collected for state legislative leaders from 1928 to present, including name, gender, home town, place of birth, highest level of education, post-graduate institutions attended (if any), party affiliation, role, district, year of first election, tenure in the body, years of service. Data was then coded and entered into a database to be sorted for exploring trends. RESULTS: It was found that with three general exceptions (President Murray and Governors Romney and Patrick), each office of legislative leadership has ceased to elect candidates born out of state, or lacking graduate/post-graduate education at a series of arbitrary dates. CONCLUSION: Trends in demographic data appear to display a substantial but unvoiced shift in the desired qualifications of electees to offices of legislative leadership in Massachusetts. Due to the significant power of these offices, this shift holds serious ramifications for accessibility to state legislative power. 163 Room 909 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Kara Clifford, Ray La Raja (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Political Science, UMass Amherst Why Don’t Women Run? Progressive Ambition Among Locally Elected Officials Scholarship on women running for elective office often focuses on higher offices, such as Congress, where gender disparities are greatest. Gender equality is greater for local elective offices, yet women who achieve such positions remain less likely than similarly-situated men to run for higher office. I examine the potential obstacles that affect women’s decisions to run for higher office. This study uses a survey and interviews of locally elected officials from Massachusetts and Connecticut to evaluate the factors that influence women’s decisions to run for the state legislature. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 104 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 164 Room 909 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Robert Donoghue, Glen Brewster (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University Occupy Washington: How Deregulation, Corruption, and Financial Greed Allowed Wall Street to Occupy the United States Government Millions of Americans lost their jobs and United States taxpayers were forced to pick up the bill for a $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program in the fall of 2008 following the worst economic meltdown since the Great Depression. This research paper attempts to analyze the forces in play decades before the 2008 meltdown that eventually led to the financial crisis. Using scholarly literature, expert accounts, documentary films, and primary documents, this paper examines U.S. governmental financial policy in the thirty years leading up to the 2008 economic recession to determine the many causes, from both Washington and Wall Street, of the financial meltdown. The first major factor found was the presence of Alan Greenspan as the Federal Reserve Chairman, who pushed for continual deregulation during his eighteen years in Washington. The second influence was the revolving door between Wall Street and Washington that allowed former Wall Street executives with allegiances to the elite to occupy the most powerful regulatory positions in the United States government. The final force in play was the corrupt actions of Wall Street investment banks whose only objective was to advance their own wealth with no aim at benefiting regular Americans. Wall Street’s extensive risk taking and greedy financial tactics during the housing bubble caused the investments of millions of Americans to become insolvent. The major issues in Washington and Wall Street that led to a global economic meltdown have yet to be solved, leading to assertions by many economists that the same forces that led to the 2008 recession could cause another financial crisis in the near future. 165 Room 909 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Ariel Geist, Tim Lang (Faculty Sponsor) Department of History, UMass Amherst Regulating Electoral Finance in Chile: An Ongoing Fight Against Corruption The vulnerability of elections to corruption through campaign finance reform is an important issue for modern democracies. Poorly regulated campaign finance allows private interests to corrupt and distort the political process. Although Chile returned to a democratic government in 1990, its elections remained without campaign finance regulation, and therefore vulnerable to corruption until 2003, when campaign finance reform laws were passed as part of a wide sweeping anti-corruption legislative package. The effectiveness of these new laws regarding electoral finance regulation has not received much scholarly attention. Using information gathered through interviews with academic experts and top election officials, and analysis of electoral data, this paper examines whether or not Chile’s 2003 campaign finance laws are sufficient to reach the goals of transparency, leveling of the competition, accountability of political parties, and assurance of the positive role of private interests. This project concludes that major strides have been made towards transparency, principally by requiring large contributions to be connected to a donor, and by requiring the publication of financial data gathered by the Electoral Service. This has greatly contributed to eliminating corruption, as bringing such transactions into the light discourages clientelism. However, due to insufficient oversight, the laws continue to fail to hold actors accountable. Additionally, campaign finance laws continue to favor heavily incumbent candidates and fall short of leveling the playing field. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 105 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 166 Room 909 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Erin McManus, Richard Levy (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Political Science, Salem State University Coming Home: An Examination of Veterans Experiences from Vietnam to Iraq- Afghanistan The Vietnam War holds a distinctive and troubled place in America’s history for a number of reasons, including the experiences of veterans returning home from the war. While homecoming narratives are clearly variable, the dominant legacy of the war attests that many veterans felt a profound sense of rejection, neglect and indifference upon their return to the U.S. This is characterized not only by the social stigmas and political attitudes at large, but also by the concrete challenges veterans faced, such as coping with PTSD in a society highly unprepared to treat combat-stress, unemployment and difficulty obtaining adequate benefits and health care through the VA system. However, the bittersweet outcome of such difficulties is that US has had to confront veterans’ needs and pioneering changes have been made to meet them, such as the acceptance of PTSD into the DSM III in 1980. While I uphold that considerable progress such as this has been made for veterans, my paper seeks to question the extent to which the painful legacies of veterans’ homecomings have positively impacted policies and attitudes towards returning veterans now. Moreover, I acknowledge and explores in detail the social issues facing new generations of veterans from the Iraq-Afghanistan Wars, many of whom seem to be subject to similar obstacles as their Vietnam-era counterparts. Through a careful examination of the differences and similarities between these veterans’ homecoming experiences, I suggest that it is rarely political leaders or large scale institutions that have promoted this change, but rather grass roots veterans organizations. Moreover, I assert that developments in veterans care serve as an excellent lens by which one can question and explore American attitudes towards policy making, social welfare, and the origins of social change. To support this, I use many sociological texts, such as but not pertaining to, John Helmer’s, Bringing the War Home, and oral histories, like Helen Benedict’s, The Lonely Soldier, as my fundamental sources. 167 Room 811 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Nicholas Smarra, Glen Brewster (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University United States Foriegn Policy: Egypt Mubarak Years In early 2011 a series of civilian-led uprisings, now popularly known as the Arab Spring, began in the Arab world. This Arab Spring took hold in many countries that had an authoritarian leader such as Tunisia, Lebanon, Libya, and Egypt. However, research shows that there is major United States funding to these countries that use authoritarian leadership. There is an obvious dichotomy between this support of authoritarian regimes and the popular notion that the United States aims to promote liberty in international affairs. Thus there must be other reasons for United States involvement in international affairs. Using Egypt as case study reveals that the goal of backing authoritarian leaders serves both a strategic and economic advantage to the U.S. The U.S must find allies in the Middle East in order to remain a major player in this important region. The United States needs Egypt in order to keep both pro-U.S and Israeli sentiment alive in the Arab World. The United States’ Egyptian policy is also based on economics. Egypt has control over the Suez Canal, a major passage for oil tankers delivering oil to the U.S, and if it were to be lost there would be a major adverse affect on the U.S economy. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 106 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 168 Reading Room 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Sophia Zaman, Gloria DiFulvio (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Saving Our Students: the Funding Crisis in Public Higher Education In an increasingly globalized world, a degree in higher education is no longer a pathway to actualizing the American Dream – it is now the prerequisite. However, in this economic downturn, the cost of attending institutions of higher education is skyrocketing. In the first part of my Capstone project, I detailed the current crisis in funding for public higher education institutions, as well as offered alternatives to the current situation. As part of my Capstone project, I intend to organize a Lobby Day to take students from across the state to the Boston Statehouse, where we will be lobbying our legislators to increase funding for public higher education. I will be collaborating with other student groups like the Student Government Association, and community colleges across the state, in order to organize a united front of students who can voice their needs to their legislators. In doing so, I hope to not only convince legislators to increase funding for public higher education but also, help students engage with their elected representatives and hold them accountable to the fundamental value that accessible higher education is a human right. PSYCHOLOGY 169 Room 809 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Mariel Adams, Michael Constantino (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst Baseline patient characteristics as predictors of remission in interpersonal psychotherapy for depression The present study will examine baseline patient factors as predictors of posttreatment remission in interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT) for depression. Archival data for this novel re-analysis derive from a study of IPT delivered naturalistically to adults (n = 74) at an outpatient mood disorders clinic of a university-affiliated hospital (McBride et al., 2010). Four specific domains of baseline patient characteristics (sociodemographic variables, clinical/diagnostic features, personality/interpersonal functioning, and cognitive factors) will be analyzed as predictors of remission using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis (i.e., signal detection) – an empirically driven, nonparametric technique appropriate for exploratory data analysis with dichotomous outcomes. Analyzing the large set of predictors, ROC will identify distinct patient subgroups (through analysis of sensitivity and specificity) likely to show remission based on patients’ baseline characteristics. ROCs can identify specific algorithms so that interactions between predictors can be interpreted in clinically meaningful ways (i.e., patients likely to remit vs. those at risk of non-remission). Effect size of ROC-derived classification will be evaluated with the area under the curve (AUC) statistic. The findings will contribute to the currently scant literature on patient factors related to successful remission following IPT. Clinically, the results will inform treatment decision-making based on presenting patient profiles. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 107 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 170 Room 903 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Brenna Bean, Jennifer DiGrazia (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University Adolescent Drunk Driving: What’s the Motive? Driving while under the influence can lead to a plethora of undesirable outcomes: legal repercussions, physical trauma, and death. Often adolescents are even more susceptible to drunk driving than the rest of us. Because of the numerous consequences, groups including MADD and SADD put forth copious efforts to raise awareness about these dangers. Despite their work, America’s young adults still bear responsibility to over 35% of fatal DUI crashes in the country. New research proves that there is undeniably a biological justification for why these individuals do what that they do. Not only does this project address the conventional excuses for teenage drunk driving, but it also brings to light previously unknown information that could help us answer the questions we’re wondering: If kids know that drunk driving is wrong, why do they do it? And perhaps more importantly, what can be done to stop them? National Geographic Magazine has published data based on research done by the National Institutions of Health and psychologists and neuroscientists who base their studies on teens. Their findings suggest that teens put themselves in compromising positions despite the wisdom they’ve acquired simply because “their brains aren’t done yet!” Through analyzing the thought processes in their minds, it turns out that a small tweak in teens’ upbringings may be the solution to keeping our kids out of trouble. Until the necessary brain development occurs, we as a society may have more success preventing kids from drinking and driving by using an approach that acknowledges teens’ growing capacity for logic, yet accounts for the ways an adolescent’s craving for social acceptance can override their rationale. When America’s young adults are so vulnerable to these intoxicated dilemmas, don’t you think it’s an issue that needs some attention? 171 Reading Room 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Megan Conery, Gloria DiFulvio (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst A Dynamic Solution to a Dynamic Problem Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender youth make up 3-5% of the youth population in the United States. However, they comprise up to 40% of the homeless youth population. The reason for this discrepancy is because of a lack of social acceptance from peers, families, and institutions. Once in the homeless population, LGBT youth face similar discrimination and rejection because of their identities. In order to organize around this issue, I decided to take a dynamic approach. By joining the LGBT support committee of UMass Amherst, the Stonewall Center, I helped organize LGBT students and their allies to gain support for LGBT youth by speaking at and helping plan discussion panels on organizing. On top of this, I contributed to an on-going campaign for “An Act Providing Housing and Support Services for Unaccompanied Homeless Youth.” With this multi-angle strategy, I helped enact support for LGBT communities while advocating for specific legislation. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 108 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 172 Room 809 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Timothy Dillon, Hal Grotevant (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst Social Normalization and the Formation of an Adoptive Identity The current project will develop a program and corresponding manual that aims to provide an outlet for adopted pre-teens and adolescents in the Amherst area, allowing them to discuss their views surrounding adoption, create a network that normalizes adoption, and form their individual adoptive identity. In previous studies adopted children and adolescents have expressed concern regarding the general attitudes within their communities and families towards adoption, multiculturalism, and difference. Adopted children are often a minority within school systems, making adoption seem different and unusual. Normalizing adoption for these adoptees will influence their unique adoptive identity as well as their general adoptive experience. Direct requests from adoptees for a diverse community are reflective of their desire to be understood and accepted by their peers. This proposed program intends to allow participating adoptees to meet and form bonds with other adopted children that they may not have otherwise met, showing them that whether they are similar or not, many other families are also formed through adoption. To avoid a clinical atmosphere, adopted college students will add a casual structure to the meetings. It is also important to note that adoption will be recognized as a commonality, however it will not be a forced topic of discussion. Since adopted adults often state that they would have benefited greatly from a program of this nature, it is hoped that by participating in this program adoptees will feel more comfortable about their adoption, diversity, and other social issues that they may face. 173 Room 809 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Jennifer Gardner, Champika Soysa (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Worcester State University Predictors of Stress and Well-Being: Social Capital, Self-Esteem, Popularity, and Technology Use PURPOSE: Some aspects of social capital, self-esteem, popularity, and technology use have been studied in terms of their relationships with stress and well-being. Since researchers have not investigated the preceding variables together, we examined several novel dimensions of these factors, as predictors of stress and well-being among undergraduates. HYPOTHESIS: i. Social capital will (a)inversely predict stress and (b)positively predict well-being. ii. Self-esteem will (a) inversely predict stress and (b)positively predict well-being. iii. Popularity will (a)inversely predict stress and (b)positively predict well-being. iv. Technology use will (a)positively predict stress and (b)inversely predict well-being. METHOD: Participants were 176 undergraduates (males=42, females=134) over age 18, taking at least a 12-credit course load. Participants completed 10 self-report questionnaires designed to assess the variables of interest. RESULTS: We conducted stepwise regression analyses to test all hypotheses. Inclusion and exclusion criteria for predictor variables were, respectively, p=.05 and .01. Supporting hypothesis 1b, social capital positively predicted well-being, beta=.16, 95%CI=[0.00,0.14], p<.05. Supporting hypothesis 2a and 2b, self-esteem inversely predicted stress, beta= -.58, 95%CI=[-1.01,-0.66], p<.001, and positively predicted well-being, beta=.60, 95%CI=[0.82,1.23], p<.001. Popularity predicted well-being, beta=.22, 95%CI=[0.13,0.69], p<.01, supporting hypothesis 3b. Supporting hypothesis 4a and 4b, MP3 player use positively predicted stress, beta=.25, 95%CI=[0.11,0.43], p<.01, and social networking positively predicted stress, beta=.30, 95%CI=[0.16,0.45], p<.001, and inversely predicted well-being, beta=-.19, 95%CI=[-0.40,0.05], p<.05. CONCLUSION: These results inform the field about predictors of stress and well-being, and could have implications for stress-reducing and wellness-enhancing interventions among undergraduates. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 109 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 174 Room 809 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Samantha Hague, Janet Gebelt (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Westfield State University Emerging Adult Identity Identity development occurs within a social context. For example, healthy relationships are related to having a stronger identity. Another important context is the collegiate environment as any major life transition can lead individuals to reevaluate their identity. This study examines identity processes in adolescents and emerging adults at the onset of their transition to college, a critical time for identity, and a time during which the relationships that have supported identity efforts to date are changing dramatically. Incoming first year college students (n=552) completed measures of identity and attachment during summer orientation. Analyses showed that stronger relationships with mother, friends and significant others predicted greater Identity Commitment and Identity Strength, but not Identity Exploration. Additionally, stronger attachment to friends predicted less Identity Distress. Six weeks after starting college 111 of these participants completed the measures again, along with a measure of adjustment to the college transition. Analyses showed that stronger attachment to friends predicted increased Identity Strength, more Identity Commitment, and less Identity Distress. Also, more Transition Stress was related to decreased Identity Strength and increased amounts of Identity Distress. This study confirms prior research showing that healthy relationships are important to identity, but suggests that relationships matter specifically for making commitments, not for exploring identity. Furthermore, when looking at change over time, it is changes in friendship relationships, not parental relationships that are especially important for fostering identity development during the college transition. Finally, the results suggest that, while healthy relationships do foster a stronger commitment to an identity, it is only the relationships with friends that can ameliorate the distress often associated with finding an identity. 175 Room 808 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Aaron Karp, Luke Remage-Healey (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Amherst An Exploration of Differential Methylation Patterns in the Brain in the Context of Vocal Learning An Exploration of Differential Methylation Patterns in the Brain in the Context of Vocal Learning Aaron Karp ABSTRACT PURPOSE: There is no research into the epigenetic modifications that affect gene expression in the brain during song or speech learning. This experiment looks to quantify changes in the promoter of the immediate-early gene EGR-1 that is associated with neural activity and plasticity. The epigenetic process known as DNA methylation results in reduced gene transciption following attachment of methyl groups to cytosine. I expect that following song exposure, the overall methylation of the EGR-1 promoter will have decreased to enable dynamic gene transcription. METHODS: Three groups of finches will be studied, two groups ~45 days old when they may yet exhibit song following exposure and one group ~20 days old when their brain is not yet able to acquire song. One 45 day-old group will be exposed to song, and the other age-matched group will remain naïve. Brains will be sectioned and a “puncher” will be used to take samples from song-learning brain areas. DNA will be extracted from this tissue and undergo bisulfite conversion, PCR, and mass spectrometry. This will yield quantitative methylation differences to be assessed at specific sites along the EGR-1 promoter. RESULTS: The process of mass spectrometry and methylation assessment is currently underway. The focus thus far has been to perfect the techniques necessary for this novel research. Optimal procedures for punching discrete brain regions and concentrating DNA to produce a viable genomic product for mass spectrometry have been achieved. CONCLUSION: Preliminary data shows an age-dependent decline. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 110 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 176 Room 809 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Alexander Keefe, Jessica Hufnagle (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Westfield State University The Development of Leadership within the position of Resident Assistants The Westfield State University Department of Residential Life consists primarily of Resident Assistant (RA) student staff members and professional Residence Directors (RD). They live at Westfield State University in one of eight residential halls on and off campus. These “RAs” and “RDs” who work with residential students are hired, selected, and placed in various communities within the halls on and off campus. The research presented will consist of current RA student staff members, current RDs, and Residential Life professional staff defining and explaining their position on leadership within the Department of Residential Life as well as examining how it is determined by the RDs and Professional staff if a student possesses the skills and capabilities of becoming an RA and excelling in the position. The research will also show how current RAs and potential RAs view their own leadership qualities and if this position has helped or can help them strengthen their leadership abilities. To examine this question, a series of individual surveys, focus group observations, and-one-on-one interviews will take place. The data collected will be analyzed and examined to show how the RAs, RDs, and the Residential Life professional staff define leadership qualities within the RA position. 177 Room 909 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Gregory Murphy, Brian Lickel (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst White American’s Reaction to Inter-Minority Prejudice PURPOSE: As American society becomes increasingly diverse, prejudicial attitudes and behaviors will inevitably occur between White Americans and ethnic minorities, though tensions can also occur between racial minority groups. The increase in inter-minority prejudice may have unnoticed effects on White Americans in terms of guilt for societal discrimination and support for compensatory policies. METHODS: Using several questionnaires regarding feelings of guilt and levels of support for compensatory policies (replicated from previous literature), as well as a news article detailing the rise in inter-minority prejudice, we will measure differences between levels of guilt and compensatory policy support between those exposed to inter-minority prejudice and those who were not exposed (as well as baseline measures with participants not exposed to any conditions). Participants in the experimental condition will be primed to think of racial discrimination as caused and perpetuated by Whites. RESULTS: Based on previous research in the areas of White guilt, we expect that the participants who read the article describing inter-minority prejudice will show lower levels of guilt for racial discrimination, as well as lower support for compensatory policies, compared to participants who do not read about inter-minority racism. CONCLUSION: Depending on the results, this study will provide information about how Whites react to instances of inter-minority prejudice. The results may highlight how portrayal certain events in the media do or do not alter people’s affect and levels of support for political policy, specifically when it comes to race relations and White people’s feelings of guilt for the discrimination that exists. 178 Room 809 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Jacob Shade, David Gow (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Salem State University The Effect of Intensive Residential Treatment Programs on Direct Care Staff To date, little research has examined the psychological impact that working in mental health care facilities has on direct care staff. In Intensive Residential Treatment Programs (IRTP), the direct care staff often experience sleep deprivation, the potential for physical violence and high levels of stress. These factors have been correlated with substance abuse. This study will focus on the prevalence and effects of insomnia or sleep deprivation. Analyses of previous research along with structured interviews of direct care supervisors at an IRTP were completed. The reports of the supervisors relate to the information derived from the previous research. The lack of sleep and high levels of stress may contribute to the incidence of substance abuse in direct care staff, and be detrimental to their well-being and health. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 111 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 179 Room 809 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Carolyn Wilcomb, Champika Soysa (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Worcester State University Differential Prediction of Depression, Anxiety, and Stress: Mindfulness, Self-Compassion, and Self-Efficacy PURPOSE: Researchers have established that college students experience significantly higher levels of psychological distress (depression, anxiety, and stress) than the general population, and that it is associated with poor academic outcomes. Researchers have found that some dimensions of mindfulness, self-compassion, and self-efficacy each inversely predicted distress. Since mindfulness, self-compassion, and self-efficacy have not been examined together, we examined novel aspects of these factors as predictors of distress. METHODS: Participants were 150 undergraduates (males = 39, females = 111) over the age of 18, enrolled in at least a 12-credit course load. Materials included a demographic form, the Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire, the Self-Compassion Scale: Short Form, the Self-Efficacy Scale, and the Depression, Anxiety, Stress Scales. Participants were assessed in a group setting using a self-report protocol. RESULTS: Examined separately, mindfulness, self-efficacy, and positive self-compassion inversely predicted distress, while negative self-compassion positively predicted distress. When examined together, mindfulness (nonjudging, describing, acting-aware) and positive self-compassion (self-kindness) inversely predicted depression, while negative self-compassion (isolation) positively predicted depression. In addition, three facets of mindfulness (nonjudging, non-reactivity, and acting-aware) inversely predicted anxiety. Furthermore, three facets of mindfulness (nonjudging, acting-aware, and non-reactivity) inversely predicted stress, while negative self-compassion (isolation) positively predicted stress. Self-efficacy did not predict depression, anxiety, or stress when examined together with mindfulness and self-compassion. CONCLUSION: Our results extend the existing literature by identifying the facets of mindfulness and self-compassion that differentially predict depression, anxiety, and stress when examine together with self-efficacy. These results may inform preventive clinical interventions for undergraduates. PUBLIC HEALTH 180 Room 809 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Jessie M Gray, Mary Kate Bradley, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Creating a Social Media “App” to Spread Awareness and Information to UMASS Students about Drugs and Alcohol The University Health Services at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst has an extensive division pertaining to the use and abuse of alcohol and other drugs. It also provides education and prevention methods. It is important to have this information accessible to students because it can help influence responsible decisions and behavior. With the rapid growth of technology and the use of smartphones, spreading information campus-wide has become a simple mechanism of daily life. This capstone project is aimed at students on the UMASS campus and will be advertised and promoted via social media. An “app” (application) will be created for smartphones that provides resources, information and social norms facts for students to utilize. We will combine our efforts with the Campus Community Coalition and the Center for Alcohol and Drug Abuse to develop a social media app free of charge to the UMASS community. By using PowerPoint and mock app software, we will create a health and wellness database that includes a variety of topics such as the Town of Amherst drinking laws, Social Norm facts, and professional resources; all at the tips of your fingers. By using different social networks such as Facebook and twitter, we will encourage students to download and effectively use this app. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 112 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 181 Room 803 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Lauren Corte-Real, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Bettering Healthcare Outcomes While Reducing Costs for High-End Utilizers This capstone project reviews the problem of homeless high-end utilizers of hospital Emergency Departments; documents the initial work of the Mercy Medical Center study on this issue; describes my role and contributions for this study; reviews similar programs and works; unpacks lessons learned and how it may be practically applied in other populations. 182 Room 803 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Trevon Mayers, Brithny Dolcius, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Promoting a Healthy Lifestyle in Massachusetts Public Schools Obesity has been a growing epidemic in the United States for many years. Today between 16% and 33% of children and young adults are obese. Obesity is often associated with health problems such as respiratory disorders, high blood pressure, mortality and other preventable illnesses. In Massachusetts, health based education programs have tried to address this issue by implementing a ban on artificial sweeteners, trans-fat and caffeine products in public school vending machines. Despite this, obesity rates among young adults have more than doubled in the last 30 years, with studies indicating that approximately 4.7 million youths ages 6 to 17 years are considered to be seriously overweight. The goal of this project is to identify and analyze new strategies Massachusetts’ public schools can adopt to improve healthy lifelong nutrition for high school students. We will design a program that includes specific guidelines to encourage teenagers to balance food consumption with physical activity, and maintain and improve a healthy weight. 183 Room 803 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Sarah Ferguson, Aline Davis (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, Framingham State University What is the role of a Medical Examiner in Society? Are Medical Examiners essential to the function of our society? Approximately 4.8 deaths among every one hundred thousand people in 2010 were attributed to homicides. The need for educated forensic professionals is high, due to the limited case load one professional office can accurately handle. The office that handles homicide cases varies from county to county and state to state. It can differ from Coroners and Medical Examiners working side by side to some working independently and performing the same tasks with varied degrees of education. Overall, Medical Examiners share some similarities in their job description as Coroners and other forensic specialists, however; there are some distinct differences. The responsibility to society as well as to the families of passed on loved ones can be overlooked when compared to their role in the justice system. Not only do specialists in this field perform autopsies and toxicology reports for judicial review in criminal cases but they may also be required to appear in court on behalf of the victim and report their findings. What is the role of a Medical Examiner in society and why is it needed? 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 113 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 184 Room 803 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Esam Goodarzy, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst The Anza Cart Project (BIT) Broadening Institutional Technologies Worldwide Inc. (BIT) is a not-for-profit networking organization founded in August of 2010 whose stated mission is to “identify and support projects across the globe that reduce hardship and improve well-being as cost effectively as possible.” To fulfill this mission, BIT has engaged in a partnership with Anza, a not-forprofit startup founded by dedicated Brown University graduates, that has developed an affordable, yet transformative, handcart that improves the livelihoods of farmers, empowers women, and keeps children in school, by helping people gather water and wood six times more efficiently. Anza is currently sending shipments of carts to Tanzania and selling them to village farmers and their families. It is a donor-subsidized foundation that plans to be economically selfsustainable within the next five years. The Anza Cart Project, which BIT is now supporting, has significant positive global health implications, as the use of the Anza Cart will allow many families to stop engaging in the physically crippling method of transportation called “head carrying”, which causes severe neck and back problems every year. The project also meets the Millennium Development Goals that were set by the UN in 2000, and Tanzania’s Second National Strategy for Growth and Reduction of Poverty by moving families out of poverty, helping children stay in school, and improving gender equality. As one of Anza’s partner organizations, BIT will develop and implement a fundraising strategy for Anza, promote Anza’s brand through their organization, provide project management consultation, and assist Anza directly with its project goals. 185 Room 803 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Rebecca Headley, Elizabeth Trobaugh (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Holyoke Community College Is Soda Killing Our Kids? This study examines the correlation between soda consumption and rising obesity rates in American children. This research draws from the book Food Inc., scientific studies, health and medical journal publications, and other statistical reports and publications. These sources suggest a link between the amounts of soda and other sugar sweetened beverages children consume and such serious health issues as childhood obesity and Type 2 diabetes. Several courses of action have the potential to reverse the declining health trends associated with excessive soda consumption, including public nutrition education, regulatory legislature to restrict vending machine offerings, and taxation of sugar as well as sugary processed foods. While it may sound extreme to say soda is killing our kids, the evidence is there to support the statement. The health epidemics affecting our nation’s children are increasing at an alarming rate, and it is imperative to implement solutions to protect and improve the health not only of our children, but of our nation as well. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 114 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 186 Room 803 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Daniel Hynes, W. Brian O’Connor (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Amherst Exploring Medical Non-Governmental Organizations and their Effectiveness in Africa Throughout the last 25 years, there has been a surge in both charities and charitable donations on the continent of Africa. These charities vary widely in how they operate, and the purpose of this paper is to uncover what “best practices” are most effective in the cultural and political climates of Africa today. This paper uses both secondary sources found in the UMass library and its databases as well as primary experience gained while volunteering in Ghana. By using both forms of research, this paper is able to acquire a broader knowledge on the “best practices” of NGOs. By combining firsthand experience and scholarly research, I expect to see that a long-term model is best fitted for Africa. An organization must be willing to set up roots and have a continuous presence to make a positive impact on the community. Various governmental restrictions will also affect the efficiency of an organization. The goal of any highquality charitable organization is to successfully serve its intended community. To accomplish this feat, one must have an effective administrative structure set up to deal with any challenges or obstacles that may arise. This paper lays out practices that have been proven effective; and that can be used to make a real impact on the population for the better. 187 Room 803 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Jeremy Miller, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Female Masculinities in Africa: The Intersections of Economic and Sexual intercourse in the Age of AIDS This project is a review of the literature that evaluates current sexual health intervention programs targeting women in urban areas of sub-Saharan Africa. Many of these studies, conducted primarily in Kampala, Uganda; Durban, South Africa; and Nairobi, Kenya, suggest that the Knowledge-Attitude-Practice model of health intervention does not work in this context. The pervasive message, adopted by internationally-funded, local non-governmental organizations and plastered on billboards in each of these cities, reads: “It’s as easy as A-B-C: Abstinence, Be Faithful, Condoms.” However, this model disregards the research-suggested conclusions that (a) sexual violence and other coerced/forced sex precludes many women from negotiating their own sexual experiences (b) the prevalence of polygyny by male partners, either with other wives, girlfriends or sex workers, (c) the overwhelming statistics that many women will knowingly participate in unprotected sex if it involves a financial incentive. This review will offer a revisionist intervention model inspired by the numerous strategies that have been documented as successful in this region, but more so by the shortcomings that have been discovered. Furthermore, it relies on ethnographic accounts of African masculinities to determine which traditionally male characteristics can be co-opted and promoted by health intervention programs to empower African women to have the same range of sexual choices as their male counterparts. In sum, the review suggests that if urban African women are to avoid sexual health risks and their peripheral effects, several structural changes would be required to provide them with the traditionally masculine (and in Africa, male) benefits of wage-earning jobs, property ownership and secondary education. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 115 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 188 Room 803 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Anthony Rascati, Jennifer DiGrazia (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University Epidemic of a Generation: Childhood Obesity in America If left untreated, this epidemic of obesity (defined as a person with a body mass index of 30 or higher) could cause the current child generation to have a shorter life expectancy than their parents along with lives full of depression and loneliness. Critics of today’s food industries like Michael Pollan argue that the causes of childhood obesity are sociocultural, lack of access to healthy food, or lack of exercise and will power. However, these critics fail to acknowledge new found causes of childhood obesity. Depending on the culture of the child, genetic traits specific to that culture could lead to an increased risk of obesity. However, as Dr. Catherine Paddock of the University of Cambridge argues, a child’s DNA could also cause early obesity as there is a certain chromosome which would cause this. Despite culture and DNA, the psychological health of a child can lead to obesity as connections have been made between depression and obesity in adolescents. So, why does this need to be heard? Aren’t there enough people talking about childhood obesity? This is a serious problem which should be addressed by the entire nation, not just the medical community and people already suffering. Using these three theories, we shall combat childhood obesity despite public weariness about the discussion of the causes of childhood obesity. We need to build upon our existing knowledge, disrupt the cycle of those who abuse anyone with obesity, and strike at the sources of childhood obesity. With the use of resources such as the Center for Disease Control, Weight Watchers, my first-hand experience, and others, the outlook on childhood obesity will be expanded and re-defined through the collusion of new ideas and insight in a roundtable like conversation. With a situation this enormous, there are never enough solutions being proposed. 189 Room 803 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Rebecca Rwakabukoza, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Obstetric Fistula in Uganda It is estimated that more than two million young women live with untreated obstetric fistula (OF). Obstetric fistula is a condition where a woman, after difficult or failed child labor, develops a hole (fistula) between either her vagina and her bladder (vesicovaginal fistula) or vagina and rectum (rectovaginal fistula). According to World Health Organization (WHO), the factors that lead to OF are generally the same as maternal morbidity and mortality, as well as many newborn deaths. Treatment -corrective operations -cures about 90% of the fistula cases but women continue to live in shame, discomfort and social segregation in parts of Uganda, a country that is reported to have the third largest rates of obstetric fistula. In Uganda, the etiology OF is explained culturally as a curse or associated with witchcraft. NonGovernmental Organizations, like Uganda Village Project and UK-based Uganda Childbirth Fund, are doing most of the work to help the women. The organizations educate the communities as well as offer support for corrective surgery for the affected women. This is not very effective as national hospitals (the primary source of health care in the country) and more generally, the Ministry of Health would create a more sustainable program. More work has been done, with combined national and international efforts, in Ethiopia to treat existing cases of OF and measures put in place to prevent it. I will do a comparative study with Ethiopia’s response because as another sub-Saharan third-world country, the cases of OF are similar to Uganda. In this capstone project, I will design a national health strategy for Uganda to educate the people on what exactly is OF, and propose measures for treatment and prevention. It will combine the work the NGOs are doing with the work that the national hospitals should be doing to reach more people. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 116 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 190 Room 903 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Lauren Sheehan, Tameka Gillum (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Teen Dating Violence Prevention Teen dating violence (TDV) has a profound effect on those who experience it. In Massachusetts, 11% teens report being physically hurt by a date (Massachusetts Youth Risk Behavior Survey [MYRBS], 2009) TDV is related to numerous mental and physical health consequences (Howard, Wang, & Yan, 2007). Research on teen dating violence has important implications for prevention efforts aimed at reducing future violence and for improving the lives of adolescents. The goal of this project was to educate young adolescents about dating violence and their roles as empowered bystanders who can work to prevent sexual assault and relationship violence. This was achieved through outreach and relationship building with local schools and community organizations to bring educational workshops to the youth they serve. This project also aims to explore various violence prevention practices to identify those that have been most successful. Data for this research project were gathered directly from adolescents attending healthy relationship workshops, from facilitators’ experiences conducting these workshops with teens in this area, and from the literature. This project is important because it is looking at the effectiveness of short dose programming, which may be more logistically feasible for some organizations and schools than longer dose programming. It will also examine some of the barriers to introducing TDV prevention programming into schools and explore possible solutions. 191 Room 811 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Eileen Thompson, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Reducing recidivism rates: A question of social health and the family focus approach Every day in America approximately 1,800 men and women are released from jail. The crimes these people commit range from multiple minor traffic violations to murder. After release, these people are thrown back into society, most of the time with little support from their family or communities. Over the course of two semesters interning at Hampshire County Correctional Facility, I have studied the reduction of recidivism though social support services, education, and the ability to build a strong family connection. In this capstone project I will examine recidivism and the impact of a family focus program. In the family focus program I will be both working with inmates and their families. The families attend a six week session with topics that range from ending the cycle of violence, self care and how to be an encouraging support system. The prisoners in the program work on skills for employment, risk prevention and substance abuse education. I will explore the purpose of the program, how it is implemented, and its impacts on both a micro and macro level. In addition, I will explore its implications on social health, both for the individual and the impact for society as a whole. The focus of my project will be to determine whether being a part of a family focus program affects rates of recidivism. In addition I will examine the importance of social health, defined as allowing equal access to services and knowledge critical to function within the society. I will present data from the facility and external research gathered though articles and journals. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 117 Abstracts • Oral Sessions RADIO-TELEVISION-FILM 192 Room 101 2:30-3:15 Panel 4 Devon Torres, Tom Grady (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Radio-Television-Film, Bristol Community College Hollywood’s (Mis)Representation Teenage Sexuality This presentation questions the depiction of consensual adolescent sexuality in recent, Hollywood feature films. Taken as a given that adolescent sexuality is a very real part of life, why is it then is there a dearth of films that depict it openly and honestly? Why is it that when shown on film, audiences/viewers are presumably uncomfortable with the material? Why are people more willing to accept or watch adolescents in sexual situations in a documentary versus a scripted film? Why are people more lenient and accepting of the sexuality of youth in a sex farce than a serious drama? Do moral, ethical and health concerns obviate the choices to depict sexual activity frankly and even positively? SOCIAL THOUGHT AND POLITICAL ECONOMY 193 Room 811 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Tiago Amaral, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College American Women in High-Prestige Engineering Positions: Why Are They So Few? Issues regarding sex discrimination have been addressed in the past decades. Legislation has been implemented making such discrimination illegal. According to The National Science Foundation (NSF 2010), the number of graduate enrollment by women has increased 63% from 1993 to 2006. But, the number of American women in high prestige engineering positions has been few. Why is this? Analyzing data collected from recognized institutions regarding the status of women continuing their studies in the engineering field and advancement in their careers, this project attempts to show the reason for this disparity. Suggested solutions are presented to the inequality in high prestige engineering positions. 194 Room 808 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Tyrone Smith, Tom Grady (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Social Thought and Political Economy, Bristol Community College Social Media Murder II Have you ever pulled a prank on Facebook? Come delve into an extreme of pranking: a staged death. Can current postmodern theory apply to the coping methods of various societies and the results deliver a better understanding of how the world is changing at the pace of media? By positioning theories from different discplines, (Elizabeth KublerRoss’ “Seven Stages of Grief,” Marshall Mcluhan’s “medium is the message,” Jean Baudrillard’s “Loss of the Real”) this inquiry seeks to unveil how each pertains to the ethics of a prank. Most importantly, what does the meta-level review reveal about the presenter’s actions? What does the project reveal about the audience? 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 118 Abstracts • Oral Sessions SOCIAL WORK 195 Reading Room 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Tequan Jones, Gloria DiFulvio (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Academic Achievement via Youth Sports Sport originated with the vision of pure gamesmanship and tribute to the athletic accomplishments of the body. However, within our society sports have evolved to signify something more. Sports represent the greatest reflection our generation have on our society and the social constructs that constrains us. The same way we have constructed our race relations to similarly reflect the ethics of our society and the urban planning of our cities reflects our social classes. These three social phenomenon’s work in cahoots with each other to create and inner-city minority sport culture that is like no other. With wealth disparities and the Achievement Gap growing rapidly, many have looked for institutions that can possible be resources for positive change especially in these urban communities that are being hit the hardest. One venue that often gets overlooked in the usage of community youth sport leagues. With their wide range of membership and unique scope of the social issues of our culture I believe that if they are used efficiently they can be agents for social change. The way I will mirror potential change is by organizing the Holyoke community to create an academic regulation policy for their youth sport leagues; this will help many of the failing students participating in sports reach academic success. Within my study I will show the process of using inner-city youth sport leagues to address the achievement gap and other social reforms needed. 196 Room 809 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Elise Kennedy, Tom Grady (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Social Work, Bristol Community College Transitions in Disability-Related Services This project explores students’ transition from high school special needs programs to college-level disability services’ policies and procedures, especially those at Bristol Community College. What are the differences in laws that apply to high school special needs students and those that apply to postsecondary students? The goal is to create a manual that can be used by students—current and future—to assist as they navigate the transitions necessary to move from a high school special needs program to disability services in a postsecondary environment. This manual will be used by current and future BCC students to ease the transition from disability services K-12 to disability services at the postsecondary level. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 119 Abstracts • Oral Sessions SOCIOLOGY 197 Room 917 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Samantha Alonso, Janice Irvine (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Sociology, UMass Amherst The Role of American Evangelicals on the Establishment of Homophobia in Uganda As with the current political feel of this country, Christianity has notable control over political decisions made regarding homosexuality in the East-African country of Uganda. Palpable evidence of this reality is the manner in which Ugandan Evangelical Pastor Martin Ssempa blazingly advocates for the Uganda Anti-Homosexuality bill, a bill drafted—though not yet passed—by a member of the Ugandan Parliament, David Bahati, in October, 2009. This legislation, which has been referred to as the Kill-the-Gays bill due to its proposed punishments for “serial homosexual offenders,” is based solely on religious doctrine. However, Ugandan religious leaders are not the only ones credited for influencing lawmakers into drafting this bill; rather, there has been speculation on whether or not a visit made by American Scott Lively and other Evangelicals a month prior to the drafting of this bill was the catalyst for the increasingly homophobic tendencies and responses in Uganda. By examining literature written by these Evangelicals, reading newspapers from Uganda, and extracting material from interviews, talks, and conferences regarding the work of key players coupled with the response of the Ugandan public, this paper inspects the motives these American religious leaders have had for preaching in Uganda. The main objective of this paper is to assess the influence these Americans had on establishing this extreme homophobia in the country and subsequent formulation of this bill. The results of this on-going research are currently indicating that there was indeed a cleverly crafted and delivered force from the part of the American Evangelicals which led to the cultural and legal hatred towards gays and lesbians. Thus, this research is significant in today’s society as it shows the detrimental consequences the work and preaching of American religious leaders have had and continue to have on African cultures such as Uganda. 198 Room 917 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Paola Arango, Janice Irvine (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Sociology, UMass Amherst Guilty Pleasure: A study of Catholic guilt and it’s influence on collegiate student’s sexual behavior. The purpose of this study is to analyze the influence that Catholic guilt has on the sexual behavior of undergraduate collegiate students. Catholic doctrine states that sex before marriage is a sin (this includes all sexual behaviors). A sense of guilt can be instilled in them thus creating what is referred as Catholic Guilt. Previous studies have shown that student’s who have either a Catholic background and/or currently identify as Catholic engage in sexual behaviors as much as those students who do not identify with the Catholic religion. However, there are other studies imply that this is not necessarily the case. This project examines for whether Catholic guilt has any influence on the sexual behavior of undergraduate college students. I have used an online survey to collect the data. The survey was posted in social networking sites and sent to students via email in order to reach the largest sample of students possible. My research suggests that Catholicism has less influence on sexual behaviors than some commentators assumed. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 120 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 199 Room 917 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Marisa Baglaneas, Janice Irvine (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Sociology, UMass Amherst “No Means No” and “Yes means Yes”: SlutWalk, Sexuality, and Shifting Narratives in Contemporary Feminist Conversations In January of 2011, a comment made to a room full of students at a university in Toronto sparked a global movement. The police officer advised the students that to avoid being sexually assaulted, “women should avoid dressing like sluts.” Thus SlutWalk was born, a protest march that has taken place all over the world. SlutWalk has been the most hotly contested event in feminist activism in recent years. By studying SlutWalk, we can better understand the contemporary narrative around women’s sexuality and the lasting impact of SlutWalk. I will argue that SlutWalk is a successful example of the mobilization of the slut persona as activism, an idea attributed to Dr. Feona Attwood. SlutWalk has refocused women’s activism on sexual freedom rather than focusing entirely on sexual violence. SlutWalk has also exemplified racial tensions in feminist activism and single-issue politics. To study SlutWalk, I have conducted numerous interviews with SlutWalk organizers, participants, and observers. I have also examined and analyzed media attention surrounding SlutWalk. By studying SlutWalk we can better understand the changing discourse of sexual violence and women’s sexuality as being more separated in feminist movements. I will also place slut in a historical context by providing a brief history of the word’s close relative, “nymphomania.” 200 Room 917 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Katelyn Blaney, Janice Irvine (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Sociology, UMass Amherst The Hard Truth: A Cross Cultural Comparison of How Pfizer Uses Sexuality to Sell Viagra in the United States, New Zealand, and Canada In recent years the pharmaceutical industry has become one of the most controversial and powerful global industries generating over 500 billion dollars in annual profit. One of the leading factors contributing to Big Pharma’s power as a dominant force driving medicalization is Direct-to-Consumer Advertising (DTCA). DTCA of pharmaceuticals was legalized in the United States in 1997 and is currently only permitted in two countries, the United States and New Zealand. Critics of DTCA argue that pharmaceutical companies take advantage of consumers with potentially misleading advertising techniques. One such technique involves exploiting sexual norms to convince consumers that they need a certain drug. Viagra, a drug for male erectile dysfunction, was approved by the FDA one year after the legalization of DTCA in 1998 and as such became Pfizer’s first experience with advertising to consumers. Today Viagra consistently generates over 1 billion in annual sales and is one of the most recognized brand names in the world, second only to Coca-Cola. This project is a content analysis of print and television advertisements from the United States, New Zealand, and Canada. It explores whether and how DTCA has shaped advertising for erectile dysfunction drugs. It suggests the importance of both sexual culture and consumer regulations in how the pharmaceutical companies construct their advertisements and deploy sexual and gender norms. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 121 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 201 Room 917 1:30-2:15 Panel 3 Rose Egan, Janice Irvine (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Sociology, UMass Amherst NOT Just Married: An Analysis of the Use of Social Scientific Data in Court Cases In 1996, Congress passed the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), which defined marriage as between a man and a woman. Since DOMA, state legislatures and courts have provided key arenas for opposing sides to contest same-sex marriage on the state level. Due to many legislatures passing anti-same-sex marriage amendments and statutes, progay marriage organizations have turned to the judicial system to confront the opposition. Arsenals of experts in social scientific fields testify to the mental health and lives of gay people. This paper analyzes the use of social scientific data in historic court cases such as Bowers v. Hardwick (1986) and Perry v. Schwarzenegger (2010) using court decisions, amicus briefs, and law reviews. The court cases used arguments that drew upon a wealth of information including the law, historical surveys, psychological studies, and economic studies. Social scientific data appears widely used throughout the court cases to construct an image of gay people. Many organizations present this social scientific data, beyond the courtroom, to the legislature and society as well. Thus, a deeper analysis of this commonly used data proves necessary. 202 Room 917 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Kelly Gibson, Janice Irvine (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Sociology, UMass Amherst Redefining Gender: A Critical Look into the Mind of John Money and His Theories on Gender For several years the distinction between sex and gender have been two notions that are relatively set in stone. However, these terms have not always been separately defined. Before the 1970s, these words were used interchangeably, and in even earlier times gender was rarely used at all. Scientist and society alike, used sex to describe body status, erotics acts and behaviors, and also psychosexual status (identity). This became especially confusing when describing the term hermaphrodites sexual identity compared with their body status. Thanks to John Money’s research the terms developed into two separate entities, allowing for a more clear-cut discussion. John Money was a noted sexologist and psychologist during this time, and was best known for his work on hermaphrodites, gender, and sexual identity. Money was the first person who had referred to gender as a human attribute. However, Money did not want people to see sex as strictly biological and gender as strictly social. He was not a supporter of this dichotomy nor did he support the nature verses nurture debate. He thought both played a major role in defining gender. He used gender as an umbrella term to describe sex, sexual behaviors, and most importantly non-erotic behaviors. Non-erotic behaviors define feminine and masculine characteristics, which in turn, are used to define ones gender identity/role, a term Money coined through his gender research. John Money not only redefined theories of gender, but used those ideas to create a practice for treating hermaphroditic patients and those with gender identity disorders. After reading several books, articles, and studies, I have grasped a better understanding of John Money’s theories and definitions of gender. I also researched the notable historical movements of that time period including the sexual revolution, second wave feminism, and the gay rights movement. I situated Money’s work into a larger more historical context of the time when his research was the most influential in the 60s-80s. Although highly criticized, I found that John Money to be a man who played a major role in the theories of gender regardless of whether his role is seen as negative or positive. Money’s ideas dominated the 1970s and 80s, because they were complicated and radical. It is important to know where these ideas came from and why they played such a dominant role. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 122 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 203 Room 803 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Eden Holt, Jorge Capetillo (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Sociology, UMass Boston Secrets in Paradise: The Proliferation of Prostitution and Abuse in Vieques Under U.S Military Occupation Despite the vast amount of information, studies and ongoing research about the environmental effects of the military presence on the island of Vieques there is little available research about the social consequences. Between the years of 1941 and 1950 the United States government expropriated two thirds of the small Caribbean island of Vieques. This land was used for bombing practice and to store ammunition. Even though the social aspect of the military presence has not been adequately researched there is reason to believe that the military’s presence on the island had a tremendous effect on the population then and now. Through the lens of various local testimonies and comparative research I provide an outline of key similarities between Vieques and other countries that have succumbed to the presence of the United States military on their native land. The stark similarities between East Asian countries like Japan, South Korea, and Thailand leave no question that more is left to be uncovered about the social reality created by U.S. military presence. A history of social upheaval has been one of many contributing factors to the island’s current social and financial difficulties. Testimonies of various Vieques natives and Viequenze literature draw a descriptive picture of abuse, degradation, and unrest that haunt the small community to this day. Vieques’s place as one of the poorest municipalities of Puerto Rico furthers the claim that there is more than environmental damage to be cleaned up on the island. 204 Room 917 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Katherine Laorenza, Janice Irvine (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Sociology, UMass Amherst Gender Identity Disorder; A Tool for Producing Gender Stereotypes? Gender Identity Disorder, GID, is the diagnosis in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorder, DSM-IV-TR which is used by psychologists and physicians to diagnose and treat individuals whose gender identity and biological sex are incongruent. The GID diagnosis has sparked controversy as the DSM is undergoing revision for its fifth edition, DSM-5, set to be released later this year. Some of the most notable groups involved in the debate at the Gender Identity Reform Advocates, members of the American Psychological Association, and a multitude of prominent psychologists and doctors in the field of psychiatry. Since the release of its first edition in 1952, critics have argued that the DSM has been an instrumental tool in producing and reinforcing gender stereotypes. This project examines the evolution of sexual identities and gender roles in the DSM, specifically relating to Gender Identity Disorder since it was first included in the 3rd edition in 1980. I will examine the arguments from different groups and what evidence they are using to back up their positions. Although the DSM emerged with the intent to help individuals truly suffering from mental illness critics have argued the DSM has become more of a mechanism for social control. If this is true then we must ask; has the DSM become a tool for stereotypes. In regards to GID, has it become a tool for producing gender stereotypes? Throughout this paper I will show the way in which the DSM produces sexual and gender identities. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 123 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 205 Room 909 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Alexandra Smialek, Jennifer DiGrazia (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University The Polish Joke: Masking (In)Equality in America Despite the fact that discrimination against Poles is seen as comedic or justified in American society, I argue that it is a form of racism and bullying. As a country, we must begin to focus on those who discriminate in order to help those who are discriminated against; this will require both the use of logical and emotional perspectives. Analyzing statements made in news articles written by Brunell, Bushwick, Garland, Garstka, and Kalinowski, and using examples from my own experience, I claim that incidents like “Polish Jokes,” that stem from misunderstandings and word of mouth, display inaccurate reasoning, and lack both evidence and historical accuracy. I will also discuss the effects of this discrimination, which include Poles experiencing: anxiety, insecurity, unhappiness, fear, and embarrassment. We can educate those who discriminate against Poles in order for there to be progress in preventing bigotry by supporting equality and respect in America among all races. While others may argue that jokes and statements, such as those made by Fox news claiming that Poles were Nazi collaborators, are a form of free speech, I state that such discrimination and bullying shows America not to be the melting pot of cultures, but a land of inequality. 206 Room 917 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Elizabeth Sullivan, Janice Irvine (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Sociology, UMass Amherst Let’s Talk About Sex! This study examines collegiate conversations on sex and sexuality. Specifically, it analyzes the contextual environment in which sexual discussions arise as well as potential gender differences in subject matter, truthfulness and audience. The primary data for this study is from an online survey of 30 questions. The survey considered a wide range of dialogue styles from gossip to “pillow talk.” It also questioned students about their comfort levels when discussing topics as innocuous as age and as heavy as masturbation. Through social media tools and email lists, over 350 students responded to the survey. Preliminary results from the study show sexual conversations among college students are shaped by gender, social context and broader sexual norms. In particular, the data demonstrate that by the time adolescents become college students, they have already identified social expectations regarding sexuality and learned how to portray the ideal mate in conversation. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 124 Abstracts • Oral Sessions SOCIOLOGY, ANTHROPOLOGY, AND CRIME AND JUSTICE STUDIES 207 Room 811 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Alicia Scott, Vanessa Martinez (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Anthropology, Holyoke Community College Is Civil War the Only Answer? An Examination of South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission Is Civil War the Only Answer? An Examination of South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission Daily, the news media reports about armed conflicts between and within countries. Recently, the Arab Spring has left Egypt and other former Middle Eastern dictatorships struggling with how to acknowledge their past while moving forward toward democracy. At this historic moment, it’s useful to remember that other nations, most notably South Africa, have successfully shifted to a democratic government while avoiding armed conflict. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission was South Africa’s attempt to avoid civil war during the transition from an apartheid government. This paper examines the precepts of restorative justice and how effectively they were implemented in South Africa. Research materials included the Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, Desmond Tutu’s book, No Future Without Forgiveness, and journal articles by various legal and political science scholars. I conclude that granting of amnesty to perpetrators and the lack of reparations to victims prevented the Truth and Reconciliation Commission from being a more widely accepted vehicle for genuine change. Nevertheless, South Africa’s commitment to a restorative justice model prevented civil war and created a lasting political climate of conciliation. My initial research suggests that the principles of restorative justice could be applied effectively in the Middle East, and leads me to wonder why restorative justice is not considered a more viable option for addressing global conflict. SPANISH 208 Room 911 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Rebecca L.C. Hoell, Luiz Amaral (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Spanish, UMass Amherst Age and the Acquisition of OPC in Advanced L2 Spanish Learners This study examines the role of age in Spanish L2 acquisition. It seeks to provide support for the Critical Period Hypothesis (CPH) (Lenneberg, 1967). The study focuses on the acquisition of the Overt Pronoun Constraint (OPC) by second language speakers. It builds upon the work done by Kanno (1997) and Perez-Leroux (1997) related to the acquisition of the OPC in L2 learners. We ran an acquisition experiment with two groups of advanced high school Spanish learners; one group (group A), who began instruction before the critical period (age 6-7) and another one (group B), who began at the close of the period (age 11-12). Students were presented with what appears to be a comprehension test in the style of the MCAS or SATs in which they were asked to determine whether sentences could describe a given situation. Within the test sentences, we presented some which violate the OPC and others that respected the constraint. Results are analyzed in light of the CPH. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 125 Abstracts • Oral Sessions THEATRE 209 Room 911 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Peter Scibak, Patricia Sandoval (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Theatre, Holyoke Community College Puppets and Protest: Examining Alternative Theatre Movements in the Vietnam Era In times of crisis it is often helpful to turn to the past for guidance. We are now experiencing a rise in global protests on many fronts and many of these protests have echoes in the recent past of the Vietnam era. This paper attempts to gain insight into the turbulence of protest through the study of four distinct alternative theatre movements of the 1960s. This paper considers the efficacy of the Vietnam protest theatres by examining the work of companies such as The Living Theatre and Bread and Puppet, as well as topical plays of the time like Garson’s MacBird! In addition, this paper utilizes both pre-existing as well as original research into the topic of American protest theatre. Focusing on techniques such as guerilla theatre as well as examples of audience participatory productions reveals patterns in the ways that Vietnamera theatre movements addressed social issues. Ultimately this research provides insight on protest theatre both during the Vietnam era and as it stands today, while also looking to these earlier productions as a potential model to address contemporary social issues. VETERINARY SCIENCE 210 Room 176 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Chelsea Cummings, Ana Maria Salicioni (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Animal Sciences, UMass Amherst Biochemical characterization of Testis-Specific Serine Kinase 1 (TSSK1) using a non-radioactive kinase activity approach PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to develop a non-radioactive kinase assay that is capable of detecting testisspecific kinase 1 (TSSK1) activity. Using this new assay, our goal was to characterize the biochemical properties of this enzyme in vitro that can then be adapted for searching TSSK1 inhibitors by high-throughput screening (HTS) assays. METHODS: We used the ADP-Glo kinase detection kit designed by Promega in order to detect kinase activity using luminescence as an endpoint. In addition, this assay involved the use of an automatized plate reader for detection of kinase activity and analysis of enzyme kinetics. Protein kinase A (PKA) is a serine kinase with known substrates and inhibitors and was therefore used as a comparative model for detecting TSSK1 activity. RESULTS: Experiments with PKA show that luminescence values are directly correlated to PKA concentration. In addition, we found that H89 is able to inhibit PKA activity at concentrations as low as 300nM. Preliminary results for TSSKs show that the ADP-Glo kit is a useful tool for detecting TSSK1 and TSSK2 activity at concentrations as low as 155 ng. Furthermore, using this luminescence approach, we were able to detect TSSKs autophosphorylation, which is known to occur in TSSK1 and TSSK2, but not in TSSK6. CONCLUSION: Based on the data collected thus far, it can be concluded that the ADP-Glo kit is capable of detecting both PKA and TSSK1 activity. Ongoing experiments are aimed at characterizing the biochemical characteristics of TSSK1 by inhibiting its activity with broad-spectrum kinase inhibitors. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 126 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 211 Room 162 3:30-4:15 Panel 5 Savannah Lloyd, Rafael Fissore (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Veterinary Science, UMass Amherst SrCl2-induced Oscillations in Germinal Vesicle (GV) and Metaphase II (MII) Oocytes and the Impact of Temperature ABSTRACT PURPOSE: External Ca2+ influx is important for oocyte physiology. It is unknown which channels mediate the influx and whether they change during maturation, as GV oocytes transition to MII. This study was conducted to determine the channels that participate in Ca2+ influx during mouse oocyte maturation. Identifying the active channels will deepen our understanding of oocyte physiology and assist in the development of new maturation protocols to improve success rate in Assisted Reproductive Technologies (ART). METHODS: Databases documenting presence of gene transcripts for Ca2+ channels were examined. Ca2+ monitoring studies were performed in GV and MII oocytes loaded with Fura-2AM, a fluorescent indicator, and exposed to 10mM SrCl2, which triggered oscillations. Measurements were performed at room temperature (RT) or at 37°C after using a heating-stage. The Ca2+ responses at different stages of maturation and the effects of temperature in both stages were evaluated. RESULTS: SrCl2 induced oscillations in nearly all oocytes maintained at GV stage at RT. When the temperature was raised to 37°C, oscillations ceased. When MII oocytes were exposed to SrCl2 at RT, oscillations occurred in a few oocytes with low frequency. When the temperature was raised to 37°C, SrCl2-induced oscillations greatly increased in frequency and in the number of oocytes showing responses. Lowering the temperature to RT greatly diminished both parameters. The addition of Dithiothreitol (DTT), 1mM, to MII oocytes increased SrCl2-induced oscillations. CONCLUSION: Different Ca2+ channels and/or different regulatory mechanisms seem to control Ca2+influx in GV and MII oocytes. Because of the sensitivity to temperature, at least one of the channels mediating Ca2+ influx seems to belong to the Transient Receptor Potential (TRP) family. WOMEN’S STUDIES 212 Room 911 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Katelyn Anderstrom, Rebecca Burwell (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Westfield State University Student Awareness of Violence Against Women using Activist Theatre Eve Ensler has been a leader in feminist theatre over the past two decades. She has brought to awareness major issues surrounding violence against women on a global scale. Through The Vagina Monologues and her creation of V-Day, Ensler has educated women and men in using theatre and the power of performance to fuel feminist activism. For four years I have been a cast member in her production of The Vagina Monologues on my university campus, and have spent two of those years organizing it. Through these experiences, I have gathered student audience testimonies about how their views on women and violence towards women have changed as a result of viewing the performance. These qualitative reports have fueled my interest in empirically examining whether theatre is an effective method of activism in educating students about social justice issues. In addition, I am seeking to examine how emotional state mediates students’ learning (i.e., as the process by which viewing The Vagina Monologues is linked with greater learning about issues related to women). To assess these questions, I will be assessing students’ emotional state and their knowledge about violence towards women before and after our university performance of The Vagina Monologues. Comparison groups, completing the same measures of emotional state and knowledge of violence towards women, will comprise a group of students reading a pamphlet with factual information on violence towards women and also a control group of students who neither read the pamphlet nor attend the performance. I hypothesize that college students who are exposed to activist theatre are more likely to experience higher educational awareness of issues surrounding women than those reading a pamphlet on the topic or those without any information, and that it will be through their enhanced emotional state that this change occurs. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 127 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 213 Room 911 10:40-11:25 Panel 1 Stephanie Bonvissuto, Christina Bobel (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Women’s Studies, UMass Boston Dancing Around Alternativity: Complicating Freedom, Community and Economy in Jamband Music Culture Purpose: The claims of music scenes proclaimed as alternative, either through self-identification or other manifestations, have not been thoroughly examined to date. Yet, the arena surrounding ‘jamband’ music (in the northeastern United States) is rife with factors that complicate this musical genre’s status as alternative from mainstream culture. Methods: Our team employed a feminist ethnographic approach and a neo-tribal perspective to interrogate the ‘jamband’ music scene. Over a period of two months we visited a total of 10 field sites, and conducted 4 (both semi-structured and structured) interviews. We also examined previously existing peer reviewed literature that investigated both the jamband scene and other alternative music sub-cultures. Results: Using the metaphor of a living breathing body, we categorized our findings into three aspects of the scene: 1) Physical and sexual orientation expression, 2) Community dynamics and 3) economic system. We found within these categories there lay many contradictions and complications. For example though the scene boasted a freedom of expression through dress, we observed that to be a member of the scene individuals are limited by what the scene prescribes as acceptable. Conclusion: The jamband scene upholds and encourages alternative practices while simultaneously reinforces certain mainstream conventions, such as physical expressions, community stratification and an exploitative economy which it seeks to avoid. 214 Room 811 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Amber R Andrerson, Katie Corey, Andrea Chiarenza, Christina Bobel (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Women’s Studies, UMass Boston “By the Common Man, For the Common Man”: How ‘Common Man Masculinity’ Plays Out in Sports Fandom A robust literature explores the gendered dimensions of sport, though much of it focuses on athlete experiences. Fewer studies, however, explore the gendered aspects of sports fandom. This ethnographic study, combining participant observation of three large sports bars, a popular sports blog and three in-depth interviews, examines a specific kind of masculinity dominant in sport spectator culture, what we call ‘common man masculinity.’ This particular variant of masculinity, we argue, constitutes a “boys club” culture enacted through the celebration of violence, exclusivity, and negative and patronizing attitudes toward women. Violence is present in major league sporting events and in the spectator culture. Fighting--both verbal and physical-- is encouraged among audience members in both bar culture and online settings. In these settings women become objects, and are treated as merely “housewives” whose role, as bartenders and servers, is limited to “taking care” of the male patrons. Women are further objectified through their attire (required of their job) and the demeaning commentary made by male patrons. At the same time, men critique other men in this setting deemed lesser men as designated through their substandard sport knowledge, attire and behavior. This performance of ‘common man masculinity’ produces and deepens man-to-man bonding. The combination of these actions deepens hyper masculinity within sports spectator culture and produces a space enjoyed by only certain men. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 128 Abstracts • Oral Sessions 215 Room 811 11:35-12:20 Panel 2 Samantha Ribeiro, Jennifer DiGrazia (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University A Thinning Line: TheNegative Effects of Media Advertising on Body Image in Young Women As is argued by Psychology professor Stacey Tantleff-Dunn, Psychoanalyst Susie Orbach, and feminist philosopher Susan Bordo, superficial media and advertisements that surround young women make it nearly impossible for them to escape the pressure to be thin, wreaking havoc on their mental and physical health. Referring to images discussed by Orbach and Bordo, and those I have seen on television and in magazines, I argue that the media condemns hunger and eating while celebrating the idea of being ultra skinny. As a result of the constant invasion of technology in our lives, such images are so pervasive in young women’s lives beginning from childhood that our understanding of the line between the way a model or celebrity looks and the way an ordinary person should look has thinned to the point of being nearly indistinguishable. Raising awareness about the effects of such images is crucial, as their impact is especially dangerous to young women, who are particularly sensitive to the way they are viewed by others. This desire to be thin consumes young women to the point that they sacrifice their own dreams, talents, and potential in order to meet a ridiculous standard of beauty that is sometimes manifested in such diseases as anorexia and bulimia, which have higher death rates than any other form of mental illness. poster session 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 129 Abstracts • Poster Sessions ACCOUNTING 216 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 26A Brenda Hernandez, Jeffery Keisler (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Finance, UMass Boston Fear of Asking: What Factors Are Keeping Latinos Away from Applying for Business Loans? As the number of Latinos in the United States continues to grow rapidly, the number of Latino businesses has only slightly increased. This study was conducted to find out the factors that are keeping Latinos away from applying for business loans. By conducting interviews with providers of financing, business owners who have and have not succeeded in getting business loans and counselors who help entrepreneurs looking for financing, this paper will try to identify the factors that are keeping Latinos from applying for loans. Also, a participant observation will be conducted at a seminar for businesses people who are seeking to open their own business. This study will test the hypothesis that Latinos aren’t applying for business loans because of their fear of higher institutions such as the government. This study will guide actions to help Latinos open businesses and therefore help the United States economy grow. It will also guide counselors to better help them once we know what the key issues are. 217 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 27A Charles Lu, Yuzhu (Julia) Li (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Computer Science, UMass Dartmouth Modern Business Dilemma - Privacy Audit in Accounting Information Systems (AIS) Modern Business Dilemma Privacy Audit in Accounting Information Systems (AIS) Charles Lu ABSTRACT PURPOSE: Today’s global economy, facilitated by information technology (IT), offers new business opportunities as traditional business processes extend beyond the physical work environment. From data collected by multi-corps, data miners, often as third parties, discover business intelligence to connect business partners, consumers, and suppliers for their mutual benefits. Even though consumers gain an edge in bargaining and enjoy transaction conveniences, they lose their privacy. The ubiquitous accessibility of exoinformation, unconscious and unintentional flow of data, has brought public demands for privacy protection. Current practice of Privacy Audit, an emerging service for accounting professionals, assesses an organization’s Accounting Information System (AIS) for its operational compliance with Generally Accepted Privacy Principal (GAPP). However, a lack of conceptual framework fails to assure privacy continuously. This thesis proposes a solution for real-time privacy assurance. METHODS: The primary method is library research to obtain information about privacy audit regulations and continuous auditing approaches. Interviews with Accounting/IT professionals supplement understanding with general practice in real world by comparative case study. RESULTS: The research results include a conceptual framework for cybermediaries to perform effective continuous auditing that assures a company’s internal controls of privacy. CONCLUSION: This interdisciplinary research of accounting and information systems has produced a framework of using computer-assisted audit techniques to provide real-time privacy assurance for AIS. The framework systematically examines all the components of computerized AIS including people, procedures, hardware, software, data communications, and databases. It offers self-assessment for internal auditing as well as trust service for external auditing. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 130 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 218 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 25A Alex Osei Bonsu, Susan McPherson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English Literature, Quinsigamond Community College The Significance of Behavioral Economics Over the years the principles and models of mainstream economics have been used to provide answers to the rational decisions people make. The purpose of this presentation is to bring a different dimension of economics that provides answers to the irrational choices consumers make. Using scholarly journals and articles from the Quinsigamond Community College library database, Boston Public Library database and Library of Economics and Liberty, this presentation elaborates on psychology as it relates to the economic decision making processes of individuals and institutions. Like all revolutions in thought, behavioral economics began with anomalies, strange facts, odd observations that the prevailing wisdom could not explain. People say they want to save for retirement, eat better, start exercising, quit smoking- and they mean it- but they do not such things. Economists have assumed that people’s economic choices are always rational since they are motivated by need and limited by scarcity. Mainstream Economics identify a consumer as an intelligent and analytical creature, who has perfect self-regulations in pursuit of his future goals and he is not swayed by bodily states and feelings. This consumer is a perfect person and truly speaking, this consumer does not exist. In general, consumers demonstrate all manner of irrational, self-sabotaging and even altruistic behavior which might be very hard to predict as the behaviors of humans are not always rigid and predictable. With the help of behavioral economics, irrational decision humans make can be understood. AMERICAN INDIAN STUDIES 219 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 28A Selvapriya Selvarasah, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College Native American’s attitude towards Nature The North American continent contained native people as diverse as the landscape. Each tribe’s traditions and mythologies reflected their way of life and provided meaning, balance and a sense of the environment. These structures were determined by the natural rhythms of their environments. This project examines the believe of Inuit Northern Native tribes, Cherokee Indians, Isleta Puebla tribes to determine what modern, western society can learn from them. The research was conducted was by reviewing anthropological literature, work of history, and Native American resources. The project concludes that these traditions have much to teach us about how we regard and treat our environment 220 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 29A Wevertton Souza, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College Najavo Indians’ Third Fourth and Fifth Genders What do the North Native American Indians know about gender roles and identity that we, as a modern society, have difficulties accepting? Navajo culture has third, fourth and fifth genders not based o nsuxuality. The analysis of the Navajo genders was researched through online peer-reviewed articles and the book Two-Spirit People. The works cited were from anthropologists, sociologists, and historians. Furthermore, the effects of western customs are discussed as an influence on native culture. Lastly, an argument of what would happen if Western Culture embraced native customs of a three-plus gender society is presented. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 131 Abstracts • Poster Sessions ANIMAL SCIENCES 221 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 34A Daniela PIerre-Toussaint, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College The Presage to an Ending The practice of whaling is a classic demonstration of humans’ abuse of animals. Today, humans have developed extremely efficient ways to unfairly take advantage of many types of animals. By comparing the novel Moby-Dick with current animal factory farming operations, this project shows how past whaling practices correlates with modern animal exploitation. The project examines scientific journals, critical literature, and industry and blog data, and finds that although human attitudes have remained the same, the use of technology in such animal treatment intesifies the devastating effects in nature. The project concludes that people should cease such animal abuse and learn that the ending in Moby Dick presages nature’s revenge on those who mistreat it. ANTHROPOLOGY 222 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 40A Melissa Masse, Tom Grady (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Anthropology, Bristol Community College Using Board Game Artifacts in the Study of Ancient Civilizations Board game artifacts are useful tools for the study of ancient civilizations. Besides the date of the artifact itself, archeologists learn a lot about a culture by studying where the game was found, the materials used, the purpose for which the game was designed to be used and the format of the game play to understand certain aspects of the culture at that time. Studying the format of a game gives people insight into a culture’s values and lifestyles, including ideas related to the afterlife, war, divination and religious practices. Artifacts from board games are also important in the study of migration and trade between civilizations. The games develop as they travel with each community contributing its own unique variety of materials, designs, and variations to the game. This allows archeologists to track the movement and incorporation of new game traits from one culture to the next. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 132 Abstracts • Poster Sessions ART 223 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 31A Lisa Leary, Jennifer DiGrazia (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University Designing a Better Future: A Graphic Designers’ Role in Harm-free Advertising Despite current media strategies that use model- and actor- driven ads that promote unrealistic representations of people, recent research by Senior Lecturer in Film and Media Rebecca Feasey and Director of the Normal Lear Center Johanna Blakley suggests that product-driven ads are more persuasive to the average consumer. Explaining the harm done to people as a result of ads, I, along with 33 graphic designers who signed the “First Things First Manifesto 2000” pledging not to compromise their morality by engaging in harmful ad-creation, argue that graphic designers should not hold themselves accountable for harmful, advertising nor should they believe they are powerless to change. Rather than potentially harm their career, I use information from a personal interview with seasoned graphic designer Uthai Panayakul to explain that all graphic designers have options and ways to challenge clients and others who want to promote harmful images. Graphic designers who work directly with clients and receive a request they perceive to be harmful should direct the client toward product-driven ads or, if need be, politely reject the client. Graphic designers who work under a supervisor can relay these strategies to their supervisors, and engage themselves in design projects that promote harm-free advertising. Rather than allow ads to hurt the professional careers of groups who are targeted and stereotyped by ads, as Cheryl Preston’s research evidences they are, graphic designers can challenge current strategies and design a fairer future for everyone. 224 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 16A Lauren Middleton, Jeanette Cole (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Art, UMass Amherst Birth, Death, and Re-Birth: Exploring Cycles through Visual Metaphor I am interested in life and death cycles as they pertain to the physical body and to human psychology and relationships. Learning to let go of people, of past loves, of places I once called home, and of beliefs about myself and others is a process that I feel deeply and consistently. Objects that mirror these patterns in the natural world, organic matter, and in my own body serve as powerful metaphors to visually depict these processes. The act of painting is a meditation on the emotional and physical cycles of holding on and letting go, of inhaling and exhaling, and of birth and death, and gives physical form and interpretation to these experiences so that they may be examined, better understood, and accepted. In developing my own personal visual language to convey these ideas, studying the life and death imagery of the 20th century American painter Georgia O’Keeffe has been instrumental. In an effort to better understand the influences of the context in which she lived and made her work for the second half of her life, I spent two weeks in New Mexico, studying her work in person at the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe, visiting the places she lived and painted, and investigating the current artistic community in the Santa Fe and Taos areas. I am exploring the influence of the New Mexican landscape and its artistic culture, both past and present, on the body of work I am producing. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 133 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 225 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 30A Brittany Norton, David Shapleigh (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Art, Westfield State University Raising Awareness for the Endangered Species of Costa Rica After making an intensive two-week trip through Costa Rica to explore its unique ecosystems, I wanted to create a painting that would raise awareness about the endangerment of species due to deforestation and pollution. As a place that holds 4% of the world’s biodiversity, it is crucial that Costa Rica’s environment stay preserved and that changes are being made to reverse the damage that has already been done. One painting is of a Scarlet Macaw, a beautiful yet highly endangered bird of Costa Rica. The second painting portrays the Harlequin frog, a species once thought to be extinct but is now slowly repopulating. Each subject is alone within its environment to emphasize the scarcity of these rare species. The sense of loneliness and emptiness within these painted environments helps get the message across that these species are in need of help and that changes must be made in order to restore the species population. BIOCHEMISTRY 226 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 61C Inna Brockman, Matthew Holden (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemistry, UMass Amherst Pep-1 Assisted Membrane Transport Cell penetrating peptides (CPPs) enable the transportation of large molecular cargo across cell membranes. This concept could be very useful for delivery of functional therapeutic agents to specific regions of the cell. This process usually works by several CPPs covalently binding to the cargo of interest, which can be DNA, a protein, or a nanoparticle. Through this binding, a complex is created between the peptide and the cargo and these complexes are taken in by the cell through the process of endocytosis. Some CPPs, however, have the unique ability to transport cargo through noncovalent bonding, such as electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions. When this happens, a complex is also formed, which crosses the cell membrane and then dissociates. The cargo is dropped off in the cell’s cytoplasm, which is a better way to delivery molecules because it bypasses the steps required to release a compound from endocytotic vesicles. The cargo is unhindered with no covalent bonding and possible unfavorable interactions. The CPP that is used in this study is Pep-1. In an earlier study, Holden et al. showed the Pep-1 mediated translocation of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) across a droplet interface bilayer (DIB). The translocation of HRP and Pep-1 was monitored by electrophysiology, and the amount of translocated HRP was determined by fusing the droplet with an excess of a fluorogenic substance and imaged with a fluorescent microscope. It has been called to question, however, whether or not HRP and Pep-1 form a complex, and together cross the membrane or whether they work independently. In this study, Pep-1 and HRP will be added separately. This way, the electrophysiology recordings collected from only Pep-1 and then Pep-1 + HRP experiments can be compared. A device informally called the “adder chip” will be used instead of a DIB. With the adder chip, contents can be added to one side of the bilayer, unlike in the DIB. This will allow for a recording with Pep-1 followed by the addition of HRP. The difference in electrophysiology recordings will help determine whether or not Pep-1 and HRP work together to cross the cell membrane or not. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 134 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 227 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 62C Kathleen Burns, Alejandro Heuck (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biochemistry, UMass Amherst Perfringolysin O Recognition of Cholesterol in Cellular Membranes In the United States, the number one source of deaths for both men and women alone is cardiovascular disease, with more than 800,000 deaths in 2005. Cardiovascular disease develops due to atherosclerosis, the slow but progressive hardening and narrowing of the arteries. This hardening is caused by fat, cholesterol and other substances that buildup in the arteries called plaque, which may ultimately lead to arterial blockage. Cholesterol is a major component involved in atherosclerosis, understanding its role and function in plaque buildup is critical to finding drugs and therapies that prevent this disease. Cholesterol is an important component of mammalian cell membranes, affecting membrane permeability and fluidity. High cholesterol levels have been associated with the development of atherosclerosis; however several aspects of cholesterol regulation and transport in cellular membranes still remain unclear. The protein toxin Perfringolysin O (PFO) is a cholesterol dependent cytolysin that is secreted by Clostridium Perfringens, the pathogenic bacteria associated with gas gangrene. Upon recognition of and binding to cholesterol containing membranes, PFO inserts into these membranes forming a large transmembrane β-barrel pore (300Å in diameter). The C-terminal end of PFO (domain 4), is responsible for the cholesterol-dependent initial binding to membranes. PFO has been shown to bind to membranes with high levels of cholesterol, and can be used to detect cholesterol in eukaryotic membranes. To expand the usefulness of PFO as a molecular probe we have introduced several mutations to prevent pore formation, and added specific mutations aimed to modify the cholesterol-dependent binding. These PFO derivatives will be used to identify high and low levels of cholesterol in cell membranes, and to study cholesterol transport and regulation in the cell. 228 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 67C Robert Chan, Manickam Sugumaran (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biochemistry, UMass Boston Cuticular Sclerotization and the Reaction of N-acetyldopamine with N-acetylhistidine Purpose: Insects have affected the survival of humans by destroying the agricultural products and spreading several devastating diseases. Yet they are also extremely helpful and remarkably resourceful. Their success as terrestrial animals is usually attributed to the high versatility of their exoskeleton which helps protect them from environmental enemies, dehydration, and provides a platform for muscular and organ attachment. To protect the soft-bodied insects, a process known as sclerotization, which is vital for the survival of all insects, hardens this exoskeleton. By elucidating the molecular mechanism of cuticle sclerotization, one can develop newer and safer control mechanisms of insect population. The purpose of my studies is examine the enzymes and reactions involved in the covalent adduct formation between the sclerotizing precursor, N-acetyldopamine (NADA) and the protein side chain model compound, N-acetylhistidine (NAH). Methods: To achieve my goals, I am purifying the enzymes associated with the cuticular hardening and employing them in a study of adduct formation between NADA and NAH. The three enzymes involved in the process viz., phenoloxidase, quinone isomerase and quinone methide isomerase are being purified from the insects, Drosophila melanogaster and Sarcophaga bullata. They are used to make adducts between NADA and NAH. The adduct formation is being monitored by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and ultraviolet spectroscopy. Results: I have purified quinone methide isomerase using conventional protein purification techniques and helped to purify quinone isomerase also. Using these enzymes and commercially available phenoloxidase, I have examined the adduct formation between NADA and NAH with HPLC. My results indeed support the formation of a number of adducts between NADA and NAH. Conclusion: Adduct formation between NADA and NAH is indicating of the role played by phenoloxidase, and quinone isomerase. I have not so far been able to get evidence for the role of quinone methide isomerase in the adduct formation. I am examining the reason for this to shed light on the sclerotization process. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 135 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 229 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 65C Benjamin Hart, Marianna Torok (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biochemistry, UMass Boston Metal-Chelating Properties of Small Molecule Inhibitors of Amyloid-beta Self-Assembly The self-assembly of the amyloid-beta peptide into neurotoxic oligomers and insoluble amyloid fibrils is one of the commonly accepted contributors to the complex pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s Disease (AD). In order to investigate the role of transition metals in this process, the possible metal-chelating capacity of newly developed organofluorine inhibitors will be determined. A structurally diverse group of successful self-assembly inhibitors will be screened for their Cu2+-chelating ability using UV-VIS absorbance measurements by following the changes in their spectra after the addition of the metal ions. The compounds will be evaluated in comparison to ascorbic acid as a reference. Further metal binding studies will be carried out for the hits using Job’s method, which is an effective approach for determining the chemical stoichiometry. 230 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 64C Matthew Griffin, Armand Kounga, William Hagar (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Boston Polyphenoloxidase Activity in Barley Plants (Hardeum vulgare) The enzyme Polyphenol oxidase (PPO) is found in plant and animal systems. In plants, it is found in fruits including those of apples, bananas, and avocados. In most plants it is thought to be protective to prevent further injury to damaged tissue, and is activated when cell membranes are disrupted. In the monocot barley (Hardeum vulgare) there is not the same PPO activation when they are cut as the enzyme remains latent. We are investigating barley plants to find PPO status and how it is activated. We have isolated the protein complex from barley plants, and after partial purification, have begun measurements on its function. Plant material was homogenized in 0.02 M sodium phosphate buffer, pH 6.8, filtered through cheesecloth and then centrifuging at 6,000 g. Ammonium sulfate fractionation was used to partially purify the protein. The resulting 50 % ammonium sulfate precipitate was resuspended in phosphate buffer, dialyzed against the same buffer, and then centrifuged to remove any denatured protein. It was found that the electrophoretic profile of this isolated barley PPO was similar to the movement of mushroom tyrosinase. Both enzymes were observed using activity staining with the substrate, dihydoxyphenlalanine (DOPA). The activation process and PPO enzyme characteristics will be discussed. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 136 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 231 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 68C Tu Van Oculto, Valery Kounga, William Hagar (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Boston Extraction and Characterization of the Polyphenol Oxidase enzyme in Centella Asiatica (Pennywort) The purpose of this research project is to characterize the Polyphenol Oxidase enzyme found in Centella Asiatica plant commonly known as PennyWort. This enzyme is responsible for the browning observe while cutting fruits or vegetables. In our investigation, the polyphenol oxidase was partially purified from the Centella Asiatica plant material. For each purification run, 30 grams of Pennywort plants were homogenized in 30 ml of phosphate buffer to get the starting solution. The homogenized material was filtered through cheesecloth, and then centrifuged at 6,000 g for 30 minutes. Ammonium sulfate was slowly added to the solution until 50% saturation was reached. After 30 minutes the sample was centrifuged at 6,000 g, and the precipitate saved. The precipitate was subsequently resuspended in 15 ml of phosphate buffer. The solution was then dialyzed against the same buffer to remove excess ammonium sulfate. Subsequent purification steps included molecular sieve chromatography to separate PPO from other proteins. The activity of the enzyme was followed by adding 100 ul portions from each collected sample tube to a well plate with dihydroxyphenyl alanine (DOPA). Samples from collection tubes- whose aliquots turned dark brown- were assayed for enzymatic activity by measuring the change in absorbance from 500 to 400 nm in the presence of DOPA. The PPO spectral samples had a peak absorbance at 470nm. The partially purified PPO exhibited similar electrophoresis profile to that of tyrosinase when run on agarose gel in phosphate buffer at pH 7.0. The enzyme was visualized using an activity stain with DOPA. These results and additional characteristics including kinetic properties will be discussed. . 232 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 66C Michael Murphy, William Hagar (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Boston An Enzymatic Method for Determining Methylmercury Content in Fish Tissue Mercury is an increasingly prevalent pollutant found in the environment primarily due to burning of fossil fuels. In aquatic systems, this mercury is converted into methyl mercury, which becomes biomagnified and accumulates through many tropic levels. We are investigating methods for measuring this methyl mercury in fish tissue using environmentally friendly and inexpensive enzyme-based methods for measurement. Mercury is a potent inhibitor of enzymes that have sulhydryl groups at or near their active sites. Mercury binds to sulfhydryl groups near the enzyme’s active site and lowers overall enzyme activity. The amount of inhibition is measured by comparing the enzymatic rate of the uninhibited enzyme with enzyme solutions that have different concentrations of mercury inhibitors. Recent methods of mercury inhibition measurements employ the Invertase enzyme. Invertase catalyzes the hydrolysis of sucrose (table sugar) into simple monosaccharide sugars of fructose and glucose. The monosaccharide sugars produced over the course of the reaction can be measured by their reaction with dinitrosalicylic acid (DNS) that produces a quantitative measurable color change. The overall procedure involves extracting methyl mercury from fish tissue in toluene and then layering the solution over an Invertase (enzyme) solution. An inhibition curve with methyl mercury chloride standards is used to calibrate the system and determine the amount of mercury in the fish tissue. We have compared the methods used in this enzyme-based measurement system with values from standard instrumentation methods. We are currently continuing to optimize and develop an extended storage stabilization methodology. Differences in the extraction and separation procedure for the enzyme-based method will be compared to standard instrumentation methods. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 137 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 233 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 60C Elyse Tanzer, Emmanouil Apostolidis (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemistry, Framingham State University Purification of Proanthocyanidin Fractions from Commercially Available Cranberry Powders and Implications for Type 2 Diabetes Management. Proanthocyanidins are flavonoid polyphenolic phytochemical compounds abundant in fruits and vegetables. Proanthocyanidins have great potential for disease prevention, including applications for type-2 diabetes that includes the high antioxidant activity potential translating to enzymatic inhibition of α-glucosidase and α-amylase; two major enzymes involved in carbohydrate metabolism. Proanthocyanins are densely present in the cranberry fruit. Cranberries milled into fine powders allow both anthocyanin and proanthocyanidins to be extracted and purified to a highly potent liquid, rich with free radical deactivation potential. Cristicran-90 cranberry fruit powder and the acetone dried Nutricran-40 powder were found to both contain significant amounts of proanthocyanidins. Samples were extracted from 0.1g of powder with 10 mL of a 70:29.9:0.01 acetone, water, and HCl solution, filtered, then evaporated until approximately only 5 mL remained. The extracts were then separated into anthocyanin and proanthocyanidin fractions using a Sephadex LH-20 column. The antioxidant activity of each extract fraction was determined through a 4-dimethylaminocinnamaldehyde (DMAC) spectrophotometric assay and determination of resulting antioxidant activity based absorbance at 640 nm. The Nutricran-40, a visibly deep red powder, produced a PAC fraction with highest antioxidant activity resulting in a calculated 88.9 mg of PACs per gram of powder. This method of extraction, purification, and assay analysis will be further used for research into bioavailability of PAC and type-2 diabetes management potential for these cranberry powders. 234 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 63C Ying Qi Zhang, Peter Chien (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biochemistry, UMass Amherst Mutagenesis of CtrA Receiver Domain and Identify Intragenic Suppressors of CpdR Regulation of protein degradation is critical for life and especially important when cells undergo developmental changes. In Caulobacter crescentus, asymmetric cell division yields biochemically distinct swarmer (SW) and stalked (ST) cells. SW cells cannot replicate, while ST cells are capable of cell division; therefore sustained growth requires SW cells to first differentiate into ST cells. This transition requires several regulatory proteins: the response regulators CtrA and CpdR, and the essential AAA+ protease ClpXP. CtrA is a replication inhibitor and must be degraded by the ClpXP protease for replication to start. This proteolysis is dependent on the phosphorylation state of the CpdR response regulator. Interestingly, both CpdR and CtrA are phosphorylated by the same kinase cascade and share signature residues important for their function. In this work, we explore how key amino acids contribute to interactions between CpdR/ CtrA and the ClpXP protease. This question will be approached in two ways. First, we will identify intragenic suppressors that activate defective mutant CpdR alleles. Second, we will generate mutations in CtrA in regions known to impact CpdR activity. Because of the aforementioned similarities between CpdR and CtrA, we predict that generating these mutations in CtrA will slow its degradation. These two strategies should reveal regulatory motifs common to CpdR and CtrA, improving our understanding of cell cycle dependent degradation by the ClpXP protease. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 138 Abstracts • Poster Sessions BIOLOGY 235 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 93A Fabiola Abissa, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College Women and Engineering Major/Careers: The Rise of a Self-Achievement Era For decades women have been not choosing STEM major and especially engineering major/ careers because of bias due to cultural beliefs, difficulties related to their entry in the field, and family/work issues. However, over the past three decades women have managed themselves to reach the top and find their way in a field highly dominated by men. The goal of this project was to find out, based on articles, data and interview with women evolving as engineers, why and how women are getting into engineering major/careers. The project tried to determine why the input of women is important for engineering. A comparative analysis showed how the status of women in engineering major and in engineering careers evolved between 1980 to 2010. 236 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 90A Caroline Adams, R. Thomas Zoeller (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Amherst Potential Causes of C Gastroentero-pancreatic Neuroendocrine Neoplasms in the Gut Gastroentero-pancreatic neuroendocrine neoplasms have been increasing in worldwide frequency in recent years according to epidemiological data. The cause of this increase in prevalence is currently unknown and the main stay treatment is surgery, which is invasive. Neuroendocrine cells of the gastroentero-pancreatic system are derived from neural crest cells. The resulting tumors are slow growing, but highly metastatic. There is also a high recurrence after surgery. This is an area of study that is not well understood or developed. By understanding the possible mechanism behind the formation of the neuroendocrine neoplasm we can propose and test improved treatments. 237 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 88A Veronica Adams, Randall Tracy (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, Worcester State University Emergency Medicine Research: An Undergraduate’s Experience Volunteering in the Emergency Department For my internship, I am a Research Assistant on an NIH-funded study at the University of Massachusetts Medical School through the Department of Emergency Medicine Research. The study looks at the tobacco use of patients and visitors in the Emergency Department. Though it may seem strange to perform this is the Emergency Department, the medical disparities we have today make this a great place. Patients are generally given mild interventions on tobacco use while visiting their primary care physicians, however many people receive care only in the ED. This, along with the fact that many patients are in the ED due to smoking related conditions, makes it a great place to reach out to those individuals. Tobacco interventions in this area can have a lasting impact and potentially prevent these tobacco-related conditions in patients and their visitors, just by making them really think about their tobacco habits. The study looks at tobacco habits as well as a variety of influential factors for being able to quit smoking: number of previous quit attempts, methods used to quit and motivations for quitting, among others. The survey finishes up by giving patients the opportunity for a referral to the Massachusetts QuitLine for cessation support. This study protocol, given to patients and visitors by volunteers using a tablet, was designed to be simple and user friendly. This prevents interruption of the flow of care in the hospital, but also allows patients to see another friendly face. While participating in this internship, I have been able to learn about the confidentiality, mechanics, and clinic aspect of research firsthand. I have learned how to navigate my way around the Emergency Department, interact with patients and have begun to develop a bedside manner that cannot be learned from a textbook. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 139 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 238 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 86A Tiffany L Caisse, Jessica Beroth, Tim Parshall (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, Westfield State University Reconstructing Forest History on the Campus of Westfield State University Most forests in New England are strongly influenced by past events like climate, human activities, and natural disturbances. One way to uncover these historical influences is to reconstruct forest history though dendrochronology. We used this approach to investigate the impacts of natural and human disturbances on trees in the Commuter Lot Forest at Westfield State University. Tree cores from thirty-one hemlock (Tsuga canadensis), twelve red oak (Quercus rubra) and seven white oak (Quercus alba) trees along with six oak (Quercus sp.) slabs were analyzed for this study. Most trees were less than 105 years old, indicating that the landscape was open before the 1900s. The tree cores document evidence of at least two disturbance events by invasive organisms. First, several years with documented gypsy moth outbreaks correspond with very narrow rings in the oak cores. Second, several lines of evidence point to the decade of the 1910s as the arrival of the blight that killed American chestnut trees, whose sprouts indicate that it was an important species in this forest before this time. During this decade, many of the oak cores show release events, and cores from both oak and hemlock show high early growth, suggesting that these trees were growing quickly in an open forest canopy. This study is the first to clearly reconstruct the events influencing the development of forests on Westfield State University’s campus. 239 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 85A Timothy Boardman, Erin Bromage (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Dartmouth Kidney Blood Flow and its Relationship to lLmphocyte Distribution in the Rainbow Trout ABSTRACT PURPOSE: The kidney of fish is a highly complex organ which possesses both renal and immunological functions. The renal functions of the fish kidney are localized to the posterior portion of the kidney, while the anterior portion of the kidney is the primary site for immune cell development. However, mature B cells have been found throughout the entire kidney. This study was conducted to map the arterial and venous blood flow into the kidney and determine if there was a relationship with lymphocyte distribution. METHODS: The blood flow in the trout kidney was determined through latex molding of the vascular system combine with infrared imaging of florescent particle fate. The regional distribution of lymphocyte within the kidney was determined using monoclonal antibodies specific for B cells and T cells and analyzing flow cytometry and ELISPOT staining patterns. RESULTS: Membrane IgM+ B cells were found to be primarily located in the anterior kidney which was also the primary site of arterial blood supply. Plasma cells secreting IgM were also found to be in relatively high abundance in this area. The posterior kidney was found to contain a majority of T cells as well as a large supply of venous blood which tapered into a renal portal system. CONCLUSION: The observed distribution of lymphocytes within the kidney coupled with the blood flow suggests that the primary lymphoid tissue of the anterior kidney is protected by an area of antigen neutralization while the posterior region may be a site of immune cell activation. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 140 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 240 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 79A Karelyn Bonilla, Alan Christian (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Boston Host Fish Immunity Suitability for Freshwater Mussels Most freshwater mussel species are obligate parasites on various species of fish, however, little is known about the percentage of fish in a population that can serve as viable host. The purpose of this project is to test host fish availability and immune availability to determine the extent of fish in a population that have acquired immunity to freshwater mussels. For this research fish serum from the blood was used to detect specific antibodies, to study their immunological response to freshwater mussel antigen. To investigate host immune availability, Western Blot analysis with Rabbit anti- Goat IgG and ELISA were used to detect the antibodies in fish. SDS-Page gels identified the amount of protein in mussel and fish and also were used for transferring proteins to nitrocellulose paper to identify the fish immune status. Preliminary results of SDS gels have shown that both fish and mussel protein have protein of about 200ug/ml-100ug/ ml, but the Western blot analysis has been negative. However, this does not mean that the actual results are negative because there may be incompatibilities. This may also indicated that the experiment for the western blots so far have not been sensitive enough to identify the interaction of the mussel protein to the fish antibody with the Rabbit anti- Goat IgG. 241 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 95A Juliet Buteme, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College Competition in the Tropical Forests: The Conflict Between the Local People and the Mountain Gorillas for Land. The Mountain Gorillas of the East African tropical forests are under constant threat of losing their habitat. According to the World Wildlife Fund, there are approximately 786 mountain gorillas left in the entire world. The land on which they depend for food, safety and survival is constantly invaded by the local people for personal use. This research was conducted to find out people’s attitudes about the conflict between conservation of mountain gorillas and their habitat, and the local peoples’ need for the same land. Information was collected using interviews, surveys, primary and secondary research. Most people were not aware of the degree to which the mountain gorillas were endangered. A large percentage of the interview group voted for the conservation of the mountain gorillas’ habitat. An interesting theme that arose from this research was that even if the locals use this land, they will eventually run out of fertile land anyway, and the underlying problem will remain. Hopefully this research helps to create awareness for the need to protect the tropical forests in order to conserve this endangered species of mountain gorillas. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 141 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 242 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 43A Meghan Corkery, Patricia Wadsworth (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Amherst The Bipolar Mitotic Spindle: A Dynamic Structure of Microtubules and Motor Proteins Purpose: Mitosis is an essential life process conserved across all eukaryotes. The bipolar mitotic spindle, a dynamic structure composed of microtubules and motor proteins, is required for chromosome segregation. Microtubules assembled at centrosomes and near chromosomes contribute to spindle assembly. A comprehensive RNAi analysis of motor proteins (kinesins) in S2 D. melanogaster cells showed that several kinesins are required for successful mitosis. These previous studies have found that 8 of the 25 kinesin knockdowns have distinct phenotypes: mono-polar spindle formation, cytokinesis failure, chromosome misalignment and anaphase delay. Our goals are to replicate these findings and expand the existing knowledge of mitotic spindle assembly through simultaneous RNA interference of both the centrosomal-mediated pathway and each of the contributing kinesins. Methods: Utilizing RNA interference and timelapse fluorescence microscopy, we will visualize the mitotic spindle using S2 cells expressing GFP-tagged tubulin. Results: Thus far we have cultured cell lines and begun to image control cells. We have successfully increased the mitotic index through the administration of RO-3306, a cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor. In addition, we have synthesized the RNAi for each individual kinesins and centrosomin and begun to examine each gene through individual RNAi trials. Conclusion: We expect to determine how each of the genes are required for mitosis in both the presence and absence of the centrosome pathway. As our research progresses, we hope to incorporate multiple gene knockdowns to better understand the motor protein interactions and maximize novel findings. 243 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 80A Ana Costa, Erin Bromage (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Dartmouth The Gills of Fish act as a Secondary Immune Tissue Fish gills as an immune organ? A. F. Costa, M. McNerney, E. Bromage ABSTRACT PURPOSE: The fish gills are an important organ of respiration, osmoregulation, nitrogen excretion, as well as major contributors to the acid-base balance and hormone metabolism of the fish. Recently, the gills have also been suspected in playing a role in the immune system. This study was conducted in order to analyze the distribution of the lymphocyte population within the gill tissue and provide conclusive evidence that the gill is a site of immune function in Rainbow trout. METHODS: The gills were flushed of all peripheral blood cells and sectioned in order to analyze the lymphocyte distribution throughout the gill tissue. Monoclonal antibodies specific for B- lymphocytes, T- lymphocytes, macrophages, and plasma cells were used in conjugation with flow cytometry and ELISPOT staining. RESULTS: A considerable number of immune cells are present in the inter-brachial gill tissue of Rainbow trout. Data collected shows that the greatest percentage of CD3+ T-cells, IgD+ and IgM+ B-cells, and IgM secreting plasma cells, are found in the section of the gill closest to the body, and decreasing towards the outer sections. However, the opposite is observed with CD11+ macrophages. CONCLUSION: These results suggest that the gills of fish harbor considerable populations of immune cells, and that there is organization of those cells within the gills which may be related to immune function. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 142 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 244 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 37A Sonal Desai, Rolf Karlstrom (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Amherst Regulation of Endocrine Cell Numbers in the Post-Embryonic Pituitary The pituitary gland is the master gland of the endocrine system and is located at the base of the brain where it secretes hormones that regulate growth, metabolism, and maturation. The Hedgehog (Hh) signaling pathway is a key regulator of the development of the pituitary gland during embryogenesis. However, whether this pathway is required for the growth and maintenance of this tissue during post-embryonic and adult stages remains unknown. The pituitary experiences major morphological changes and massive growth during post-embryonic development. As a first step towards understanding the molecular cues that regulate endocrine cell numbers and post-embryonic growth of the pituitary gland we have characterized normal rates of endocrine cell addition for this period. Quantification of specific endocrine cell populations across larval stages was performed using transgenic zebrafish lines that allow visualization of endocrine cells. Pomc-promoter driven GFP expression labels anterior ACTH cells and posterior MSH cells, while prl-promoter driven RFP expression labels Prolactin (PRL) secreting cells in the anterior pituitary. All three cell populations increased throughout larval development, with a dramatic increase in cell number during the larval-juvenile transition (25-30 days post-fertilization). Our lab has shown that Hh is critical for pituitary induction and patterning during embryonic stages. I tested whether Hh continues to regulate pituitary growth in larval stages using the small molecule inhibitor cyclopamine. I found that Hh signaling negatively regulates endocrine cell addition during periods of major pituitary growth. This negative regulation of proliferation was a surprise, and suggests that Hh loss-of-function mutations could lead to pituitary hyperplasia. Consistently, one study has now found that proliferation of cells derived from some human pituitary adenomas are negatively regulated by Hh signaling. Our work in zebrafish may thus help uncover the mechanisms by which Hh regulates the adult pituitary and adenoma formation. 245 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 81A Alexander Dills, Mark Silby (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Dartmouth Characterization and Evolution of a Pseudomonas aeruginosa Phage PURPOSE: Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an opportunistic pathogenic species of bacterium and the most common colonizer of medical devices. The goal of this project is to isolate phage from soil and to characterize the dynamics of a coevolutionary “arms race” with P. aeruginosa strain PAO1. Through this we investigate the nature and feasibility of such a system for the generation of more generalist yet virulent phage, and experimentally test evolution of hostparasite interactions. METHODS: Phage was isolated from soil by enrichment of cultures and six plaques from the original extract were selected for study. These were cultured with PAO1 in 10% LB+ 4mM CaCl2 for 24hr with 1:100 transfers between 24hr incubation periods for 20 days. Throughout this process the populations of both phage and bacteria were monitored. Various evolved strains of both were competed against each other and the ancestral strains to map how infectivity and resistance changed over time. Analysis of phage DNA sequences is being used to aid in phage characterization. RESULTS: The population density of both phage and bacteria increased over time, mirroring each other. In addition the size and turbidity of plaques became more diversified with each successive pair of generations. Since the titer of phage was estimated from plaque formation on agar inoculated with the original line of PAO1 as a host, the actual count of phage may be higher as they evolve. CONCLUSION: A coevolutionary arms race between phage and bacteria results in mirrored population development and differentiation of phage infectivity as demonstrated by increased variation in plaque size and turbidity. The change in plaque morphology suggests the evolved phage have an altered ability to infect the ancestral host. Infectivity and resistance of evolved and ancestral phage and bacterial strains, respectively, will reveal coevolutionary dynamics. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 143 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 246 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 96A Matthew Ford, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College Signs of Biophilia: A Survey of Community College Students The biophilia hypothesis, propounded by E.O. Wilson, suggests that humans have an innate, evolutionary disposition to concern themselves with living organisms and organismal processes. The project investigated whether this concern for life is an issue for community college students. A survey was delivered. The survey measured students’: mood, behaviors and attitudes toward living systems, emotional responses to positive and negative natural scenery, and persepctive on whether nature could, and/or should be further incorporated into everyday life. The resulting data indicate a concern for the living world, but with a tendency to act less on that interest than expected. It was concluded that further incorporation of natural life into everyday urban and suburban living may increase the appreciative treatment of the organismal world. 247 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 38A Srinivasa Nithin Gopalsamy, Elsbeth Walker (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Amherst The role of BdNAM-B1 in senescence and nutrient remobilization in Brachypodium distachyon Malnutrition is a major epidemic that presents a multitude of problems for a large portion of the global population. It affects 20% of the population in the developing world and has been found to be the cause of 49% of child mortality worldwide. One avenue by which malnutrition is being combated is the biofortification of staple foods, which is the genetic engineering of crops to accumulate a greater amount of nutrients such as metals and proteins in the edible portions of the plants. As part of biofortification research, BdNAM-B1 has been identified as an ortholog to TtNAM-B1, a gene present in the common wheat, Triticum aestivum. TtNAM-B1 has been found to act in the regulation of senescence in wheat, and as senescence is the stage of the life cycle during which nutrients are transported from the main body of the plant to its seeds, the nutrient content in the grain is impacted. More specifically, plants with reduced TtNAM-B1 expression are delayed in their senescence and thus maintain a younger and greener appearance for more time, which is likely why the gene was artificially selected out of the wheat cultivar during domestication. The cost of this delayed senescence, though, is that the grains of these plants contain significantly reduced nitrogen (protein), Zn and Fe. My first study with BdNAM-B1 is to demonstrate that the expression pattern of BdNAM-B1 is the same as that of TtNAM-B1. Having shown the similarity in expression pattern, the next step is to demonstrate that the BdNAM-B1 knockdown plant results in delayed senescence using a miRNA construct as the mutagen. Moreover, in a study that was could not be performed in T. aestivum, a promoter-GUS construct has been developed to give a representation of where the NAM-B1 gene is expressed. Through the implementation of both these constructs, a more comprehensive understanding of the role of BdNAM-B1 and the molecular mechanism by which it regulates the remobilization of nutrients to the grain during senescence will be obtained. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 144 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 248 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 42A Patrick Hanlon, Chul Park (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Amherst The Fate of Activated Sludge and Algae Microalgae have great potential for the treatment of domestic wastewater. It has been reported that they uptake Nitrogen and Phosphate, two key nutrients for eutrophication (Gutzeit et al 2005). Microalgae also enter into symbiotic relationships with heterotrophic bacteria that consume organic carbon (Gutzeit et al 2005). The major goal was to examine the fate of various types of activated sludge (pure, pure/no light, filtered/Micrectinium, and filtered/Chlorella), in terms of biological growth and chemical parameters. Specifically, total suspended solids, volatile suspended solids, soluble chemical oxygen demand, total oxygen demand, total protein, total polysaccharide, pH, absorbance, and total ions were examined on a weekly basis. Also, the size of algal granules and the biological composition (total cells and flocculations) were examined. The goal was to examine how activated sludge changes when algae grows in it, and the fate of the algae growing in the activated sludge samples. The hope is to one day use algal granules in the treatment of wastewater. 249 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 36A Hannah Kincaid, Cristina Cox Fernandes (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Amherst Electrocyte Organization in the Electric Organs of Four Genera of Apteronotidae Apteronotidae is a family of weakly electric South American fish whose members have an electric organ composed of modified nerves called electrocytes. In some species, these electrocytes enter the organ and change direction, while in others they only run caudally. This study focuses on the electric organs in the four genera in the most basal clade of apteronotids: Orthosternarchus, Sternarchorhamphus, Sternarchorhynchus, and Platyurosternarchus. Through dissection, these fish are classified by unidirectional or bidirectional electrocytes. Orthosternarchus and Sternarchorhamphus have a known monophasic electric organ discharge (EOD) waveform, while Sternarchorhynchus and Platyurosternarchus have a known biphasic EOD waveform. The purpose of this research is to test if there is a relationship between electrocyte structure and EOD waveform. Specimens for this project were collected from the Amazon River and fixed in formaldehyde. Through longitudinal dissection, the electric organ of each specimen was exposed and stained with osmium in Sorenson’s Phosphate Buffer at pH 7.3. A dissecting microscope and Moticam 2300 Camera were used to take images of in situ electrocytes. We found that Sternarchorhynchus, which has a biphasic EOD waveform, has an electric organ with bidirectional electrocytes. The electrocytes innervate the organ, run anteriorly, and then turn around to run posteriorly. Sternarchorhampus, which has a monophasic EOD waveform, had unidirectional electrocytes that run caudally. We hypothesize that in subsequent experiments Orthosternarchus, monophasic in waveform, will have unidirectional electrocytes, and Platyurosternarchus, biphasic in waveform, will have bidirectional electrocytes. 250 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 35A Eric Lee, Cynthia Baldwin (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Animal Sciences, UMass Amherst Developing a Novel Bioluminescence Imaging (BLI) Cytotoxicity Assay A novel imaging technique using transgenic cells expressing a luciferase–green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion protein has been generated. Transduced cells are selected by cell-sorting technologies, using the GFP signal or fluorescent antibodies specific for selected cell-surface markers. The goal of this proposal is compare a previously known method, the chromium-51 release-based cytotoxicity assay, to the newly developed BLI-based cytotoxicity assay and show the advantages of the BLI-based assay. BLI is a more sensitive assay and allows much more data points to be gathered; the same cells can be read from 0 hours to 48 hours. Another advantage is that BLI also works with an in vivo animal model. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 145 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 251 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 87A Stephen Liptak, Randi Darling (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, Westfield State University Seasonal Feeding of the White-Tailed Deer (Odocoileus virginianus) Purpose: This study examined the seasonal feeding behavior of White-Tailed Deer. We hypothesized that deer would feed more frequently, and for longer periods of time, in late autumn because the deer need to develop fat reserves as they head into winter. Another hypothesis was that deer would preferentially feed during the least windy and the coolest time of the day, avoiding activity during the warmest part of the day. The final hypothesis was that females would feed in groups together while males would feed solitarily. Methods: These hypotheses were tested using trail cameras that operate by motion and infrared sensors. The cameras were placed in three cultivated food plots in West Granville, MA. Pictures were collected by each of these cameras. Local temperatures and wind speeds were obtained from a weather database. Results: There was no trend in daily frequency of feeding of the White-Tailed deer, but there were trends suggesting that as autumn progressed, the deer increased feeding time. The hypothesis that deer feed during the least windy and the coolest times of the day was supported. Only once did a male visit a feed plot with a female; females and males generally fed in separate groups. Conclusions: As temperatures decrease going into late autumn, White-Tailed deer spend more time feeding. The deer prefer to feed during low wind conditions. Males on average, feed solitarily, while females feed in larger numbers 252 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 46A Marcelina Machado, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College The Use of Animals in Research Historically, animals have been used for scientific research. Many researchers have not followed the appropriate protocols which were developed in order to minimize abusive treatment. This project examines government rules and procedures for animal testing to see if they are being followed. Through examination of scientific articles and internet sources, the project evaluates the effectiveness of past and present regulations. The project concludes that though many companies follow the proper protocols, many do not. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 146 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 253 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 84A Joseph Matrisciano, Erin Bromage (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Dartmouth Characterization of an anti-rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) CD3e monoclonal antibody Abstract T. Boardman, C. Warner, F. Ramirez-Gomez, J. Matrisciano, E. Bromage PURPOSE: T lymphocytes and B lymphocytes are the two primary immune cells in rainbow trout and show similarities, both in functional and structure, with mammalian lymphocytes. While there has been extensive research conducted to elucidate B cell characteristics limited work has been conducted on T cells. A monoclonal antibody (mAb) was developed to target the cytoplasmic tail region of the epsilon chain of the CD3 transmembrane protein found in T lymphocytes of rainbow trout to facilitate further studies on cell-mediated immunity in fish. METHODS: A monoclonal antibody was produced against the rainbow trout CD3ε chain and was screened via antigen-specific ELISA. Flow cytometry, immunoprecipitation assays, and in vitro proliferation assays were conducted to further characterize the anti-trout CD3ε mAb. RESULTS: The mAb was found to be highly specific for the target sequence of CD3ε. The observed distribution of T-cells varied among tissue samples collected from the rainbow trout. Peripheral blood had the fewest T cells. The posterior kidney was found to have far higher percentage of T cells in comparison to the head kidney. Also a high number of CD3ε¬+ cells were found in the skin, suggesting T cells may have an important role in mucosal surfaces such as the skin and gills. CONCLUSION: These assays show that a mAb directed against the CD3ε domain located in trout T lymphocytes has been established and characterized. This reagent will prove to be a useful tool in examining T-cell responses and their role within the immune system of rainbow trout. 254 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 77A Ankita Mehta, Solange Brault (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Boston Stable Isotope Analysis of Fish Species of the Coastal Ecosystem of the Gulf of Mexico Stable isotope analysis of nitrogen and carbon ratios has been used to understand food web patterns of marine organisms. A high nitrogen ratio in fish tissue indicates that a species has a higher position in the food web while a high carbon ratio indicates the original source of carbon. For this research, a stable isotope analysis of carbon and nitrogen ratios was conducted for fish prey species of the Bottlenose dolphins from Cedar Key, Florida. These fishes occupy different trophic positions in the food web of the Coastal Gulf of Mexico. Tissue samples of these fish prey species were analyzed using GC- IRMS instrument at the University of Massachusetts Boston Analytical Facility. By determining how specialized the diet of each species or stage of a species (juvenile/adult) is, we can identify their trophic roles in their coastal ecosystem. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 147 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 255 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 82A Alexandra Michalowski, Mark Silby (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Dartmouth Production and inhibition of quorum sensing molecules in Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris and soil isolates. PURPOSE: Cell-to-cell communication known as quorum sensing regulates cellular processes such as biofilm formation and virulence in many bacteria. In multi-species environments, some bacteria may gain an advantage by degrading QS signals. This ‘quorum quenching’ is known in the well-studied acylated homoserine lactone-mediated QS systems. Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris (Xcc) is a plant pathogen which employs the diffusible signal factor (DSF) for quorum sensing . Unlike AHL degradation, there is limited information on whether degradation of DSF occurs in microbial communities. We hypothesize that some soil bacteria will degrade or inhibit the production of DSF by Xcc. Understanding degradation of DSF may yield new ways to utilize microbes in the protection of plants from Xcc by disabling DSF-mediated QS. METHODS: We used the wild-type Xcc 8004 carrying a DSF-induced promoter fused to the GFP gene as a reporter for DSF degradation, and the Xcc DSF mutant 8523 carrying the same plasmid to detect DSF production. Soil bacteria were isolated from the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth campus on 10% Tryptic Soy agar. Identity and relatedness of isolates will be established by 16s rDNA analysis. RESULTS: Forty eight morphologically distinct soil bacteria have been isolated. Screening for anti-DSF activity has so far identified at least five isolates which may interfere with DSF-mediated QS. Amplification and sequencing of 16s rDNA is under way, and investigations of DSF production and degradation by soil bacteria are ongoing. The genetic basis for DSF degradation will be investigated for a selected isolate. CONCLUSION: Some members of the bacterial community in soil have the ability to interfere with DSF-mediated QS. Phylogenetic analysis may yield insight into the evolutionary origins of DSF-mediated quorum sensing mechanisms, and the nature of microbial communities in which DSF-degraders are found. 256 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 94A Hassan Mirza, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College Human’s Relationship with Nature in Two Films Human’s encounters with nature often have negative results, which creates a culture that is detrimental to humans and nature. This project compares the unfortunate impact of treating nature negatively with the benefits of treating nature positively. Through a critical analysis between the classic film of King Kong and the more recent film Avatar, this project shows that treating nature negatively is harmful where treating nature positively is beneficial and useful to humans and nature. Is it possible that humans can be less destructive toward nature, as in Avatar, or are humans destinate to destroy nature as in King Kong? Viewing the negative and positive outcomes from these examples may teach us how to treat nature positively. The project concludes that much can be learned about the positive treatment of nature from these two films. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 148 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 257 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 83A Christiaan Rees, Mark Silby (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Dartmouth Antibiotic Properties of Novel Oroidin-Derived Compounds PURPOSE: Recently, several naturally occurring marine alkaloids and their derivatives, including oroidin, have been shown to have antibiotic and antibiofilm activities against a variety of bacterial species. It has been demonstrated that the 2-aminoimidazole moiety is implicated in this activity, while the presence of halogens, specifically bromine or fluorine, may also play a significant role. METHODS: We have screened eleven novel oroidin-derived compounds for antibiotic activity against both gram-negative Escherichia coli and gram-positive Staphylococcus aureus. Spectrophotometric assays were used to evaluate antibacterial and antibiofilm activity. Bacterial growth rates in the presence of oroidin derivatives, as well as the abundance of biofilm, were measured to examine the degree to which growth and biofilm formation was inhibited at a range of concentrations. RESULTS: We show that the 2-aminoimidazole moiety is critically important for antibiotic activity, while a polybrominated pyrrole ring also plays a significant role. Among the compounds studied, N-[3(2-amino-1H-imidazol-5-yl)-3-oxopropyl]-4,5-dibromo-1H-pyrrole-2-carboxamide was the most potent, with complete inhibition of growth observed at approximately 400 μM for E. coli and 200 μM for S. aureus. The monobrominated variety of this compound also showed antibiotic activity, but at a significantly higher concentration. Biofilm assays are currently in progress, and results will be presented. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that a 2-aminoimidazole moiety and a brominated pyrrole ring are critically important for function among the oroidin family of compounds. In the search for more effective derivatives, it is likely that modification to molecular structure will involve the carbon chain bridging these moieties. 258 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 91A Edd Ricker, Patricia Wadsworth (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Amherst Examining the Interactions within the Mammalian Mitotic Spindle Through a Phospho-Regulation Study of Eg5 and TPX2 As a plus-end directed homotetramer, mammalian Eg5 cross-links and slides antiparallel microtubules in the spindle midzone, providing the force necessary to establish mitotic spindle bipolarity during early mitosis. The current model of spindle assembly and maintenance relies on Eg5 and its interactions with other key motor and non-motor microtubule associated proteins. Independently, the dynein/dynactin complex has been shown to transport astral and half-zone Eg5 towards the spindle poles and TPX2 has been shown to act as a molecular break on the ability of Eg5 to translocate microtubules. Recent data published by the Wadsworth lab suggests TPX2 acts as a molecular linker, connecting Eg5 with the dynein/dynactin complex on astral microtubules. Here, we build upon the model of mitotic assembly and maintenance by exploring how phospho-regulation of Eg5 and TPX2 by cell cycle kinases contributes to spindle bipolarity and the role that phosphorylation plays in mediating the interactions between these target proteins. In order to determine this, we created siRNA-resistant non-phosphorylatable Eg5 and TPX2 mutant constructs using sitedirected point mutagenesis. LLC-PK1 cell lines were engineered with these constructs, the endogenous Eg5 or TPX2 was silenced with RNAi, and confocal fluorescent microscopy was used to determine whether the non-phosphorylatable mutants were able to rescue the bipolar mitotic phenotype. In vitro study was also done on one of these Eg5 mutants to determine whether phosphorylation is important for Eg5 dynamics in vitro. Understanding the interactions and regulations within the mammalian mitotic spindle provides new targets for chemotherapeutic drug development for the treatment of numerous cancers. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 149 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 259 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 45A Laura M Stapler, Sruthi Satishchandran, Gerald Downes (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Amherst Assessing the Effects of Small Molecules on a Zebrafish Model of Maple Syrup Urine Disease Maple Syrup Urine Disease (MSUD) is a human metabolic disorder of branched-chain amino acids: isoleucine, leucine, and valine. MSUD is caused by a mutation in any one of the four genes encoding an enzyme complex responsible for a step of branched-chain amino acid metabolism, which results in the accumulation of these amino acids and α-keto acids, an intermediate by product. MSUD-affected individuals have bodily secretions that have a sweet, burned sugar smell (hence the name of the disease). If not treated, the toxic build-up of branched-chain amino acids and α-keto acids can have a devastating impact on the central nervous system, causing mental retardation, seizures, coma, cerebral swelling, dysmyelination, and death. A better understanding of the mechanisms that cause this nervous system damage and the development of new therapeutic drugs could greatly benefit affected individuals as well as yield new insights into nervous system metabolism. In previous studies, our laboratory has identified a zebrafish model of MSUD, and this model mirrors molecular, cellular, and behavioral aspects of MSUD (Friedrich et al., Disease Models and Mechanisms, 2012). Zebrafish have several features that make this a valuable model to better understand and develop therapeutics for MSUD, including small size, ease of obtaining large numbers of animals, rapid development, amenability to genetic approaches, and robust swimming behavior. Due to these features, zebrafish have been utilized in small molecule screens, in which thousands of chemical compounds can be tested to develop new drugs to combat human disease. As a first step to perform a small molecule screen to develop new drugs to treat MSUD, our aim was to characterize the effects of ten different chemical compounds on wild-type and MSUD zebrafish. Each of the chemical compounds is thought to promote or challenge branched-chain amino acid metabolism. Zebrafish embryos were incubated in different concentrations of each chemical compound and quantitative behavioral analysis was performed to see whether each chemical compound improved or worsened the swimming behavior of wild-type and MSUD zebrafish. These assays are being performed currently, and we will present a summary of our findings. This work complements our ongoing studies to further characterize MSUD zebrafish, and it lays a foundation to perform small-molecule screens to develop new drugs to treat MSUD. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 150 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 260 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 89A Alexander Simolaris, Kimberly Tremblay (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Animal Sciences, UMass Amherst Investigation of Liver Bud Potentiality Using Dose-Dependent Cre-loxp System Liver disease is the fourth leading cause of death among middle-aged Americans. High rates of morbidity from hepatocellular carcinoma, cirrhosis, and liver cancer has placed tremendous strain on the organ donation system. Resultant mortality from liver disease is on the rise as the demand for transplantable liver tissue continues to outstrip the available supply. Little is known about the developmental processes and molecular mechanisms underlying liver differentiation. Specifically, it is unknown if liver bud cells are bipotential or unipotential. Previous research suggests that hepatic progenitors reside in the small terminal bile ducts and when activated proliferate, giving rise to a cell population of oval cells, which differentiate into hepatocytes and cholangiocytes. While many genes are involved in liver induction, reiterative expression between cells and between tissues has complicated analysis, particularly during the Septum Transversum Meseenchymal (STM) transition. Despite this challenge, researches have generated in-vitro cultures that exhibit hepatic-like phenotypes. However, a gap in Developmental Biology lies in understanding how single hepatoblasts differentiate to form the structures and cells of the mature organs. We propose to determine the pathway of hepatoblast differentiation to determine if these liver-precursor cells are bipotential or unipotental. We will utilize a novel, in-vivo, single-cell labeling technique involving a TM-sensitive endoderm-Cre expressing mouse crossed with a reporter mouse. Previous proof-o- principle experiments have established the conditions for lineage tracing from the onset of liver budding through the remainder of organogenesis. Determining the potentiality of liver bud cells will involve two specific aims: confirming that only single-celled derived clones are consistently labeled during later stages of liver budding; and establishing histological conditions for the analysis of labeled 14.5dpc adult livers. Impact: Establishing the potentiality of liver precursor cells in-vivo will greatly contribute to the necessary molecular and developmental knowledge required to develop transplantable liver tissue in-vitro. 261 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 92A Brenna Rose O Haynes, Erin Stockman, William Manning (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Plant, Soil, and Insect Sciences, UMass Amherst Physiological and Biochemical Responses of Common Bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) to Elevated Soil Temperature and Ambient and Elevated ODzone PURPOSE: To determine a correlation between ozone pollution and elevated temperature with already observed decreases in crop yields worldwide. The data gained through this experiment will give crop researchers clues on how future conditions may affect yields. METHODS: The effects of day time ozone are measured by comparing relative plant biomass and surface area, water usage, photosynthetic rate, and leaf respiration rate in elevated temperatures and ozone concentrations. Plants are currently growing in close system chambers within the Air Pollution Research Lab greenhouse at UMass Amherst. RESULTS: Increased temperature conditions jumpstart the growth of the common bean, plants in elevated temperature conditions are larger than those in elevated conditions. Plants submitted to high ozone concentrations as well as elevated temperature show clear signs of stress on their leaf organs when compared to their counterparts who experienced high ozone but ambient temperature or high temperature and ambient ozone concentrations. More information on the effects of ozone and temperature levels will be available in the coming weeks as the plants mature and tertiary harvests are performed. CONCLUSION: Elevated ozone and temperature, which correlate to future climate conditions, will have a negatively correlated effect on crops such as the common bean. Information on how pollution affects our food sources is essential. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 151 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 262 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 78A Dewar Tan, Linda Huang, Dr. Hongbo Luo (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Boston Small Molecule Mediated Cystolic Activation of Akt/PKB Subhanjan Mondal, Hakryul Jo, Hongbo R. Luo Department of Pathology, Harvard Medical School Dana-Farber/ Harvard Cancer Center & Department of Lab Medicine, Children’s Hospital Boston In eukaryotes, cells are normally programmed to die under apoptosis where conditions would prove otherwise detrimental to the host. Aberrant control of this process, on the other hand, is known to be associated with many neurological degenerating diseases. Activation of Akt, a serine/threonine kinase which promotes cell survival and proliferation, is one solution that has been shown to effectively halt this pro-apoptotic behavior; however molecules specific for its activation has been limiting. In this study, we characterized the function and mechanism of SC79, a compound derived from a cell-based high-throughput screen using GFP-tagged Pleckstrin Homology (PH) domain of Akt. To determine if SC79 activated Akt, various cell lines were treated with SC79 and measured for downstream phosphorylation to indicate kinase activity. Targeting the PH domain in the primary screen suggests SC79 may mimic its endogenous binding to phospholipid, PtdIns(3,4,5) P3, to confer Akt into an open conformation for phosphorylation. HEK cells stably transfected with Akt mutations K14R, in which abolishes PH-Domain binding to PtdIns(3,4,5)P3, and ∆118, a PH-Domain deleted variant, were used to identify this mechanism. Additional experiments to characterize the mechanism by which SC79 augments Akt function were evaluated for their efficacy. Here we show that SC79 is able to phosphorylate Serine and Threonine residues of Akt, activating its kinase ability for downstream targets GSKß3 and FOXO3 in the absence of stimuli. We find that with the PH-domain deleted variant, SC79 is unable to phosphorylate Akt while altered PH domain, which prohibits PH-domain binding PtdIns(3,4,5)P3, is able to, suggesting SC79 must bind to the same binding pocket of PHDomain as PtdIns(3,4,5)P3 to activate Akt. Furthermore it appears SC79 is only able to act on Akt for short durations, thus mitigating concerns over its oncogenic properties. The discovery of this low cytotoxic molecule with high efficacy for modulating Akt/PKB activation provides a potential therapeutic for many neurological diseases that occur from Akt down regulation. Applying the same concept in future developments, SC79 could also have therapeutic use for myocardial infarctions (heart attack) where Akt activation has been shown to reduce cardio muscle cell apoptosis. CHEMICAL ENGINEERING 263 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 34A Zachary Brentzel, Neil Forbes (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemical Engineering, UMass Amherst Dose Rate Effect of Bacterial Toxin on Tumor Tissue The cure, and even highly effective treatments, of cancer have been eluding doctors and researchers for the past couple decades. In one route, researchers have experimented with bacterial methods in order to penetrate to and eradicate inner, quiescent regions of the tumors. Our current experiments are being performed on bacteria that have been genetically modified to produce and secrete bacterial toxin X (labeled this way for proprietary reasons). Since bacteria have been found to preferentially migrate into tumors, the next step is to measure the toxicity of the bacterial supernatant on a monolayer culture of breast cancer cell line, MCF-7. The toxicity measurements are performed by MTS cell viability assays. Additional experiments were performed with another toxin, Pseudomonas aeruginosa Exotoxin A (PEA). PEA’s main cause of cell death is to prevent the production of proteins in the foreign cell. Viability experiments were conducted at different time points and concentrations for each toxin. The differences were that dilutions of pure PEA were used, whereas bacterial supernatant containing toxin X was used instead of the pure protein. When comparing the effects of toxin X and PEA on cell viability, toxin X had eradicated more of the tumor tissue at each of the respective one, three, and five day time points. However both toxins, at the highest concentrations tested, were able to kill over 90% of the cancerous tissue at 5 days. Present experiments are aimed at picking narrower ranges of concentration and time parameters for toxin X in order to model equations of the tumor tissue death rates. In parallel with previously developed bacterial migration models, the ultimate goal is to model in vitro tumor death. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 152 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 264 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 31A Nicholas Cadirov, Susan Roberts (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemical Engineering, UMass Amherst Production and Characterization of Protoplasts in Taxus Suspension Cultures Plant cell suspension cultures provide a viable option for producing pharmaceutically active metabolites that are otherwise expensive to create synthetically. The anti-cancer drug, paclitaxel (Taxol®, Bristol Myers-Squibb), is a secondary metabolite currently being produced from Taxus plant cell cultures, but product yields are low and variable over time. To understand more about the instability of Taxus suspension cultures, it is important to examine the heterogeneity of the culture on a single cell level. Single cells can be created from aggregated Taxus cultures using enzymatic digestion techniques, but are difficult to maintain and continuously reculture over time. As an alternative to the preparation of single cells, this project focuses on the production and reculturing of Taxus protoplasts. A method for reculturing protoplasts has been developed to minimize the processing time required for protoplast isolation, while maximizing cell growth and viability. The protoplast purification technique has also been optimized to prevent protoplast lysis when transitioning from the digestion solution into the formulated growth media. Recently, we developed a procedure to determine the cell density and size of protoplasts in a culture using a Coulter Counter. This new method will be used to track changes in the culture over time including size distribution and cell wall integrity. The effect of initial seeding density, media composition, and elicitation with methyl jasmonate on protoplast generation will be discussed. Characterizing the properties of protoplasts in culture can provide insight into both culture heterogeneity and variability in paclitaxel accumulation. 265 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 28A Kevin Cunningham, Thomas Russell (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemical Engineering, UMass Amherst Gas Diffusion Through Thin Polystyrene Films Thin polymer film technology is a rapidly expanding field in materials engineering. Understanding the properties of materials asthe film approaches molecular dimensions is of fundamnetal scientificinterest and relevant to nanotechnology applications ranging from electronic, optical, medical, and next-generation energy systems. Here we have investigated the diffusion of gas through thin polymers films, a functionof the film thickness, which reflects the variation in the mechanical properties of the film. Films werel be prepared by spin coating, a commercially practiced procedue, followed by thermal annealing to remove residual stresses. Thje films were floated on the surface of a liquid and a tiny bubble of gas was placed under the film. As the gas diffused thorugh the polymer and into the environment, the volume of the bubble decresed, which could easily be measured with an optical microscope. The experimental results were compared to recent theoretical arguments and to a novel empirical model that was developed from the observations. The results are currently being framed in context with theconfiguration ofthe polymer chain in thin film and deformations to the polymer chain due to confinement in a thin film geometry. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 153 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 266 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 30A Erinn Dandley, Shelly Peyton (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemical Engineering, UMass Amherst Breast Cancer Tissue Tropism in Engineered Metastatic Microenvironments Breast cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death. Ninety percent of breast cancer deaths are associated with metastasis: the spread of cancer cells from the original tumor site to other organs. Breast cancer preferentially metastasizes to the brain, bone, and lung. Different clinical subtypes of breast cancer have different metastatic profiles to these very diverse organs. Through the use of engineered metastatic microenvironments (EMMs) we are investigating how the physical and chemical properties of these tissues influence metastatic site preference. Our EMMs consist of cover slips coated with representative proteins of the metastatic tissue site (Bone = collagen I and 1% osteopontin; Brain = 50% fibronectin, 25% vitronectin, 20% tenascin, and 5% laminin; and Lung = 33% laminin, 33% collagen IV, 15% collagen I, 15% fibronectin, and 4% tenascin). We focus on three main characterizations to quantify tissue tropism to these organs: immunofluorescent staining, cell adhesion, and cell migration. I have seen trends in cell area and shape; adhesion area and time to polarization; as well as migration speed and persistence in one direction, respectively, in MDA-MB-231 and BT-549 cell lines. Both cell lines have the same metastatic profile (42.8% frequency to lung, 39% frequency to bone, and 25% frequency to brain) but surprisingly show different results on the EMMs. We propose that by creating profiles for many different cell lines we can determine a more accurate picture of how these cells are actually behaving instead of grouping them together in their current clinical subtypes. Future work includes the addition of new cells line with different metastatic profiles and clinical subtypes, creating 2D gels to mimic stiffness along with protein content, and eventually using 3D models to most accurately mimic the environment in vivo. By better understanding the current clinical subtypes of breast cancer better treatment options can be created by finding new target areas for anticancer drugs. 267 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 33A Brittany Forkus, Neil Forbes (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemical Engineering, UMass Amherst Development and Characterization of a Microfluidic Device for Recombinant Bacterial Biomarker Capture for use in Early-stage Cancer Detection One of the major challenges limiting the efficacy of modern cancer therapies is the absence of an effective and simple diagnostic mechanism for the detection of the disease in its earliest stages. By manipulating the native characteristics of gram negative bacteria such as their preferential accumulation in tumor regions, inherent chemotaxis capabilities, and ability to actively penetrate tumor tissue; it may be possible to engineer these bacteria to develop a more sensitive and stable cancer detection strategy. A successful plasmid construct has been developed in which a reporter fluorophore is secreted from an attenuated strain of Salmonella typhimurium under the control of an L- arabinose inducible system. Current work is directed towards fostering a more in-depth understanding of the underlying mechanism responsible for this observed protein release to determine if it is associated with desired secretion or bacterial cell death and subsequent lysis. Bacterial viability has been measured using cell-culture techniques and fluorescent microscopy with viability stains to quantify the amount of fluorophore produced and determine if its release correlates with cell death. The development of a microfluidic detection device would be beneficial to increase biomarker signal recognition for use with in vitro and in vivo models. Proof-of-concept dynamic assays are currently being developed to elucidate the feasibility of the envisioned detection system using trace quantities of antibodies. These studies aim to determine the necessary density of bacteria for significant protein detection and to better understand the characteristics of the fluorophore-antibody interaction. Specific emphasis will be on determining the governing kinetic and diffusion parameters that dictate this relationship which will then be used to model these interactions. These assays are being performed in vitro in LB media and mammalian blood before future mouse trials. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 154 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 268 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 29A Dan Ganz, Neil Forbes (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemical Engineering, UMass Amherst In Vitro model of in Vivo Blood Vasculature of Tumor Microenvironments Currently, a microfluidic device which mimics tumor microenvironments has been developed to test cancer therapies. The device, lacking a model of in vivo blood vasculature, will be improved by coating a tumor spheroid by a layer of endothelial cells. This coat mimics a blood vessel, and improves the accuracy of drug testing in the microfluidic device. With this model, we are able to show genetically engineered Salmonella typhimurium are able to penetrate this endothelial layer to deliver drug to the tumor spheroid. 269 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 32A Nicole Raia, Susan Roberts (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemical Engineering, UMass Amherst Development of a Selection Protocol for Transformed Taxus Callus and Suspension Cultures following Agrobacteriummediated Gene Transfer Paclitaxel (Taxol®, Bristol Myers Squibb) is a clinically important anti-cancer agent that is currently produced through Taxus plant cell suspension cultures. Rate influencing steps in paclitaxel metabolism can be targeted through metabolic engineering approaches to increase paclitaxel accumulation and overall yields in culture. To successfully achieve stable transformation using Agrobacterium-mediated gene transfer methods, this project aims to create and optimize a protocol to isolate the transformed cells using antibiotics such as cefotaxime and hygromycin in both liquid suspension and callus plant cell cultures. Optimal concentrations of cefotaxime will eliminate bacteria after transformation without harming Taxus cells. Optimal hygromycin concentrations will inhibit growth of untransformed cells while allowing transformed cells to continue actively dividing. After transfer to selective media, cell growth ismonitored using both microscopy and Coulter Counter analyses, allowing for determination of the optimum antibiotic concentration. Successful isolation of transformed cells will allow our laboratory to scale-up genetically engineered cultures that produce higher amounts of paclitaxel. CHEMISTRY 270 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 54C Stephanie Bellinger Buckley, Jonathan Rochford (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemistry, UMass Boston Synthesis of Redox-Active Ligands for Use in Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells Fundamental chemical research into alternative energies is a critical priority due to increasing energy demands, diminishing natural resources and environmental concerns. Solar-to-electric energy conversion is one option currently under investigation by our research group where we utilize transition metal based photochemistry for application in dye sensitized solar cells (DSSCs). DSSCs use photosynthesis as a model in converting solar energy to electricity and provide a promising alternative to current energy sources. Heteroleptic ruthenium dyes utilizing the 4,4’-dicarboxyl-2,2’-bipyridyl (dcbpy) and 8-oxyquinolate (OQN) ligands, e.g. [Ru(dcbpy)2(OQN)]+ , have shown promise for application in DSSCs. We will present recent progress in this project that seeks to enhance the efficiency of [Ru(dcbpy)2(OQN)]+ based solar cells by the addition of light harvesting and electrically conducting functional groups to the 8-oxyquinolate ligand. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 155 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 271 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 51C Jeffrey Boerth, Sivappa Rasapalli (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemistry, UMass Amherst Studies towards the total synthesis of quinazoline alkaloids: Vasicinone, Luotonins and Nigellastrines Peganum Nigellastrum is the source of three important alkaloids, namely: Vasicinone, Luotonin and Nigellastrine. Each shares a common quinazoline core, which is a benzene ring and a pyrimidine ring fused together. This core has been known to have benefits in medicine, where quinazoline has been used in cancer treatment. Intrigued by the common core and common source for these alkaloids, we set out to develop a synthesis route that would provide access to all the three natural products and/or their analogues. We proposed that the bicyclic quinazolinone ketone could be a suitable intermediate and serve as a lynchpin to gain access to a library of tricyclic ketones. The mechanism for this tricyclic reaction is proposed from a key aldol reaction with various aldehydes. Instead of the traditional alkene formation normally produced through the aldol reaction, the heteroatom allows for dehydration and the formation of the desired third ring. Our efforts towards the synthesis of the precursors and the efforts to develop a common synthetic route to the natural product type library will be presented. Once this key reaction has been fully developed, future work entails the total synthesis of the three molecules. 272 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 58C Nick DeGraan-Weber, Richard Vachet (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemistry, UMass Amherst Peptide Modification Rearrangements in CID-MS Purpose: Covalent labeling and mass spectrometry (MS) can be used to study the three-dimensional (3D) structure of proteins. Collision-induced dissociation (CID) is often used in MS to determine labeled sites on proteins, but some labels can transfer from one amino acid site to another during CID, thereby leading to incorrect structural information. In this research, a series of peptides were studied to determine the amino acids and experimental conditions that lead to label rearrangement during CID. Methods: Peptides and proteins were reacted with the labeling reagent diethylpyrocarbonate (DEPC), and the resulting products were analyzed by MS. Two fragmentation methods were implemented: CID and electron-transfer dissociation (ETD). Liquid-chromatography was also used to separate differently labeled peptides; this allowed for the separate analysis of each labeled peptide to facilitate elucidation of the labeling site. Results: Several different peptides were investigated to find the conditions under which label rearrangement is possible. Preliminary results suggest that label rearrangement most commonly occurs on histidine residues and only seems to occur during CID. For example, when angiotensin 1-13 is labeled in CID, evidence reveals that a label at histidine 6 can be transferred to histidine 9. In contrast, no label rearrangement is observed when the peptide is sequenced in ETD. Other peptides and a protein digest were analyzed to find that a small amount of the peptides studied show rearrangements during CID. Conclusions: Rearrangements of the label DEPC are estimated to occur in some of the peptides studied. Our results demonstrate that reliance on CID alone could lead to some inaccurate 3D structural information and alternative methods are required to avoid this inaccuracy. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 156 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 273 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 47A Huong Doan, MEGHNA DILIP (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemistry, Worcester State University “Green” Cleaning Products as a Vehicle towards Green Chemistry in the Undergraduate Laboratory Experiments described in this poster can be adapted for use in an analytical/environmental chemistry laboratory. Green household cleaners are ubiquitous in the market today, and this laboratory gives an opportunity to undergraduates to explore the meaning of “green” while gaining experience in various analytical techniques. Students collected material safety sheets and ranked the green cleaners using the 12 principles of green chemistry as their guide. In order to assess the end of use fate of these cleaners, standard environmental tests such as chemical oxygen demand, pH tests, phosphate tests and ecotoxicity tests were conducted. 274 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 52C Jacquelyn Dorhout, Michael Knapp (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemistry, UMass Amherst Synthesis of Potential Inhibitors of FIH Fe2+ Active Site In the human body, regulation of blood vessel formation, red blood cell production and oxygen homeostastasis, is in part determined by the protein Hypoxia Inducible Factor (HIF). One of the key O2-sensors in humans is Factor Inhibiting HIF (FIH). In the presence of oxygen, FIH hydroxylates HIF-Asn803. This prohibits the genes controlled by HIF from being switched on. Under hypoxic conditions, the Asn residue does not get hydroxylated, and HIF is free to stimulate the genes. Developing compounds that inhibit or stimulate FIH would permit control over blood vessel growth or blood cell creation. The goal of this work is to explore pyranone-based compounds as inhibitors of FIH, as these are moderateaffinity metal chelators. The use of amide groups appended to the pyranone may block FIH from hydroxylating the HIF protein. If inhibitors like this are able to chelate to the Fe2+ center of FIH, it might possibly allow for treatments of diseases related to blood disorders such as sickle-cell anemia, or congenital heart defects. 275 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 59C Thomas Foley, Kevin Kittilstved (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemistry, UMass Amherst Photophysics of Cadmium Telluride Quantum Dots PURPOSE: Photocatalytic bond-making or bond-breaking reactions are gaining increased interest in possible sustainable and carbon-neutral energy sources. The study of the photophysics and photochemistry of these catalysts provide insight into the driving forces behind energy and/or electrons transfer processes. Quantum dots, a class of semiconductors that can perform these reactions, are typically less than 10 nanometers in diameter. The quantum dots that we are interested in studying have delocalized electronic energy levels that result in band characteristics while the physical size restricts the photo-generated exciton to within the dimensions of the particle. In this study we combine the interesting photophysics of quantum dots with spiropyran, an organic chromophore that undergoes a reversible structural change when excited with light. We aim to study energy transfer processes between these two interesting classes of molecules by electronic spectroscopic techniques. METHODS: Cadmium telluride (CdTe) quantum dots are synthesized using a one-pot hydrothermal process. Spectroscopic investigation of the resulting systems uses absorption and luminescence spectroscopy. The two forms of spiropyran molecule (transparent and colored) are accessed using ultraviolet and visible laser light sources. RESULTS: The size of the cadmium telluride quantum dots are controlled by varying the growth time and growth temperature. We observe that growth at 200 degrees C from 35 to 65 minutes corresponds to an increase in particle size from approximately 3.8 to 4.5 nm corresponding with a red-shift in band gap absorption of 530 nm to 590 nm. This allows the selection of a particle size appropriate for the specific spiropyran that will be used in the photophysical experiments. CONCLUSION: Controlling growth conditions permits tuning the cadmium tellurium particle to select for optimal interaction with spiropyran. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 157 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 276 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 53C Christin Harrington, MEGHNA DILIP (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemistry, Worcester State University Eutectic Compositions and Solution Behavior of Ionic Liquids An ionic liquid is a salt containing an anion and cation (usually organic) that has a melting point below 100°C. An understanding of the fundamental solution properties of ionic liquids is required for wider application. We will present our studies on the extent of ion pairing in pure ionic liquid solutions as observed using differential scanning calorimetry. We will also present data for mixtures of common ionic liquids. 277 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 49C Prince A. Sarpong, Elonia Lamontagne, Karsten Theis (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemistry, Westfield State University Shifting Learning Outcomes as our Cell Phones Get Smarter Purpose: More and more cognitive tasks are now completed by computer. We will study how this effects student learning by finding different ways in which problems can be represented. Quantitative problem solving is an important skill for students to learn in order to succeed in math and science. It can be difficult in areas such as General Chemistry, where technical language is mixed with regular English in word problems. In our technologically advanced society, it will be useful for teachers and researchers to have a computerized approach in teaching how to solve chemistry problems. These digital methods may be able to help us identify where students are struggling. Methods: First, we will choose at least ten General Chemistry problems to focus on. Then, we will break down each problem into “keywords”. These keywords will be grouped into categories such as “chemical”, “unit”, “amount”, “physical state”, “action”, etc. Items will be connected into “frames” to associate the terms with one another and provide a visual aid in solving the problem. We will also try different approaches in looking at the problem. We will find the best ways for computers to gain information and see if they are also the best ways for students to learn. Results: We took a few General Chemistry questions (for example, neutralization, dilution, and precipitation problems) and created a visual format in which to organize the given information. We also used a formal text representation also derived from natural language. We found that there is some implicit knowledge that must be incorporated into many of the problems. Conclusion: We anticipate that the process of breaking word problems into keywords in an organized fashion will help students learn how to solve word problems just as it will teach the computer. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 158 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 278 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 56C Joshua Litchman, Min Chen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemistry, UMass Amherst Studies on the translocation of DNA through ClyA by single channel recording In the 1980s, nanobiotechnology offered nanopore sequencing as an answer to the high costs, extensive labor requirements and short read lengths of first and second generation DNA sequencing methodologies. A specific brand of nanopore sequencing, protein nanopore sensing, involves electrophoretically threading a single-molecule analyte, such as DNA, through a biological pore and measuring the conductance fluctuation that results from obstruction of the pore’s lumen by the translocating analyte. From the magnitude and duration of the obstruction event, the size, charge, structure, and surface properties of the analyte can be deduced. Working with a strand of DNA as the analyte, theoretically, each nucleotide would generate a unique conductance fluctuation, thereby turning nanopore sensors into rapid and cheap DNA sequencing instruments. The research presented here examines the cytolytic α-helical toxin pore (ClyA) as a potential nanopore sensor. Electrophoretic analysis of wild type ClyA using single channel recording technique confirms ClyA’s in vitro pore forming capabilities and defines its electrophysiology without the translocating analyte DNA, providing a standard with which to compare ClyA’s electrophysiology with DNA. Experimentation with ClyA and DNA, however, returned either low resolution traces or negative results altogether. In response, two corrective measures were taken to facilitate the translocation of DNA through ClyA: 1) The introduction of manganese (II) into the system to provide DNA with a cationic escort through ClyA and 2) The mutation of select ClyA lumen residues to decrease the repulsion or increase the affinity between ClyA and DNA. The current study features the results to these trials as well. 279 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 11A Sashari Pinnace, Barbara Mello, Jonathan Rochford (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemistry, UMass Boston An Electrochemical Investigation of Non-Innocent Ligand Co(III/II) Systems. Nature often exploits redox-active organic co-factors in controlling overpotentials of redox driven chemical transformations. In fact, metal-based radicals and redox transformations are the cornerstone of most catalytic cycles. Growing in importance are metal complexes with redox addressable co-ligands, i.e. non-innocent ligands that catalyze chemical reactions. The term non-innocent is here used to describe ligands which have significant consequences on the electronic properties of the complex as a whole and undergo redox chemistry themselves. There are many examples of non-innocent ligands of various geometric and electronic structures used in an assortment of environments with metal centers from across the periodic table. The non-innocent nature of a series of 8-oxyquinolate and N-(8’-quinolino)-ptolylcarboxyamide ligands is here presented at the Co(III/II) redox center. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 159 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 280 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 12A Mylinh Nguyen, Wei Zhang (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemistry, UMass Boston Investigation of the Dynamics of Grignard Synthesis Grignard synthesis is an organometallic chemical reaction in which alkyl or aryl-magnesium halides called Grignard reagents act as nucleophiles and attack electrophillic carbon atoms in a carbonyl group to yield a carbon-carbon bond. Many pharmaceutic-ally related precursors such as the analgesic agent tramadol and the antifungal agent ravuconazole are synthesized via Grignard synthesis with high yields. Nevertheless, in-depth study of the reaction dynamics remains uninvestigated. In this project, the reaction profiles of various Grignard reactions are studied. Solvent screening for both the formation of the Grignard complex and its reaction with appropriate ketones are performed to determine a safer, greener and most effective solvent system for the two steps reaction. In addition, the reactivity of different alkyl halides in the formation of the Grignard complex, an integral part in determining the success of a Grignard synthesis, is also being studied. Last but not least, the interactions between the Grignard complex with different electrophiles are being investigated. Once the reaction dynamics and optimized condition of the Grignard synthesis are determined, the reaction can be carried out in industrial large scale with fewer hazards and high product yield. 281 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 50C Hoa Ly, Luz Pacheco, Karsten Theis (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemistry, Westfield State University Improving a Method to Measure Water Activity Purpose: Water activity is a measure of the effective concentration of water, for instance when it acts as a solvent. It is relevant whenever water takes part in a reaction (such as food spoiling) or when physical properties of water are essential for a process, such as in protein crystallization, where changes of water activity cause changes in water vapor pressure. One method to measure water activity of a solution is to compare its vapor pressure to that of a standard solution after reaching equilibrium. Our hypothesis is that the reproducibility of a previously developed method could be improved by better temperature control and by protecting solutions from evaporation while their composition is determined gravimetrically. Methods: We will test two methods of minimizing systematic errors from temperature (1) vials are suspended in a thermostated water bath and (2) vials are kept in an insultated container. Also, we will design control experiments showing whether temperature gradients and evaporation during mass determination result in systematic errors. Results: We already established controls demonstrating that without temperature control, the expected equilibrium is not reached. We anticipate that careful control experiments will show whether an improved apparatus for measuring vapor pressures will minimize systematic errors so that they are insignificant. Conclusion: Having the ability to determine the water activity for arbitrary solutions will help to understand protein crystallization outcomes, and help develop crystallization methods that rely on water activity differences of different solutions. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 160 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 282 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 55C Colleen Stewart, Donald Boerth (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemistry, UMass Dartmouth Quantification of adducts as a result of pesticide exposure In the study of toxic agents used in agriculture, greater attention has been paid to the mutagenic qualities on animals from pesticides. Less attention has been paid to the effect on plants, even though crop plants have been shown to be susceptible to stress from pesticides manifesting as poor development of leaves, stems, roots, and fruit. For crop plants, poor development results in low yield overall, a detriment to the industry on which the food supply depends. Previous studies, including 32P postlabeling analyses, show evidence of direct and indirect formations of DNA adducts from pesticide use. These adducts can serve as biomarkers of peroxidative stress and genotoxic stress from direct binding of pesticide molecules to DNA. Part of the difficulty with this research is the lack of speedy and efficient methods of quantification of DNA adducts. 32P postlabeling is a sensitive but also laborious and time-consuming method for detecting DNA adducts. We are attempting to analyze plant DNA by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) which should provide a faster, more efficient method of not only quantifying the DNA adducts but also identifying their structure. In order to develop such a method, plants were exposed during growth to pesticides. DNA was extracted from sample plant specimens and enzymatically digested to mononucleosides. The digestion was purified using solid phase extraction and analyzed by LC-MS. The identity and quantity of adducts resultant from this exposure was compared to the previous 32P postlabeling analyses of modified nucleosides isolated from DNA of treated crop plants. 283 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 05A Angela Tanner, Wei Zhang (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemistry, UMass Boston Synthesis and Application of Fluorous-Tagged Quinine Organocatalyst for Asymmetric Fluorination In the organic chemistry research lab that I work in, the main focus is to make new molecules or to create new, environmentally friendly ways to make existing molecules. My project deals with fluorous technology, which is a part of “green” chemistry because it allows molecules to be recycled after use in a reaction, rather than thrown in the waste container. Fluorous technology also allows for a more reactive molecule, which leads to a better product yield. My senior thesis makes use of an organic catalyst, which speeds up the reaction, with fluorine molecules attached. The fluorine molecules allow the catalyst to be recycled and reused for other reactions. The fluorous-tagged catalyst will be used in many different reactions to see whether the results are improved due to its use. Many of the molecules made will be useful for pharmaceutical purposes, and the results will hopefully be published in a scientific journal by the end of next semester. 284 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 57C Jennifer Wilcox, Sankaran Thayumanavan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemistry, UMass Amherst Surface-Functionalized Nanogels with Drug Delivery Applications Polymer nanoparticles show promise in the field of targeted drug delivery systems. A drug deliver vehicle should stably encapsulate and deliver a guest molecule to a target tissue. We have developed a random copolymer with crosslinkable moieties that are used to encapsulate a guest molecule, like a hydrophobic dye or drug. These polymer nanogels are redox sensitive and will disassemble in the presence of glutathione, a chemical found in tumor tissue. However, biological systems are extremely complex and the active targeting mechanisms of nanogels need to be perfected. We propose a surface-functionalized nanogel with an enzymatically-cleaved coating. Once the coating is removed by target enzymes, the surface functionalities will bind to receptors over-expressed on tumor cells allowing for internalization and subsequent degradation of the nanogel. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) studies to analyze the stability of the nanogels and cell internalization and viability studies will be performed. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 161 Abstracts • Poster Sessions CIVIL ENGINEERING 285 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 80A Obesebea Aye-Addo, Susan McPherson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English Literature, Quinsigamond Community College The Structure of the Brain Foundation construction, framework, installation of windows and doors, roofing, siding, rough electrical and plumbing, insulation, drywall, trim, and painting. These are the basic steps to the construction of any structure. We know plenty about buildings from our two story homes to the 102-story Empire State Building. But what do we really know about the brain? This project compares the structure of the Empire State Building to the structure of our brains. I will try to answer questions like “what is the foundation construction of our brain?” Also, where can we find the windows and doors in our brain? Furthermore, we have improved the quality of our buildings over the years. What improvements have been done on using the brain to its best ability? What happens when an old person gets alzheimer’s? Does that mean one of the frames came out after 80 years? What happened to make it fall? And finally, what steps we can take from childhood to prevent diseases like alzheimer’s will be explored. 286 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 81A Kelly Batista, Kelly Pennell (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Civil Engineering, UMass Dartmouth Effects of Ultraviolet Radiation and Silver as Sequential Disinfectants for Inactivation of Bacillus subtilis Spores Ultraviolet (UV) radiation is a common disinfection technique used to inactivate microorganisms. The energy from the radiation penetrates the organisms’ cell walls and reacts with nucleic acids. At sufficient UV doses, the organism loses its ability to reproduce and is no longer viable. This study involves the inactivation of Bacillus subtilis spores via dissolved silver and ultraviolet radiation. Experiments were conducted as sequential disinfection applications. The order in which the disinfectant was applied was investigated to quantify if there was a complementary effect of exposing a spore solution to UV radiation followed by dissolved silver and vice versa. These results were compared to previous experiments to determine if preirradiation has a significant effect on the subsequent inactivation by dissolved silver. 287 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 82A Paul M Venini, William May, Nima Rahbar (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Civil Engineering, UMass Dartmouth Conch Shell Reinforced Concrete For this research project we hypothesized that sea shells etched in acid would provide better adhesion to cement due to the change in surface roughness. We etched the shells in acid for a various amount of time and then make concrete samples using the shells. The goal was to understand if the shells that were etched provided better adhesion than the shells that were not etched. We tested the concrete samples in an unconfined compression test. Preliminary results show some increase in adhesion with the acid etched shells. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 162 Abstracts • Poster Sessions CLASSICAL LANGUAGE & LITERATURE 288 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 06A Christopher Chan, Teresa Ramsby (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Classical Language & Literature, UMass Amherst Shield of Aeneas as a Showcase of Rome Virgil’s Aeneid is one of the greatest artistic works of Roman literature, but its import also derives from its role in framing the accomplishments of Augustus, and, as I suggest, even shaping the new principate. The ekphrasis of the shield of Aeneas in book VIII highlights major moments in Roman history, a unified interpretation of which has been elusive. This paper, along with a visual poster and video presentation, aims to read the shield as a celebration of Rome and a challenge to Augustus to live up to their city’s virtues. Using scholarly literature accessed through the University of Massachusetts Amherst library database, Latin texts with commentary, and literature in translation this paper examines how Virgil uses the poetic, social, and political context to make pointed statements about Augustus and his role as Rome’s new leader. Virgil’s choice of including key scenes of Roman history and legend while omitting others allows for in-depth analysis of his reasoning. Other, relevant Roman sources yield further nuanced interpretations of Virgil’s selected imagery. Readings into poetic traditions lend support to Virgil’s use of a shield ekphrasis to convey his message. The presentation of the shield by Venus to Aeneas in the epic can be seen as parallel to the presentation of the epic itself by Virgil to Augustus. Through the strategic placing and interpretation of historic scenes, Virgil reminds Augustus of the immense responsibility he undertakes and of the Roman virtues he must now embody in the hope of ensuring peace and prosperity under the principate. COMMONWEALTH HONORS COLLEGE 289 Concourse 11:35-12:20 Board 49C Dylan Mowry, Jason Almeida, Tom Grady (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Commonwealth Honors College, Bristol Community College Post-Modern Studies, Beards and You This experiment in postmodernism involves positioning two “texts” that compete against each other. In one, a student’s classroom presentation posits the notion that beards are an exhausted form. While the presenter delivers results of survey and other findings, another presenter, unbeknownst to the audience, projects a live stream of bloglike deconstruction of the former project. The purpose of presenting concurrently is to explore postmodern theories of “everything is a text” and “flattening of hierarchies.” In its first trial, the audience’s reactions confirmed the hypothesis that much of the onlookers would overlook the less conventional meta-text of the presentation and end up focusing on the primary text which resembled the conventional “class presentation.” 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 163 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 290 Concourse 11:35-12:20 Board 51C Stephanie Keogh, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College Modernism Unplugged The fear of the many writers was that the dominance of the city would become so great that society and nature would no longer live symbiotically. This study evaluated if the fears of sociologist Georg Simmel, and authors such as T.S. Elliot, Edgar Allan Poe and Virginia Woolf have been actualized. Does modern society in fact view nature as an enemy? By careful reading of contemporary authors, Edwidge Danticat and Peter Mattheissen, the project evaluated the posture of modern society toward nature. Using specific examples from these texts, as well as documentaries, specifically Shackelton’s Incredible Voyage, and studies on the increased trend of ‘unplugged’ – technology free, nature based vacationing. The project concludes that the great modernist writers were correct, modernity has turned against nature. 291 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 41A Ethan Young, Sheila Mammen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Commonwealth Honors College, UMass Amherst The Earned Income Tax Credit and Its Impact on Families and Local Communities Abstract The Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) program has been credited with lifting millions of low-income working families out of poverty and for serving as an incentive for continued employment among adults. Additionally, the EITC serves as a boon to local economies through the multiplier effect. In spite of the many benefits of the EITC, many eligible families, including those from Massachusetts, fail to participate in this program. Differences in the economic well-being between eligible recipient and eligible non-recipient families from Massachusetts were examined using two databases of rural, low-income families collected ten years apart. EITC recipient-families were found to experience significantly less material hardship and financial distress when compared to eligible families who did not receive the EITC. As much as $1.40 of economic activity was stimulated for every $1.00 of EITC receipt spent in these rural Massachusetts communities; during fiscal year 2010, 2,337 rural families in these same towns claimed the EITC for a total of $3,777,474. When eligible individuals fail to file for the EITC, they are effectively foregoing substantial benefits that could otherwise help their families and communities. Ways to increase participation, including the introduction of more effective strategies to disseminate information about the program, will be addressed. Full participation in this tax credit may ensure that working families thrive financially and that their rural communities flourish with the added consumer expenditures. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 164 Abstracts • Poster Sessions COMMUNICATION 292 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 45A Julie Barrows, Robert Carr (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Communication, Fitchburg State University Gallery Design and Execution PURPOSE: This presentation explores the creative process of building an art exhibit around an original body of work. The objective was to have a fully functional public art exhibit and opening reception, accompanied by professional caliber publicity materials. METHOD: Research included visits to other art exhibits, attending receptions and analysis of artist statements to identify common practices and compare styles. The lighting and design of gallery spaces, atmosphere at the reception (resulting from music, refreshments and dress code), publicity materials, artists’ behavior and presentation were analyzed in relation to the body of work. RESULTS: Most galleries exhibited work in one horizontal line around the room, but the collage-style arrangement appeared more organic and appropriate for this project. The materials observed ranged from hastily cut printer paper to glossy postcards, e-mail invitations to oversized posters. The quality of presentation and materials related to the artist’s confidence in their work and dedication as a professional artist. CONCLUSIONS: The exhibit created for this project included forty landscapes and still lifes in a wide variety of media. The title, “Engaging Moments with Ordinary Sights,” came from analyzing the familiar subject matter and charming style of each piece in the collection. Once the location and dates were set, professional materials such as postcard invitations, gallery cards with an artist statement, posters and a press release were created in response to the theme. The last month was spent framing and designing the layout of the physical exhibit. An opening reception was also planned, with refreshments and entertainment, and was advertised in the surrounding communities. COMMUNICATION DISORDERS 293 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 13A Danielle Falcon, Mary Andrianopoulos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Communication Disorders, UMass Amherst Acoustic Perceptual and Speech Characteristics of Children with High Functioning Autism The purpose of this investigation is to study children with High Functioning Autism (HFA) and their use of language, speech and phonology, specifically concentrating on their acoustic-perceptual speech characteristics. This project analyzed the data from an empirical study conducted by Andrianopoulos et al. (2001) in the Department of Communications Disorders at the University of Massachusetts- Amherst. This study examined the acoustic features of speech production in children with HFA performing the following tasks: a) a spontaneous speech task using a visual support (Frog Story picture book stimulus); b) a connected speech task while describing or discussing a topic of interest; c) syllabic repetitions to assess speech rate, sequencing, prosody, and pitch; and segments of Happy Birthday song produced during role playing a birthday party. The children with HFA in this study were compared to neuro-typically developing children that were matched on the basis of age, gender and formal measures of receptive language ability. The outcome of this study will help to identify the overt and subtle speech acoustic differences that are unique to children with HFA compared to their typically developing peers. The study will contribute to science in that it will identify the unique speech production patterns and prosodic features of speech, the melodic component of speech, among a population of children with HFA. The data were subjected to formal statistical analyses to determine differences and/or similarities of children with HFA compared to their TD counterpart’s speech. This research will shed insight on the theory that children with HFA “sound” different. We hypothesize that children with HFA speak with high pitch, monotone and immature sounding speech. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 165 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 294 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 14A Stephanie Tompkins, Sarah Poissant (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Communication Disorders, UMass Amherst Auditory Perceptual Learning of Vocoded and Frequency Transposed Speech PURPOSE: For individuals with severe-to-profound hearing loss who receive limited benefit from traditional hearing aids, a cochlear implant can offer vastly improved hearing, yet comes with the risk of total deafness in the implanted ear. The present investigation examines listeners’ abilities to make use of a novel signal processing algorithm that has the potential to improve speech understanding for these listeners without surgery. METHODS: Nine subjects with normal hearing were presented with simulations of speech signals (nonsense syllable, words, sentences) in which the high-frequencies were lowered to frequencies where a listener with hearing loss would be expected to have useable hearing. In addition, these lowered frequencies were also subjected to the same processing that occurs in a cochlear implant. Subjects listened to the signals through headphones in a sound treated booth and entered their responses into a laptop computer during both pre- and post-testing sessions. Between these two sessions were 8 days of training to the novel signals. RESULTS: Data collection is ongoing. For subjects run to date, monosyllabic word perception has increased from 45% to 64% over the course of the eight session training program. Additional data analysis of sentence and nonsense syllable stimuli is on going. CONCLUSION: Direct training improves the perception of frequency-lowered, vocoded speech by normal hearing listeners under conditions of simulated hearing loss. Use of such signal processing by those with severe-to-profound high frequency hearing loss may one day be feasible and may greatly improve speech understanding ability for these listeners without the need for invasive surgery. COMMUNITY OR PUBLIC SERVICE 295 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 37A Solomon Adnew, Meghan Callaghan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Community or Public Service, Bunker Hill Community College Experiences of a Volunteer In going back to school as an adult, I knew I wanted to become involved with the local community as a student volunteer. In being a student at BHCC I came across a program called Serve Boston. Serve Boston is for students, like me, who want to commit 300 hours of service over the year to a community based organization. I have chosen to spend my time with Little Brothers as well as the Boston Living Center. Little Brothers Friends of the Elderly is committed to reliving isolation and loneliness among impoverished elders. Their philosophy is “flowers before bread”, that express the concept of meeting basic human needs in the spirit of friendship and celebration. My volunteer experience in this organization has been very nice. The simple task of talking with elders goes a long way to in improving their health, as well as allowing me to feel connected in the community. I meet with my elder on a weekly basis. We talk and play cards. I make sure he has enough foods and knows when his next medical appointments are. At the Boston Living Center, I work in the kitchen, where we provide free meals to people living with HIV/AIDS. I help to prepare and serve food for the members. I enjoy the outgoing and welcoming nature of the Boston Living Center. The Boston Living Center also provides a holistic support services for anyone living with HIV/AIDs. In addition to working in the kitchen, I’ve also helped out in the computer lab, helping members search online for jobs and housing. My greatest lesson learned in being a volunteer involved having an open mind and being able to go with the flow when things occur. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 166 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 296 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 36A Piseth Cheav, Meghan Callaghan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Community or Public Service, Bunker Hill Community College People Who Make a Difference “People Making a Difference” (PMD) is a non-profit organization that provides community services through the Boston area. Since I have become a member of Serve Boston at BHCC, I have had a chance to work for PMD. PMD service opportunities include, providing friendship to elders, participating in annual aid walks, building educational Lego DNA kits for grade school students, clean-up activities, and etc. Because the organization provides various types of community service events, I have met many new people, learned more about the present needs and concerns facing society, and have been able to develop professional communication skills through helping to lead these volunteer events. My experiences so far have directly connected with my personal goals of improving my communication skills and becoming a stronger leader. As a non-native English speaker, volunteering is a great way for to me get to the know community, practice speaking and communicating in English, and adapt with US cultures and customs. More importantly, the purpose of volunteering is also to help the community. From one project to another, we can see the appreciation from people who receive PMD’s services. For example, we see smiles upon the elders’ faces when we cook and talk with them during the Holiday season. We hear the work “thanks” and feel appreciated from homeless people as we serve them foods. We feel and see the difference that we make in the society and it is an amazing feeling! Having this duty gives me an opportunity to develop my skills as well as appreciate what I am doing every day. It is a very important experience that people should try. Getting involved as a volunteer is a way to provide love, care, education, and food to people when they need. 297 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 38A Yuanhua Chen, Meghan Callaghan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Community or Public Service, Bunker Hill Community College Improving Myself- While Helping Others From October 2011, I have been in a program called Serve Boston at Bunker Hill Community College. Every member chooses a charity to volunteer with in the Boston area. I chose to volunteer my time at the Asian American Civic Association, which is located in Chinatown. Currently, I volunteer twice a week, going in on Mondays and Thursdays. When I am there, I help my supervisor in administrative tasks, such as collecting student application forms and giving out assessment tests, which gauges their English speaking and writing levels. I have found that in explaining to students how to fill out the different forms; my public speaking is improved. On Thursdays, I help students in a Level 1 class. My responsibility is to strengthen what they learned in class. In tutoring them, we go over their homework and I answer any remaining questions they might have. This is very significant to me, because while I’m helping others improve their English; I am also working on my own English development. My confidence strengthens when communicating with others. When I started in October, I was shy and quite with the students, but now I am more active and feel good about communicating. It is very important that people find ways to improve themselves, as well as participate in the community. Through volunteering, I help others when they are in need; I meet new friends; I develop my ability to deal with problems; and I learn how to accomplish administrative tasks and so on. Everyone should try to make a difference in the community. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 167 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 298 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 34A Beryl Fomundam, Sharon Schaff (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Community or Public Service, Bunker Hill Community College Creating a Blue Print for Sustainable Development In Cameroon-West Africa Youth Action Africa (YAA) is located in Boston and it has as its mission to alleviate poverty through computer literacy and entrepreneurship development in Cameroon. The organization serves as a platform for youths to acquire knowledge through experiential learning. I have been a service intern for the AmeriCorps student leaders in service at Bunker Hill Community College for the Fall and Spring semesters. I have identified and acquired computer donations, tested and refurbished over 200 used computers, and deployed them to project centers in Cameroon. I have learned to maintain good relationships with donors, refurbish computers, try new things with efficiency, and most importantly, identify the power of information technology as a driving force for sustainable economic and social development initiatives. This has also improved my technical, communication, and interpersonal skills to work in a professional environment. YAA is successful in bridging resources from the rest of the world into Cameroon through its collegiate collaborations in the US. YAA prides itself on its worldwide network and bottom-up approach to reducing the poverty crisis in Cameroon. Volunteering is important as it demonstrates commitment to the community and willingness to work for the betterment of others. To date, YAA has provided computer literacy and entrepreneurship development courses to over 450 participants. 300 of them have gotten jobs, 78 have started small sustainable businesses, 41 have gone back to school to complete their diplomas and 31 are still on the job market and also looking to start some sort of a small business. 299 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 35A Ashley McCarter, Meghan Callaghan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Community or Public Service, Bunker Hill Community College My Service with Dorchester Bay Youth Force Through my service in the SERVE Boston program at Bunker Hill Community College, I have had the opportunity to work with a lovely organization called Dorchester Bay Youth Force. Dorchester Bay Youth Force is a group which works to empower youth to become agents of social change within their communities through community organizing. Dorchester Bay Youth Force also leads trainings and workshops to create awareness in the community on the impact that the Massachusetts state budget has on youth jobs. As a volunteer, I take part in outreach with various schools and counselors to get more youth from around the city of Boston involved in the Dorchester Bay Youth Force. My present experiences and those that will continue to develop as I move along in my time at Dorchester Bay Youth Force are directing and guiding my educational, personal, and professional goals. As a volunteer, I see not only how issues such as youth unemployment have an impact on the Boston community, but also how it affects the greater society as a whole. More importantly, I see significance in giving youth a voice and empowering them to become leaders. Empowering their voices changes their attitudes and future actions, which will have an impact on the wider community. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 168 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 300 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 32A Viet Phan, Meghan Callaghan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Community or Public Service, Bunker Hill Community College My Initial Experiences as a Volunteer in America I am an international student and have been living in Boston for a few months now. In coming to the US, I wanted to explore many things in my community; such as its unique culture and people’s lifestyles. When I heard about the Serve Boston program at BHCC, I thought volunteering would be a great way for me to do all the things that I mentioned above. In addition, I can also practice my English outside of being a student. I decided to volunteer at the Boston Rescue Mission, which is a non-profit organization that provides services to improving the lives of homeless people. I volunteer in the kitchen where we provide free meals to the homeless community in Boston. Working there gives me a chance to see and meet a lot of different people and gain a whole picture of what life is like for them. At first, I was shy and did not enjoy talking with people. I felt ashamed and awful when speaking English because some people did not understand what I was saying. I felt stressed when other volunteers or staff would ask me to do something, but I did know what they were talking about, because I was unfamiliar with where things were in the kitchen. But eventually, I became more outgoing and felt more comfortable and confident. More importantly, I am building strong relationships with Boston Rescue Mission staff. I can talk with them about my everyday experiences and now they also share with me. I now realize that I misunderstood the true meaning of volunteering. Volunteering is no longer about me and what I do for myself or how I get better by volunteering, but rather what happens for the community through the actions of people coming together. 301 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 03A Andrew Alcombright Alex Streisand, Krysta Livingstone, Sarah Fregeau, Cassandra Santos, Ken Magarian (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Community or Public Service, Westfield State University Westfield State University Circle K The Westfield State University Circle K Club was founded in 1970 by the Kiwanis Club of Westfield. The main purpose of the club is service, fellowship, and leadership. The Westfield Circle K Club has been actively involved in creating a positive relationship with the Westfield community for over forty years by developing student run projects as well as supporting the local Kiwanis Club. Some of the club’s recent projects include the first-ever City Spelling Bee, Hoot Day, Jail and Bail, and Breakfast with Santa. These projects as well as others will be explained in greater detail exhibiting how the projects benefit both the community and the students involved. Organizing students on a university campus and demonstrating how a successful Circle K Club functions will also be demonstrated in this presentation. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 169 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 302 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 39A Lei Shen, Sharon Schaff (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Community or Public Service, Bunker Hill Community College Everyone Can Make a Difference! “Charles River Conservancy” (CRC) focuses on the environmental protection of Charles River Parklands from Boston Harbor to the Watertown Dam. I’ve interned at CRC 10 hours per week since last fall. I assist in organizing volunteer events. These events are important ways to get more people involved and help clean-up the Charles River Parkland. It’s particularly interesting to work with high school students. They come in thinking they may not want to do this kind of work. But when they dig in, and plant bulbs, they actually start to have fun with each other and realize that next year flowers will come out beautifully. Through volunteering, I become more involved in the local community, and I know more people. Also, I developed my professionalism. The office work sounds uncreative, but I learned to have the right attitude and how important it is to the organization. As a non-profit organization, all projects need funding support. I am working on data related to building relationships between CRC and other companies. Everyone in the office shows passion for the work. Under their leadership, I’ve learned how to work well with a team and also how to work independently. Also, I’ve learned the rich history of the Charles River and current environmental threats. It has now become an important place in the community for residents to enjoy. Without volunteers, CRC would not be able to achieve their goal of revitalizing the Parklands. That’s also the reason why everybody can make a difference. 303 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 33A Yasmin Vasquez, Sharon Schaff (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Community or Public Service, Bunker Hill Community College Volunteering at the East Boston Neighborhood Health Center Community Service is about volunteering and helping the community to grow. My internship since November 11, 2011 has been at East Boston Neighborhood Health Center. Volunteering at the health field has presented a great opportunity for me to help others and experience new thing in the real world. This also has helped me shaped my future guiding me in what I want as a career in my life. I interned in the interpreter services, where I don’t really have any interaction with patients. I dispatch, answer phones, and check the upcoming appointments. Doing all these kind of work has showed me capabilities I didn’t think I’d ever have. I can understand the importance of being part of the interpreter services. It is a way of offer communication between the doctors and patients, that make patients feel comfortable to express their selves without feeling uncomfortable. The environment in the clinic is great. People are very comprehensive and appreciate the help I offer. At the same time, this is also building up my career. I plan to continue and finish my 300 serving hours. It is not only an opportunity for me but for whoever out there that is willing to volunteer in a Boston community with a feeling of passion. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 170 Abstracts • Poster Sessions COMPUTER SCIENCE 304 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 35A Patrick Stickney, John Fallon, Georges Grinstein (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Computer Science, UMass Lowell Collaboration in Weave Weave is an open source visualization platform developed by UMass Lowell that is intended for use by the public. It is being used by a large number of neighborhoods, cities, states and government agencies, including for example Boston, Chicago, Connecticut, Rhode Island and South Florida (see http://metrobostondatacommon.org/). One of the issues tackled in the continuing development of Weave is collaboration. Collaboration in Weave can consist of anywhere from two to hundreds of users simultaneously visualizing and sharing data. Some of the concerns of collaboration within Weave include keeping some data private that a user may not wish to share and the coding involved in allowing multiple users to connect to each other and deal with changes being made on each user’s instance of Weave. A way to deal with having common data being shared with all collaborators and to hide personal data is to have private and public workspaces. This could involve dividing the screen into different parts, or allowing a way to mark what should be made public and private. Weave is written mainly in Actionscript which runs using Adobe Flash. A collaboration server is needed to foster communication between users over the internet. This server listens for collaboration requests and manages the messages going between each user’s instance of Weave. The XIFF protocol is used for sending and receiving messages within Weave. Video and voice chat are also supported in Weave with the use of a media server to handle live streaming data. Rtmplite, which is an open source project written in Python, is used to handle the streaming of video and voice chat. Collaboration in Weave will allow users to interact with each other simultaneously in real time to develop visualizations and share data. 305 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 40A Ryan Imposimato, Richard Kiernan, Andrea Farnworth, Karen Druffel (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Management, Framingham State University Sustainability through Social Media Nowadays, major organizations need to ensure to their clients that their brand is continuing to grow and evolve with society, while at the same time, proving to be environmentally responsible. The main goal of an organization is to generate a profit, which can sometimes prove to be challenging, while trying to accomplish sustainability. Consumers continue to recognize how important sustainability is and the effects it has on society. In order to remain competitive, organizations must use this to their advantage and promote sustainability. Throughout this study, we will be using qualitative and quantitative analysis to record and code messages from Microsoft, Oracle, and SAP through their social media outlets to report sustainability efforts. We will be looking at these organizations’ use of Twitter, Facebook, and their very own websites blog to see how they report sustainability through social media. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 171 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 306 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 38A Chris Garry, John Kingston (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Linguistics, UMass Amherst An Algorithm for Tracking Vertical Larynx Movement PURPOSE: In the past, it has been technically difficult to measure larynx movement at fast enough rates to relate its movement and height to other articulations that a speaker is producing simultaneously. As a result, the role of vertical larynx movement in the production of speech has not been studied thoroughly. The purpose of this project is to develop a means of identifying and tracking the larynx in order to further understand the relationship between vertical larynx movement and speech. METHODS: We combine the use of a high-speed camera and a video acquisition and processing algorithm developed in MATLAB to identify the larynx and track its movement. The algorithm uses edge detection and the convolution integral to detect the larynx profile and track its displacement from its resting height in millimeters. This displacement data is synchronized with the video and speech recordings by aligning each to a distinguishable audio event produce by a metronome. RESULTS: Once the video is synchronized with this displacement data and the speech recordings, we investigate how larynx movement contributes to the control of the fundamental frequency of the voice and the volume of the oral cavity. 307 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 41A Sandaradura Chamara Silva, Christopher Gosselin, Karen Druffel (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Management, Framingham State University Company Use of Social Media to Convey Sustainability Our study looks at three companies and the way they communicate their sustainability effort to their customers and shareholders. Companies use sustainability in terms of achieving the triple bottom line – the environment, the economy, and social responsibility. Specifically, it will look to find the answer to the following question: How do these three companies use social media to communicate their sustainability concepts and efforts to the customers. A mixed method study will be used to complete this research. The three media that will be used to follow up with the messages sent by these companies are Facebook, Twitter, and company blogs. Messages from these companies will be gathered and coded in order to answer the initial research question. 308 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 37A Todd Holland, Susan McPherson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English Literature, Quinsigamond Community College The Singularity This presentation will examine the topic of the convergence between man and machine. I will be discussing the evolution of technology and how it will be integrated into the human body. I will breach the subjects of nanotechnologies, artificial intelligence, neuroprosthetics, and the implications for the future of man. The project will share a combination of interviews with scholars and authors, and traditional sources of reference. Interviews will include Dr. Germinal Isern (Clark University), Dr. Dalila Megherbi (Umass Lowell), and several other authors, educators, and innovators in their respective fields. Medicine and Healthcare are moving at the speed of light, and technology is paving the way. The application of this technology is diverse from surgical robotics to neural implants, and the impact on the longevity of mankind hangs in the balance. The topic of potential immortality will also be discussed, and how this will change the dynamics of population growth. I will discuss the potential for computers to be self-aware through the use of the five senses, and whether it is possible for them to hold the conscious mind of a human being. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 172 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 309 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 43A Bryan R Greene, Lawrence Gitau, Chad D Spencer, Christopher Letendre, Karen Druffel (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Management, Framingham State University Driving Sustainability Through Social Media In the past, corporations focused primarily on profitability. In addition to profitability, the focus has recently evolved to encompass other sustainability concerns, such as environmental and social issues. With the emergence of social media as a powerful communication tool, corporations have begun to advance communication with their consumers about sustainability through social media sites such as Facebook, Twitter, and Google+. Our mixed method study describes how four automotive companies use social media to inform their consumers of their sustainability efforts. We will examine four automotive companies, Ford, Chevy, Toyota, and Kia. The message posts from these four automotive companies were analyzed on random dates from February 2 through March 29. The messages are categorized as pertaining to environmental sustainability, social capital, social responsibility, or as not pertaining to either. Mixed methods research was used to categorize these messages in their social media utilization, with Inter-rater reliability then administered to compare the messages, ensuring a collaborative conclusion was found. 310 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 42A Matthew J Remillard, Joseph Montillo, Karen Druffel (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Management, Framingham State University Management Issues in Information Technology Attaining sustainability has become an important part of the business world for large companies. Informing the companies’ customers and client base about their sustainability effort has become significant in addition to reaching their sustainability goals. Businesses have moved towards the use of social media as an easy and effective way to create this contact with their customers about their efforts. Our group will observe how three companies (SAP, Oracle, and Microsoft) use their social media to display their efforts of sustainability. We will be comparing these three companies using a mix of qualitative and quantitative studies. The three companies will be observed over 14 fixed randomized dates gathering data on every communication they post and categorizing messages based on content on three methods of social media, Facebook, Twitter, and their company’s blog. 311 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 44A Dan Groose, Thomas Whitehead, Robert Piantedosi, Karen Druffel (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Management, Framingham State University Corporate Sustainability Initiatives This study is to explore four major car manufacturers’ use of social media platforms as conduits to their customers to communicate their sustainability principles. “Sustainability is the ability to maintain balance in a system.” (Jacobs, R., Chase, R (2011). Operations and Supply Chain Management (13th Edition). MacGraw Hill-companies. p17) Companies do this through social, economic and environmental means to create a business development strategy. Using platforms such as Twitter, Facebook and Google+ we examine the messages provided by these companies over fourteen randomly selected days over the course of two months. Using a mixed method of qualitative and quantitative research, each message is categorized and coded then used to delineate the companies’ use of social media to portray their sustainability methods. The coding is validated using inter-rater reliability. Using these results, the companies’ utilization of social media to communicate sustainability is described. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 173 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 312 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 45A Evan Shelhamer, Erik Learned-Miller (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Computer Science, UMass Amherst Information-theoretic Unsupervised Visual Segmentation This undergraduate thesis work presents and evaluates a novel algorithm for visual segmentation. Consider a child drawing in scenes from a coloring book. The world is such a book without any of the lines. This is the visual segmentation problem: to identify task-relevant parts of the world with their locations from visual information. This work approaches the problem from the perspective of compression, framing the task as the search for an efficient code for the visual content of a collection of images. Compression reduces description length by generating a code that represents the statistical structure of the data, which in this case is the visual arrangement of a scene. This code is learned in an unsupervised fashion; no prior visual information or explicit training is given. The segmentation process can be repeatedly applied to produce a hierarchical decomposition of the visual appearance of an object. The code generated represents the image collection as location-assigned segment labels followed by segment-dependent color encodings; compression is achieved by capturing statistical similarities of segment locations and segment appearance across images. The proposed algorithm derives segmentations by gradient descent on the expected encoding length followed by thresholding segment labels. Segmentations of the MIT pedestrians and LFW faces data sets are demonstrated. Unsupervised, computationally efficient segmentation algorithms have broad applications as a basic step in visual processing for recognition, classification, and other tasks. 313 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 36A Faisal Yousuf, Sharon Schaff (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Community or Public Service, Bunker Hill Community College My Journey with RIM My 300 hours of my service at Refugee Immigration Ministry (RIM) was a great experience. At my 300 hours of service, I met many people from different regions such as Haiti, Iraq, Somalia and Algeria. During my service hours, I was teaching many of my students about the basics of computer use. My goals for teaching computer skills were to give a great experience with communication and problem-solving skills. For my class, I first taught them how one system connects to many devices and how each device operates. I also taught what we can do with the internet which is changing the shape of the world. As a result, my students now have knowledge about what one can do with a computer. Right now my student has built a tool to find jobs, develop communication skills by email, and improve their language skills by using many resources for improving their English. Overall, I had a great experience working with RIM because RIM provided an opportunity to teach real people real skills. The people I was working with were very friendly and helpful. DANCE 314 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 41A Kimberly Mann, Susan McPherson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English Literature, Quinsigamond Community College Neuroscience of Dance This presentation will briefly talk about dance and the process involved in learning dance. The presentation will provide in depth information on how the brain functions when learning dance. Studies which have been done at different universities on the brains of dancers and non-dancers will also be shown. These studies will provide information on which part or parts of the brain are functioning when learning a dance or dance moves. The studies also compare the brains of dancers and non-dancers, and show how the brains function differently when learning dance. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 174 Abstracts • Poster Sessions ECONOMICS 315 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 62C Laura Molyneaux, Michael Ash (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Economics, UMass Amherst The Environmental Consequences of the Chilean Salmon Farming Industry and Policy Recommendations to Alleviate The purpose of this thesis was to investigate the environmental impacts of the Atlantic Salmon Farming industry in Chile. The Chilean salmon farming industry has sparked concern, both among local farmers and international environmentalists, over the introduction of non-native species, the introduction of disease to native wildlife, and damage caused to the ocean floor and surrounding habitats. These potential damages have caused further, external damages to tourism, and the producers and consumers of farmed salmon. However, there have also been winners in this industry: the farmers and consumers of Chilean salmon, suppliers of salmon farms and workers in other industries in Chile. Another aim was to use this information to formulate policy options to deal with the environmental impact of the industry, and to address the merits and weaknesses of the proposed policy solutions. EDUCATION 316 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 01A Nicole Gilford, Jennifer Berg (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Mathematics & Statistics, Fitchburg State University Teaching Math to the Masses One of the most despised subject types in school from elementary levels to continuing education is that of Mathematics. This project is to find out why this subject is so abhorred by students and what could make the learning of math easier on both the student and the teacher. All types of learning and teaching methods will be discussed in relation to mathematics. Classes encompassing math of almost all uppers levels of schooling (high school and university) will be observed. Also, the teachers will be interviewed to find a way to implement an effective way of teaching mathematics in a classroom. The interviews and observations along with the research on learning and teaching will be used to create several lesson plans and a “teaching manual” on creative and innovative ways of teaching math to the contentment of the student masses. 317 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 32A Kylie Nelson, Marijoan Bull (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Geography, Westfield State University The Geography of MCAS Scores The Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System (MCAS) is an annual test implemented in public school systems in 1993 as a way to reform education. While it was put into place to evaluate students and schools, much controversy remains about the credibility of the tests’ results. For this project I am using spatial analysis to hypothesize about correlation between the MCAS scores of communities and other attributes. The data for my research is published by the Massachusetts Department of Education, which maintains statistics related to the MCAS that are available to the public. I intend to teach in Massachusetts’s public schools and preparing students for the MCAS has become a significant element of the job, affecting how teachers teach. I predict that the results will show that towns with higher incomes will also have higher MCAS scores. Results of this project may show the significance of how household income affects student performance on the MCAS and may indicate that the state government should allocate more educational funds to lower-income communities. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 175 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 318 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 02A Nicholas Raby, David Johnson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Philosophy, Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts Identity Recognition, Integration, and Respect for Difference: Toward a Unified Conception of Multilingual Multicultural Education There is a disconnect between the literature on multicultural education, a pedagogical paradigm that took form during the American social movements of the 1960s, and multilingual education, a practice which can be traced back to the training of ancient scribes. While multicultural theories touch on the implications of foreign or secondary language education, they fail to integrate the deserved amount of multilingual pedagogical theory into their analyses. Where individual institutions and teachers do employ such multilingual theories, they use them to structure the teaching of English to American citizens while drastically overlooking the potential to educate native English speakers in other languages. Conversely, multilingual theorists and educators limit their research and programs by failing to integrate into their pedagogical domain implications of the greater multicultural movement, both in practice (i.e., class content and curriculum structure) and theory (i.e., publications). In addition to the main argument in favor of synthesizing the two pedagogical theories, I present a defense of multicultural education against its three main misconceptions (Banks, 1999) through examples from a range of philosophers throughout history such as Heraclitus, Immanuel Kant, and Robert Proctor. By orienting the integration of the two theories around discussions of critical thinking and metalinguistic awareness as both cognitive capacities and practical pedagogical devices, I lay out the basic foundations for a unified conception of an overarching multilingual multicultural pedagogical paradigm. ENGLISH LITERATURE 319 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 25A Dominica Cinelli-Graham, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College “So then Moby-Dick said to the Lord...” Many environmental questions are posed in Melville’s Moby-Dick, a story of a man’s obsession with a whale that has eaten one of his limbs. If the whale is doing what comes naturally to it, what is the issue? Why is Ahab so furious with Moby-Dick for what is in the whale’s nature? Is the novel a metaphor for man’s problem with nature? The novel allows the reader to take a close look at the mindset of man: Why is man so greatly intrigued by that which can cause his demise? Why is man so defiant towards nature? Why is man so defiant towards his own nature? The project answers these questions using critical analysis of Moby-Dick, the Holy Bible, a survey of literary criticism, apocalyptic movies, personal interviews, and a philosophical debate between Moby-Dick and God. The project concludes that a greater understanding of human nature and the natural world can be found in this fine novel. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 176 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 320 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 22A Rebecca Montano, Jan Lindholm (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Salem State University Mental Illness in the Bible: King Saul This research project is a literary analysis of the character of King Saul from the book of I Samuel in the Bible. While some biblical scholars claim that Saul is possessed by an evil spirit, I suggest that he is, in fact, mentally ill. To support my claim, I apply psychological theories to explain Saul’s erratic behavior in the biblical narrative and reveal how Saul’s behavior parallels the behavior of individuals who suffer from Delusional or Bipolar disorders. In addition, I analyze the ways in which Saul’s psychological disorders impact his relationships with other major characters in the narrative, particularly David, God, and the prophet Samuel. By applying these psychological theories, I provide readers with important lenses through which to view the events and relationships portrayed in the narrative, allowing readers to observe the relationship between Saul and God as both unique and tragic. I conclude by indicating how applying psychological theories to Saul’s behavior complicates the way in which we look at Saul as a character and the way we come to understand the biblical text. 321 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 23A Branden Pacheco, Anupama Arora (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English Literature, UMass Dartmouth Is that all there is? (mis)Representations of Britishness in Andrea Levy’s Small Island This paper explores the role of Britishness in Andrea Levy’s “Small Island.” By focussing on two characters, Hortense and Queenie, I trace the construction of Britishness in both the Jamaican intellectual class and in the English working class environments. While it is apparent that Hortense strives to embody the British persona both in Jamaica and in London, and that Queenie struggles to reconcile the value of the British lifestyle, examination of the temporal environment further illustrates their anxiety about how to be British. This quality of Britishness is ultimately abstract and elusive -expressed by mannerisms and ways of dress and decorating, practices most identifiable with the Imperial aristocracy. Levy’s characters are not simply learning to adjust their lifestyles in the face of a closing colonial era, but also among the rubble of a crumbling class system. As the war shatters pristine stained glass, fells grand architecture and unites colonist and subject in the fight against Nazism, the grand image of Imperial aristocracy is cracked and questioned. I content that Levy latently illustrates that these characters come to recognize the fabricated quality of Britishness, and they abandon this endeavor as they realize the futility of striving to be something whose qualities are a set of vague and disparate practices exalted by a class that strives to replicate itself and relegate the non-aristocratic as Other. Citing Levy’s text and engaging relevant articles and theoretical work, I contend that Britishness is a product of economy, one that serves to replicate a dysmorphic Imperial aristocratic self-image. It is this tension, this inherited impulse to identify the mythical ‘British,’ that motivates anxiety in Levy’s characters. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 177 Abstracts • Poster Sessions ENTOMOLOGY 322 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 42A Elizabeth Sussky, Joseph Elkinton (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Plant, Soil, and Insect Sciences, UMass Amherst Density-dependent Survival: Hemlock Woolly Adelgid Life Stages We infested sixty-four hemlock trees with varying densities of HWA sistens ovisacs in a forest in MA and documented subsequent HWA density, fecundity, and the amount of new growth on experimental trees. Our findings are consistent with similar experiments and show significant patterns of density-dependent survival in both the spring and winter generations. Half of the trees were previously infested hemlocks and half newly infested hemlocks. Half of the trees in each group were 1 m tall saplings and the other half were branches of mature trees. Here, we show that survival in each life stage has little to do with the previous infestation by HWA, but was significantly related to the density of HWA on each tree. ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES 323 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 88A Stéphanie Arcusa, Raymond Bradley (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Geological Science, UMass Amherst Long-term Changes in the Climate of Amherst, 1836-2011 Climate change is a pressing issue for today’s society. Long-term records provide a perspective on the climatic changes that we can expect in the future under increased levels of atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations. In most locations, instrumental records of climate variables are relatively short, but the town of Amherst has one of the longest records, dating back to 1836. While mean annual temperatures over Northeast U.S. have been increasing over the instrumental record and the last few decades, observations show insignificant change over winter since 1988, hypothesized to be a result of atmospheric changes linked to losses of Arctic sea ice. This study examines long-term changes in the climate of Amherst over the last 175 years through analysis of graphs and tables. We examine surface air temperature and precipitation trends from the Amherst records at seasonal and monthly scales. Average daily temperatures and precipitation amounts based on the entire record are also reviewed to assess whether recent extremes have been unusual or not. Our end product is a web page linked to the New England Climate website of the UMass Climate System Research Center along with an accompanying discussion of Amherst’s climate. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 178 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 324 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 58C Stephanie Pelletier, Emily Asp, Michael Vorwerk (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Environmental Studies, Westfield State University Effects of Extreme Temperature and Elevation on the Hemlock Wooly Adelgid Distribution Purpose: This research was designed to address the prevalent issue of invasive species in terrestrial environments. We examine the presence of Hemlock Wooly Adelgid (Adelges tsugae) on Eastern Hemlock trees (tsuga canadensis) across two transects in western Massachusetts. We hypothesize that at higher elevations with colder average temperatures, the prevalence of Hemlock Wooly Adelgid is less in comparison to warmer temperatures and lower elevations. Methods: We observed these effects across various sites located off Route 2 and Route 9 in western Massachusetts. We chose these transects because they primarily run east to west with varying elevations. At each site, we visually examine the prevalence of Hemlock Wooly Adelgid on Eastern Hemlock trees in the area. Extreme low temperature data will be collected from online sources for the sites visited, allowing us to test if there is a correlation between extreme low temperatures and the presence of this invasive. We also will test the correlation between elevation and the presence of Hemlock Wooly Adelgid. Results: Previous studies have shown a correlation between elevation and average low temperatures with the presence of Hemlock Wooly Adelgid. Extreme minimum temperatures for each site will be computed in Excel using minimum temperatures from species introduction to present. These results will then be plotted to calculate correlation between our independent and dependent variables. Conclusions: This is an ongoing study and data are still being collected. Conclusions from this study will provide insight into the spread of this growing invasive. 325 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 55C Kasey Bascetta, Michael Vorwerk (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Environmental Studies, Westfield State University Escalators Escalading Energy Consumption in Shopping Malls PURPOSE: Shopping malls always give the option of taking a staircase as a way of traveling from floor to floor; why do people find it necessary to have and to use escalators? This research project focuses on the total energy consumption escalators use each year in shopping malls; specifically, I will use the Holyoke Mall in Holyoke, Massachusetts, as a case study and extrapolate my results to the country as a whole. Keeping in mind that elevators are available for handicapped people, it seems to be that escalators serve no real purpose. Based on energy consumption data, I hypothesize that greenhouse gas emission could be limited with the eradication of escalators in shopping malls nation wide. METHODS: For this study, observations, tallies and comparisons are made between the numbers of people taking the escalator to the number of people using the available staircases. By discussing the negative contributions that escalators have on global warming and potential savings that eliminating escalators would have on the environment, I will try to answer the question of what differences the removal of escalators in shopping malls could have on the environment. RESULTS: The results from the data collected by observing people’s modes of transportation at the Holyoke Mall are factored into the energy that is required to run one single escalator annually. CONCLUSION: With the data collected I can support my hypothesis that eliminating escalators in shopping malls will reduce green house gas emissions nationally. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 179 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 326 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 87A Rachel Calderara, Curt Griffin (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Environmental Studies, UMass Amherst Abundance, distribution and habitat use of White Rhinoceros at Welgevonden Private Game Reserve, South Africa Increasingly, private game reserves are playing a critical role in rhino conservation in southern Africa where rhinos are managed for ecotourism, trophy hunting and game auction. White rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simmum) population increased from 51 to 79 rhinos between 1998 and 2011on the Welgevonden Private Game Reserve in South Africa. Information on the habitats used by rhinos is needed to develop more effective management programs for rhinos on the reserve. I determined the abundance and distribution of rhinos using data from aerial surveys conducted annually from 1998-2011. Kernel density maps were developed using ArcMap 10 for four 3-4 year intervals to assess how rhino distribution on the reserve may have changed over time. I also determined habitat use versus availability for rhinos in 2010 and 2011 using chi-square analyses to identify those habitats (n=8) and vegetation (n=20) types most frequently used by rhinos. Between 2006-08, kernel density maps indicate that rhino density was consistently the highest in the central and southern portions of the reserve with a third area of high density in the northwest portion of the reserve. Since 2009, rhinos concentrated into fewer areas in the central and southern portions of the reserve. In 2010-11, rhinos most frequently used the old lands, plateau, and hill slope habitats on the reserve, whereas riparian, plains, and crest-summit habitats were used the least. During these years, the “Southern grasslands” and “Mixed Burkea africana/ Trachypogon spicatus/ Schizachirium sanguineum woodland Diplorynchus condyloc” vegetation types were most frequently most, whereas six of the 20 vegetation types were not used at all. Active management of habitats and vegetation types most frequently used by rhinos are important for expanding the rhino population on the reserve. 327 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 89A Amy Clark, David Christensen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, Westfield State University Sustainable Development and Green Technology in Suburban Homes It is no secret that our climate is being altered by human activity. As Americans continue to see evidence of environmental changes, the concept of sustainability is becoming increasingly popular. People are looking for ways to reduce their ecological footprint, and one way to do this is through sustainable development. In 1993, the U. S. Green Building Council was founded to help establish green building techniques and raise environmental awareness. The USGBC created the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design scale to assist developers with constructing, operating and implementing green design building options. Wright Builders Inc. is a local company that uses green building techniques like LEED and Energy Star to create efficient, sustainable development within our region. They recently finished constructing the Village Hill Homes in Northampton, MA, and I will compare utility performance from those homes to outdated homes to determine whether sustainable building techniques have an effect on energy efficiency. This study is significant because it will help to endorse environmentally friendly building design and raise awareness on the importance of energy efficiency. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 180 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 328 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 57C Patrick Desmond, David Christensen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, Westfield State University Salmon Restoration in the Connecticut River Watershed – Out Migration and Adult Returns Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) are anadromous, meaning they return from the ocean to spawn in their natal freshwater rivers and streams. Since the 1970’s an interagency and interstate effort to restore Atlantic salmon to the Connecticut River Watershed (CRW) has been in effect. Restoration efforts have focused on the release of hatchery-produced salmon parr or smolts into CRW rivers and brooks. The purpose of this study is to evaluate juvenile escapement versus adult return in relationship to restoration efforts in the CRW. Specifically, this work will focus on the effect and efficiency of using fry or smolts to influence the return rates of salmon to their native habitats. This work will also explore other factors influencing salmon survival such as freshwater ecosystem alteration and ocean productivity. 329 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 93A Edward Dimitri, Carsten Braun (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Geography, Westfield State University Sustainability of Rail Transit Systems in Massachusetts Since the late 19th century, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts has utilized rail transit systems to facilitate the transportation of people and goods throughout the Greater Boston area and beyond. Mounting deficits of the Massachusetts Bay Transit Authority coupled with an ever-pressing need for sustainable development highlight the need for affordable, efficient, and environmentally-friendly transportation. The focus of my study is the Metro Boston area, the Pioneer Valley – Interstate 91 corridor, and the Mass Pike – Interstate 90 corridor connecting Springfield, Worcester, and Boston. I will use scholarly journals and books, appropriate news articles, and detailed geographic information system generated maps to illustrate the historical precedents, existing infrastructures, and future options for new and expanded high-speed rail, light rail, heavy rail, and commuter rail networks. The results of my research will reveal operation and maintenance costs, legal and zoning issues, safety concerns, energy efficiency, and the overall feasibility of rail transit expansion in the early 21st century. My recommendations will take the aforementioned factors into account and compare realistic options for extending commuter rail routes, constructing high-speed rail lines, and securing the necessary private, state, and federal funding for these projects. 330 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 86A Kathleen Doherty, Mark Hamin (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Landscape Architecture, UMass Amherst Yard By Yard: Putting the Power of Permaculture into the Hands of Ordinary People The word ‘permaculture,’ a compound of the words ‘permanent’ and ‘agriculture,’ encompasses a system of sustainable design whose goal is to meet human needs while increasing the health of the local-regional ecosystem. The purpose of this project is to demonstrate permaculture principles as applied to a backyard garden design and to provide resources to make permaculture more accessible to homeowners interested in implementing a similar system. The initial basis for this project was a collaborative garden design project for a shared backyard in Northampton, MA, in the summer of 2011. Major deliverables for this project include: an expansion of the original design in the form of detailed planting plans and a 100-year vision of the future of the site; a detailed analysis of specific limitations and resources to permaculture design in Northampton, MA; a brochure guiding homeowners through the design process and using the site in Northampton as a case study; and a presentation to residents and city officials in Northampton demonstrating the potential accessibility of permaculture design. The immediate goal of this project is to make permaculture more accessible to homeowners in Northampton, MA, but the long-term goal is to demonstrate limitations and opportunities for permaculture design throughout the United States. The homeowner’s brochure and planning report will serve as templates for residents and officials in other cities interested in implementing their own permaculture guidelines. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 181 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 331 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 60C Leticia DoPrado, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College The representation of Nature in Robinson Crusoe, Moby Dick and Solaris The novels Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe, Moby Dick by Herman Melville, and Solaris by Stanislaw Lem each represent nature in a unique manner. The purpose of this project is to understand how these books use different approaches to teach us about nature. This project examines the novels and critical literature about these novels, and compares and contrasts the different approaches to nature as ally or enemy. When seen together, these perspectives teach what nature is and what it is capable of. The different treatements of nature in these three novels reveals that we have much to learn about how to treat it environment, maybe even if is it extraterrestrial. 332 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 54C Karl Jensen, Michael Vorwerk (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Environmental Studies, Westfield State University Using Remote Sensing to Analyze the Rate of Pond Succession: A Study of Fosters Pond, Andover, MA Using orthographic imagery from 1995, 2001, 2005, and 2008, we are exploring the rate of pond succession occurring at Fosters Pond, Andover, MA. Based on preliminary examination, there appears to be significant growth of vegetative species occurring, and therefore a net loss of open water. For the purposes of this study, open waters will be defined as an area having a reflectance value that appears to be water. Orthographic images from MassGIS will be analyzed and manipulated using ArcGIS. Each image will be closely examined and the perimeter and island structures will be delineated. The area of open water is then determined and compared on a temporal scale. The rate of succession is measured as the acres of open waters lost between 1995 and 2008. The loss of open waters will be displayed using multiple map images. The results of this study will provide insight into the rate that succession is occurring at Foster’s Pond, and determine the net loss of open waters. 333 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 50C Rebecca L Talamini, Michael Jocelyn, Michael Vorwerk (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Environmental Studies, Westfield State University Correlation of Japanese Knotweed Distribution with Stream Order and High Flood Plains PURPOSE: Japanese Knotweed (Fallopia japonica) is a perennial plant native to Asia that, due to its ability to thrive in varying soil types and locations, is considered an invasive species in Massachusetts. It spreads rapidly through human interaction and is especially prevalent near aquatic ecosystems which allow its rhizomes to float and colonize new sites. It forms dense stands and often crowds out all other vegetation, creating large, unstable areas along river banks. Because large portions of the Westfield River are National Wild and Scenic River systems, it is important to monitor and prevent future invasions of the species on the nearly pristine West Branch. METHODS: Using GIS maps, we identify all headwaters of the streams, crossings of roads, and the Strahler Stream Order of those stream/West Branch Watershed river segments. Using these maps, we also determine the flood risk along these stream crossings. In the field we go to each crossing and identify the presence or absence of knotweed. RESULTS: Using ArcGIS we map out where knotweed has colonized and attempt to correlate the presence of it in areas with a higher stream order and at a higher risk of flooding. CONCLUSION: This method will allow for a base measurement of knotweed presence along the river, which can be used in future efforts to identify new colonies and control their spread in areas that are deemed most at risk. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 182 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 334 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 56C Timothy Judd, Michael Vorwerk (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Environmental Studies, Westfield State University An Environmental Analysis of the Greenway Project in Southampton, Ma PURPOSE: This comprehensive analysis of the environmental effects of the Southampton, MA, Greenway Project studies the potential effects on the surrounding wetlands, wildlife, drinking water supply, and on their primary beneficiary – the people. METHODS: The effects of rail-to-trail conversion on local watershed areas, soils, and wildlife habitats are explained, as will be the Project’s effects on the neighborhoods and the town. Soil samples taken from the rail bed tested for the presence of arsenic and geological site surveys provide this analysis with the essential data to make a sound analysis. Additionally, it reviews case studies and comparisons to other analyses made by experts in the field of conservation give this Greenway study the necessary depth to be formally used. RESULTS: The construction of the Southampton Greenway, connecting neighboring cities of Easthampton and Northampton with Westfield, will strengthen environmentalism and therefore spur new conservation efforts. The project will also describe the problems left behind by the railroad such as arsenic in the soil and the undisposed railroad ties left in its path. This study shows how not only the health of the town will improve but also the individual health of those who utilize this great natural resource. CONCLUSION: Southampton is the priority Greenway Initiative in the area, acting as the potential connection between greenway programs in Westfield and Southwick to the south, and Northampton, Easthampton, and Hadley to the north. A Greenway committee has been established by the Town Select Board to cooperate with the Planning Board and the Conservation Commission. This Environmental Analysis of the rail-to-trail conversion is essential to the successful coordination among these committees and the town’s residents. 335 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 91A Sarah LaFlamme, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College People as Parasites Climate change, depletion of natural resources, and the extinction of species are just a few examples of how humans have impacted the Earth. This project compares humans’ relationship with the Earth to the relationship of parasites have with humans. Through documentary films, scholarly articles, and internet research this project examines the stages of parasitic progression in filarial worm, whipworm, and tapeworm and the similar outcomes with humans behavior toward the planet. By illuminating the similarities humans have with parasites, this project helps raise awareness of the impact humans have on Earth. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 183 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 336 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 53C Mackenzie Wright, Robert Larose, Michael Vorwerk (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Environmental Studies, Westfield State University Loss of Carbon Sequestration due to the October 2011 Snow Storm Purpose: The goal of our research is to calculate the percentage of forest damage after the 2011 October snow storm. Using this information we will calculate the loss of carbon sequestration due to the loss of trees and the resulting impact in regards to global warming. Methods: Using transects and study plots, we will calculate the percentage of overall damage caused by the October storm. We do this by counting the number of downed trees and damaged branches and calculating an overall percentage of forest damage. Based on our field data collection, we will calculate the loss of carbon sequestration. Results: Counting the number of downed and damaged trees in our study plots will give us a percentage of damage in a specified area, which we can extrapolate to the total damaged area. We will be able to find the potentially unfixed carbon dioxide in the atmosphere by calculating the percentage of forest damage and correlating that percentage to the amount of carbon dioxide which was unabsorbed, according to the sequestration levels of trees. This will give us the data necessary to find out how much influence the loss of trees in Massachusetts during the 2011 October snowstorm has on global warming. Conclusion: This study will enable us to conclude how much the 2011 October snowstorm has influenced the levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. The techniques we develop can be used on other small-medium scale disturbance events. 337 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 90A Robert Larose, Michael Vorwerk (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Environmental Studies, Westfield State University Analysis of Methane Released through Cow Manure Purpose: The goal of my research is to calculate the amount of methane released from cow manure. Using this information, I will calculate the percentage of methane in the atmosphere that is due to cow manure from the United States. Methods: Using a portable gas detector, I will record how much methane is released from a single cow’s waste until minimal amounts of methane are detected. I will also quantify the amount of manure a cow releases throughout its lifetime by averaging how frequently a cow defecates in two hours. I will collect country-wide statistics on cattle farms and apply my data in order to derive the amount of methane released from cows. I will also use several equations to determine how much methane is released in association with a single serving of beef, as well as how much methane release is associated with one glass of milk. Results: With methane data collected from the field, I will present the quantity of methane released from one cow through its entire lifespan. I will also present the quantity of methane released from all the cows in the United States, taking into consideration an average life span. I can directly correlate global warming to the amount of methane released from cows across the entire United States. This correlation will show a percentage of methane in the atmosphere due to cattle farms across the United States. Conclusion: This study will show how meat and dairy industries are responsible for large amounts of methane in the atmosphere. The techniques developed in this study can be applied to other studies on livestock and animal bi-product industries and their contributions to greenhouse gases. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 184 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 338 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 95A Jeremy McKinstry, Michael Vorwerk (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Environmental Studies, Westfield State University A Comparison of American and Chinese College Student Views on the Environment PURPOSE: China is currently one of the rising industrial powerhouses. This rise in industry has resulted in a lot of negative environmental consequences. Having spent the last year in Beijing through the study abroad program at Westfield State University, I am interested in future generations’ environmental views and the problems this industrialization will create. METHODS: Through a survey distributed to American and Chinese college students via social media, I will analyze current college student views on many of today’s leading environmental issues and ethics. I will analyze these responses and compare the views between college students of the two countries. RESULTS: I am currently in the process of carrying out this research. I hypothesize that the environmental awareness of students in China will not be as high as that of students in America based upon my observations of student life from a year spent at a Chinese University. CONCLUSION: The world will continue to become more populated and industrialized. This can have negative consequences on the environment if we are not careful. Considering that China is currently one of the fastest developing and most populated countries, it is very important to gain insight into future generations’ environmental views in order to help create a cleaner and greener future. 339 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 94A Erin Murray, Michael Vorwerk (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Environmental Studies, Westfield State University Species Richness as a Function of Latitude Purpose: Recently we had the good fortune to participate in a short course in Costa Rica. We were amazed by the diversity; though the land is only .03% of the world it harbors 5% of the world’s species. Here in Massachusetts the diversity is much less. We hypothesize that the major factor in this is latitude since as the latitude gets higher; species would need to have specific adaptations to more extreme climates. Methods: The study conducted explores biodiversity in relation to latitudinal gradients. We define a latitude sector as equal to 15° increments, which begin at 0° and end at 90° north and south. Through research, we collect data for each country’s biodiversity that is in each latitude sector. The diversity of species that we observed in Costa Rica includes mammals, birds, orchids, frogs and trees; which serve as our species of interest. In our research we document spatial patterns in diversity and explore their implications. Data will be organized in a table by the individual species and the number of species that were found in different countries that cross the latitudinal line. Results: We expect to see a decrease in biodiversity as the latitudes increase towards the North and South Poles. Since the study is still on-going, the results are not yet available. Conclusion: Terrestrial species are more diverse near the equator. As latitudes increase away from the equator, the species diversity will be less diverse due to different climate conditions and having to adapt to different types of weather. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 185 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 340 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 59C Ryan Noyes, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College Ensuring Fresh Water Resource Stability in the 21st Century The sustainability of all natural resources has been threatened by the exponential global population growth in the last century. Among the many resources under threat is fresh water, a commodity that has been compromised by many long-term global factors that are directly and indirectly the result of population growth. At the core of this problem is a fundamentally flawed global attitude towards the acquisition and use of fresh water. This project examines the attitudes and policies that have led to this resource compromise and the current efforts to prevent fresh water depletion. This project also examines the effects of these policies, including the direct and indirect consequences of regional fresh water depletion, the global geo-political reaction to a peak resource crisis, and the probability of future armed conflict. This assessment is the product of historical data and statistical analysis that results in a suggestion for a global strategy that can potentially mitigate the threats associated with fresh water depletion through the 21st century. 341 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 49C Nicole C Giles, Samantha L Wysocki, Sarah Pierce, Michael Vorwerk (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Environmental Studies, Westfield State University A Comparison of Increasing Meat Consumption and Environmental Problems Purpose: With globalization of trade and world economies, many developing countries are achieving higher standards of living. In particular, China’s economy has grown exponentially in the past 30 years due to increased global interactions. One result of a growing economy is that people are able to afford more meat in their diets. In the past, China’s population has relied on a primarily vegetarian diet augmented with a small amount of animal protein. To feed the one billion people a diet with more meat, there is a need for the increased use of industrialized feed lots across the globe. These feedlots have resultant worldwide environmental problems that must be considered. Methods: In this research, we focus on two environmental problems associated with this change: Carbon Dioxide emissions released from meat production and the deforestation of land for more cattle lots. This study explores the increase in environmental problems which correspond with the increase in the standard of living in China, while using the United States as a benchmark. We compare the environmental impacts of beef production and consumption between the United States and China, based on existing data and projections which we will calculate. Results: Since the study is still ongoing, the results are not yet available. Conclusion: Since the results are not yet available, a conclusion has yet to be reached. 342 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 61C Jordan Piper, Michael Vorwerk (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Environmental Studies, Westfield State University An Analysis of the Environmental Impacts Due to Dunkin Donuts Coffee in New England Rob Downey and Jordan Piper, Westfield State University, Spring 2012 Purpose: Dunkin Donuts, a well-established fast food business, has a heavy impact on the economy and the environment of New England. Using Dunkin Donuts as a model, we will analyze how food is distributed throughout the northeast region, specifically observing coffee, which is defined in this study as a medium-sized hot coffee with cream and sugar. Methods: We will quantify for one cup of coffee a) how many miles it has traveled, b) how much gasoline/ diesel has been used for that one cup of coffee, and c) how much carbon dioxide has been emitted by its transportation. Analysis Plan: We will then use these results to assess the efficiency of the current system, how it impacts New England’s environment, and how it could be improved upon. We will also consider the impacts that Dunkin Donut stores have on run-off pollution, solid waste, and habitat fragmentation. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 186 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 343 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 51C Sarah Shearer, Michael Vorwerk (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Environmental Studies, Westfield State University The Effect of Lunar Cycles on the Foraging Behavior and Movement of Sea Turtles ABSTRACT PURPOSE: Many species, particularly predators, react to the fullness of the moon by decreasing their movement and activity levels. This study was conducted to determine whether a certain species of sea turtle, being predatory as well as dependent on tidal cycles, also decreases in activity when the moon approaches peak fullness. METHODS: The methods used include the analysis of publicly available sea turtle conservation data, including the recent movements and tracking locations of specific sea turtles that have been marked and released in the Persian Gulf region. The data that have been collected span multiple lunar cycles to reflect any consistency or inconsistency in daily sea turtle behavior and activity levels. RESULTS: Calculating and comparing the average distances of travel for the thirteen tracked Hawks-bill turtles on each recorded day, in relation to the concurrent lunar phase and the lunar effect on tide intensity, reveals any potential correlation in the data that may indicate that the moon has an effect on (and whether it decreases) the activity level of sea turtles. CONCLUSION: This is an ongoing study. 344 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 96A Gabriel Siegel, David Christensen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, Westfield State University Mapping the Bathymetry of Russell Pond, Russell Ma Bathymetric maps provide valuable insight into the health and protection of aquatic environments. Surface area, fetch, z max, mean depth, volume, and shoreline development can be derived from a bathymetric map. I have created a bathymetric map of Russell Pond, in Russell, MA. The map was created to update an existing map made in 1978. My goal was to use modern technology to create a detailed map of the pond’s floor. Any differences in current and previous bathymetries can be attributed to one of the following: advancement of technology used, increase in procedural detail, or natural changes in sediment dynamics. A perimeter and 23 linear transects were projected over an aerial image of the pond. This map was used as a guide route. Using a Marcum LX-i digital sonar device and Trimble GeoXT GPS unit, depth measurements were recorded roughly every 20 feet along the predicted route from a kayak between October 22nd and November 9th, 2011. A series of new bathymetric maps was created using multiple interpolation methods based on 1,710 recorded depth measurements collected during this time. Each map varies slightly from the next due to differences in interpolation methods, but overall they are very similar. There are minor differences between these newlycreated maps and the original map produced in 1978. The updated bathymetric maps provide a detailed tool in the management of Russell Pond. 345 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 85A Ashley Sullivan, Carol Soules (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Commonwealth Honors College, UMass Amherst Environmental Health Environmental health is the study of the effects of the environment on individual health. Everyday the human body is exposed to many chemicals. Harmful chemicals are found in cleaning products, pesticides, deodorizers, soaps, paints and naturally occurring substances in homes. When people breathe in the chemicals from the air the chemicals become absorbed into the blood stream. The body’s detoxification system is unable to get rid of man-made toxins. Overtime the toxins build up in the body and reeks havoc on the body’s systems. Researchers indicate that asthma, fatigue, headaches, depression, anxiety, hyperactivity, allergies, diabetes, and obesity are commonly provoked by environmental factors. Environmental illness is a growing concern, but limiting the amount of toxic exposure can prevent sickness. My senior capstone project focuses on important environmental factors in Holyoke, Massachusetts. I created newsletters and pamphlets containing information about environmental hazards and healthy alternatives. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 187 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 346 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 92A Gertian Xhafa, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College Whaling Laws: Past and Present Laws protecting whales are fairly recent acts of legislation. Existing laws from the International Whaling Commission (IWC) are meant to control whaling practices worldwide. Under present laws “scientific research” is allowed and because of this loophole the law frequently fails to protect whales. This project examines ways to change the current whaling laws to provide better protections for whales. Through examination of outcomes from previous whaling laws as well as laws protecting all species, the project examines the effectiveness of present and past policies. The project identifies problems with current laws and offers conclusions. The results will be submitted to International Whaling Commission. FORESTRY 347 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 48A Derick Tah, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College The Effects of Deforestation on the Environment and Economy of Cameroon Cameroon obtains a large percentage of its national revenue from timber exportation, and is rapidly consuming its natural forest reserve. Current logging activities pose severe problems both to the environment and a threat to the economy of the nation in years to come. Evaluating the impact of deforestation on the ecosystem as well as on country’s economy in recent years is critical in planning and projecting further economic growth with necessary attention to safeguarding the environment. By way of research from scholarly articles, newspapers, periodicasl and the internet, the procedures and practices carried out in timber exploitation in Cameroon were examined. The results revealed widespread practices of excessive logging. Although the central government has stipulated measures to regulate this activity, their implementation has been timid and ineffective. The lucrative nature of forest exploitation has led to widespread corruption and has lead to an uncontrolled number of licenses or permits issued. The project concluded that redistribution of national income justly together with adequate education of the population is the key to reversing the current situation. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 188 Abstracts • Poster Sessions GEOGRAPHY 348 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 72C Kaeleigh Chartrand, Jennifer DiGrazia (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University Global Warming and Tornadoes: Are the Effects Spinning out of Control? Tornadoes are a fascinating yet devastating natural disaster with a strange distribution pattern occurring lately in conjunction with the effects of global warming. While there is some speculation on the part of meteorologists such as Ken Cook of Alabama , Harold Brooks of Oklahoma, Kevin Trenberth of the national center for Atmospheric Research, and NASA research scientist Tony Del Genio that as a result of global warming, tornado distribution has shifted and increased across the U.S, that concern has not been studied extensively. While such speculation could be valid, we need more evidence to support a causal link between global warming and tornado distribution as argued by Greg Carbin of NOAA, and activist Bjorn Lomborg. By reviewing data from national weather websites such as www.nesec.org, www. noaa.gov, and www.ncdc.noaa.gov, I have found that several sources believe there could be a causal link between the change in tornado distribution in the United States and global warming. Accepting the connection between global warming and the change in distribution of tornados is imperative, as the changing patterns of tornadoes will affect those who are currently unprepared. Tornadoes used to occur mainly in “Tornado Alley”, the area comprised of South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, northern Texas, and eastern Colorado. As of late, a higher number of tornadoes have occurred outside “Tornado Alley” and have been seen in northern New England states such as Massachusetts, New York, and New Hampshire. My research is aimed at United Stated citizens because global warming is a prominent issue to which we contribute to greatly, and the effects of tornadoes could change our country drastically. Tornadoes are destructive, and those recently affected do not know how to prepare for such a disaster. With the effects of global warming, the future of tornadoes could potentially be deadly and we need to keep informed as U.S. citizens. 349 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 71C Ryan Dunn, Annaliese Bischoff (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Landscape Architecture, UMass Amherst No One Leaves: how to save your home after foreclosure The housing foreclosure crisis that surfaced around 2007 has devastated urban communities across the United States in predominantly low-income and minority neighborhoods. As the balloon payments of predatory loans spiked and homeowners began defaulting, housing prices dropped significantly, leaving many homeowners ‘underwater’ with a mortgage much higher than the value of the house. What is left today is a national imperative for urban planners and policy makers. City Life/Vida Urbana(CL/VU), a community organization in Boston that has been fighting displacement since the 70s, saw the housing crisis as an opportunity to organize. In response to the relative failure of loan modification and foreclosure prevention programs, CL/VU began a post-foreclosure eviction defense campaign that is keeping people in their homes. Their strategy, called “The Sword and the Shield”, unites public protest with pro-bono legal defense. From weekly meetings to frequent actions, CL/VU has pioneered a grassroots movement of resistance in Boston that has since spread to other communities in Massachusetts such as Springfield and Worcester. Research for this project was done through active participation in the movement, reviewing news articles, and conducting informal interviews with community organizers. By ‘collectivizing’ individual cases, and making concrete demands such as ‘principal reduction’ and ‘no no fault evictions’, CL/VU’s post-foreclosure strategy has kept hundreds of families in their homes. Ultimately, CL/VU’s grassroots model of post-foreclosure defense moves people to reclaim public space as a platform for letting their voice be heard in an effort to defend the private space we call home. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 189 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 350 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 73C Nathan Wojcik, Marijoan Bull (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Geography, Westfield State University Campus Tree Plan for Westfield State University: The environmental, social, and economic benefits of trees. Purpose: The growth and expansion of Westfield State University (WSU) poses a threat to the trees on campus. The benefits of the trees lost due to the building of MOD Hall and the new Residential Dormitory is overlooked. A Campus Tree Plan will determine the value of existing trees and balance the economic growth with environmental concerns by defining a replacement plan for trees lost to removal or decay. Methods: Inventory and catalog the locations, size, condition, and benefits of every existing tree on the campus of WSU. GPS locations were mapped using ARCmap to display the placement of the current trees. The Diameters at Breast Height (DBH) were measured to determine size. The conditions were graded using a predetermined scale system and using I-tree software, the benefits were calculated for each tree. GEOLOGICAL SCIENCE 351 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 75C Devon Colcord, David Finkelstein (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Geological Science, UMass Amherst A Multi-proxy Investigation of Holocene Environmental Variability in Central New York PURPOSE: Discerning details of past climate variability is essential to our understanding of the present, as well as future changes. This study presents a multi-proxy approach to investigate environmental variability in central New York throughout the Holocene. METHODS: A ~13m sediment core was taken from Watkins Glenn Marsh and analyzed for total nitrogen(%TN), total organic carbon(%TOC), C/N ratios, and stable isotopic δ13C of bulk organic matter. RESULTS: 14C dates show the 13.5m core spans the past ~10,000yrs. For much of the core, there is little variability (~0.1) in %TOC with the exception of an interval of drastic increase (~0.4%TOC) from 5.8-5.5m followed by an interval of significant decrease (~0.4%TOC) from 5.5-3.0m. At 13.5m, the C/N ratios are ~40 and decrease to ~10 by 11m. From 11-3m, the C/N ratios remain between 10 and 20. From 3-2m, the C/N ratios increase by 15. The δ13C values shift from ~-27‰ at the bottom of the core to ~-24‰ at 6m. From 6-5.5m, δ13C becomes significantly more depleted (~-30‰), and then increasingly enriched to the top of the core. CONCLUSIONS: High C/N ratios at the bottom of the core are consistent with input of terrestrial vegetation. From 12-3m, C/N ratios are much lower, reflecting a change to lacustrine sourced organic matter. Throughout the Holocene, there has been a shift from depleted δ13C values to enriched values, indicating an increase in abundance of C4 plants. Further investigation of the anomalous variations in C/N ratios and δ13C is in progress. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 190 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 352 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 76C Jennifer Fardy, Jon Woodruff (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Geological Science, UMass Amherst Sedimentation from Tropical Storm Irene in the Lower Connecticut River In late August 2011, Tropical Storm Irene hit Western Massachusetts. A rare late summer flooding event such as this posed a great opportunity to study how extreme flooding events may impact the sedimentation in inlet ponds along great meandering rivers such as the Connecticut River. Past studies on meandering river floodplains concluded that major flood events like Tropical Storm Irene, do not leave a sedimentological imprint that is easily distinguishable from other events like spring freshets in the bottom-sediment (Sambrook Smith, 2010). However, these studies did not examine ponds and marshes connected to meandering rivers by tidal inlet channels. Throughout Fall 2011, the sedimentology class at the University of Massachusetts Amherst collected sediment core from off-river ponds and marshes along the lower Connecticut River. We analyzed these cores for grain size, porosity, organic content, mercury, and other heavy metals. The findings from the fall show that Tropical Storm Irene did in fact leave a distinct imprint in the sedimentary record of inlet ponds and marshes along the Connecticut River. On average, the overall thickness of the Irene deposit was roughly twice the thickness of sediments deposited during the spring freshet of 2011, with sedimentation rates increasing towards the mouth of the river. Mercury (Hg) and other heavy metals are now trapped in sediment along the Connecticut River. In the cores we collected in the fall, the sediment that we previously determined to correlate with Tropical Storm Irene was significantly less abundant in Hg. These findings suggest that the Irene deposits are cleaner and could be seen as a cap on the older more contaminated sediments. 353 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 74C Amy Goldman, David Finkelstein (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Geological Science, UMass Amherst Investigating Climatic Changes of Western Massachusetts Through Ring-width and Stable Isotopes (13C) in Red Oak (Quercus rubra) Purpose: Tree rings have the ability to generate an exact chronology that can record changes in climatic patterns for hundreds of years. This study aims to use Red Oak to examine the influence of different climate variables in western Massachusetts on tree ring width and stable isotopic composition in an effort to provide a baseline for reconstructing climate beyond the instrumental record. Methods: Annual ring widths spanning 1954 to 2011 of Red Oak cores from western Massachusetts were measured and compared to instrumental records of temperature, precipitation, and large scale ocean-atmosphere interactions. Earlywood and latewood portions of each ring were isolated and prepared for analysis by Elemental Analyzer- Isotope Ratio Mass Spectrometer. Results: Width variations are evident throughout the core. When graphed against average precipitation and temperature for latewood growth (July-September), ring-width varies with precipitation. An interval of below average ring-width from 1981 to 1985 corresponds to a period of 5-year below average precipitation. A similar 5-year drought occurs in the early 1960s without an apparent effect on ringwidth. During the early 1980s, temperature was below average over the 5-year period, which was not the case in the early 1960s. Conclusions: Covariance of ring-width and precipitation rather than temperature suggests that precipitation is the primary determining factor of ring-width in the cores examined. Temperature acts as a secondary influence. Investigation of the carbon isotopes in the latewood of the tree rings will provide further insight into the climate’s effect on tree growth allowing for a reconstruction beyond the instrumental period. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 191 Abstracts • Poster Sessions GEOLOGY 354 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 47A John Gilbert, Julie Brigham-Grette (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Geological Science, UMass Amherst Exploring Warm Interglacial Marine Seasonality Along the Northwest Alaskan Coast During past interglacials, warm water masses penetrated northward into the Arctic and subarctic seas influencing the climate system, causing among other things changes in seasonal sea ice extent. Such changes are accelerating today. To better understand the seasonality of temperature in Arctic coastal waters during past interglacial periods one approach is to measure changes in the oxygen isotope geochemistry of annual growth bands in fossil mollusks the lived at different times. This study explored the suitability of several bivalve species for producing paleorecords of seasonal changes for comparison with extant specimens recovered from the northwest coast of Alaska. Intact shells of Hiatella arctica, Mya pseduoarenaria and Astarte borealis were chosen for study from existing Alaskan collections representing warm interglacials dating to 125ka, 410ka and 2.6 Myrs ago. Each sample was embedded in epoxy, cross-sectioned, polished, and imaged prior to isotopic sampling using a micromill capable of 100μm sampling resolution. The resulting carbonate powders were then analyzed for oxygen isotope geochemistry using a Finnigan Delta XL+ ratio mass-spectrometer attached to a Kiel III automated carbonate preparation system. Changes in 18O content of the fossilized specimens are compared to the δ18O content of modern specimens to evaluate differences in seasonality relative to other paleoproxies from the same collection sites. The efficacy of these methods in determining the amplitude and range of variability in past and current seas surface temperature is determined. Changes in seasonality provide important data sets contributing to ongoing data-model comparisons by other scientists using global circulation models. HISTORY 355 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 16A David Condon, Michele Wolfson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Cape Cod Community College History of Women in Iran In Iran, women are treated as inferior to men. This research paper attempts to determine the historical background behind the mistreatment of women in the Iran. Upper class women in the Persian Empire, while not socially equal to men, were allowed to work and in some instances actually supervised men. Women were able to buy and sell property and were able to acquire wealth. Veiling was not forced, and only upper-class women were actually allowed to wear veils. The women in ancient Persia were treated far better than women in the region today. In modern Iran, women are suppressed by men: they are forced to hide themselves with veils in public and are kept out of view when in their homes. Women are not allowed to vote; girls may be married off at age thirteen, and men may divorce their wives without needing permission from the courts. Although it seems that women in ancient Persia enjoyed rights that many women in other parts of the world did not, modern women in Iran are some of the most oppressed women in the world. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 192 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 356 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 15A Cameron Hadfield, Michele Wolfson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Cape Cod Community College Oppression in the Modern Workplace This project will investigate the reasons and methods used to keep women from attaining their full potential in the workplace. Whether deliberate or accidental, women are often ‘silenced’ by employers and coworkers alike. This happens in the form of sexual harassment, antagonism, or disregard compared to other employees. Additionally, it is often said that women are paid less than men to do the same job or the same level of work. This paper will examine the validity of that assertion and consider how this contributes to the silencing of women. 357 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 19A Stephanie Nguyen, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College The Political Gender Divide: The Growing Gender Gap Between Men and Women in Politics The purpose of this project is to identify why women choose not to enter into politics in the United States. The goal is to both confirm there is a gender gap in political positions, and to answer why it is more difficult for women to be elected to office at the nation’s highest levels. By observing and cross-examining statistical data obtained by The Bureau of the Census, The Congressional Research Service, and other nationally accredited and reliable sources, an accurate understanding of women’s participation in politics can be made. Recognizing that women and men have different motivations and underlining societal and familial expectations, and analysis of women who do succeed at the national level compared to the state level, it becomes clear that although the gender gap is slowly being bridged, women who decide to run for top political offices still face significant gender inequity. 358 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 18A Dermot O’ Brien, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College Mankind and Misfortune: Natural Disaster Throughout the Ages. Natural disasters have long fascinated and terrified mankind. This project examines how man has understood and coped with disaster. BIt considers contemporary sources along with evidence gathered long after the events. Questions raised are: how did man keep himself safe, how did man explain the cause of disaster, and how did disaster affect his culture? The project examined memoires, documents, artifacts, archaeological evidence, and the writings of witnesses to events like the Black Death, the Irish Famine, volcanoes, and earthquakes. This projectgives a glimpse of religious and scientific leanings of those times. It concludes that much can be learned from the markedly different historical interpretations and reactions to the perils of nature. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 193 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 359 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 20A Thamyris Tavares de Almeida, Brian Bunk (Faculty Sponsor) Department of History, UMass Amherst Manet’s Bar: A Reflection of the Modernization of Prostitution in Nineteenth-Century France Édouard Manet painted several paintings of women known to be involved in prostitution from 1860 to 1882. In addition to Bar at the Folies-Bergère, this project looks closely at two other paintings, Olympia and Nana, and focuses on how Manet represents these supposed prostitutes. The project employs Manet’s paintings to illustrate the effect France’s cultural, political and economic changes had on the system of prostitution. The sources used for this project vary but are mostly secondary sources; such as scholarly articles, books and novels that can help produce a clearer image of that society. Other sources include historical analyses of all three paintings to understand the discourse concerning the subject matter, as well as literature concerning sexuality and promiscuity during this epoch. The research reveals how an increase in the prosperity of upper-class French citizens, and eventually that of the growing middle class, generated changes to both the culture and politics of France. The wealthy men of France started a “trend” (employment of prostitutes) based on how they spent their free time and eventually this fad caught on with the male members of the growing middle- and working classes. It is important to note that the economic effects and the changes to prostitution possibly display correlation rather than causation. The use of Manet’s paintings in order to explain how prostitution evolved in nineteenth-century France allows for a discussion around a new interpretation of art as a means to explain history. 360 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 17A Benjamin Weeks, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College Religious Basis Towards Origin of Life Theories Explanation of life’s origins are rife with religious speculation. Science’s growing role has given rise to new forms of understanding the fundamenalts of life. Mythological tales pose questions which science seeks to answer. Through comparing past and present scientific origin theories with religious creation myths, this project investigates the stagework that religion has provided science throughout history. The belief in outside forces served an important role in mankind’s ability to ask ultimate questions. No matter how intricately we comprehend the origin of life, there will always be a ghost in the machine. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 194 Abstracts • Poster Sessions INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING 361 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 83A Majdouline Touil, Jenna Marquard (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Industrial Engineering, UMass Amherst Which Visual Scanning Patterns Help Nurses Correctively Identify Patients? A key element in the medication administration process is accurately identifying that the patient is receiving the correct medication. Patient identification errors during the medication administration process can be potentially fatal, yet nurses are not being trained in how to correctly identify patients. This study seeks to determine if there is an optimal visual scanning pattern that nurses can use to compare patient identification information (e.g., name, date of birth, medical record number) across artifacts used in the medication administration process. Participants (N=60) viewed patient profiles with and without errors using artifact-based and identifier-based scanning. With artifact-based scanning, participants were forced to look at all patient identification information on one artifact, then all patient identification information on a second artifact. With identifier-based scanning (IBS), participants were forced to compare patient identification information (e.g., name) one-to-one. There was a significant difference between the performance of those who compared the artifacts using artifact-based scanning and identifier-based scanning. The one-to-one comparison of identifier-based scanning was found to be the more effective visual scanning pattern. Potential applications of this research include developing a training program to teach these visual scanning patterns to nursing students. INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES/BDIC 362 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 42A Kerry Gorham, Susan McPherson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English Literature, Quinsigamond Community College Eating Evolution Humans were hunter-gatherers until about 10,000 years ago when the agricultural revolution began. Since this paradigm shift, we have yet to evolve to eat the standard American diet. The widely accepted and recommended nutritional guidelines ignore our biological needs and promote foods that are harmful to us. As a result, we have been consuming more and more foods that increase our chance of health hazards, introduce toxins into our bodies, block essential nutrients and cause behavioral changes. We are on the cusp of a new paradigm shift. Researchers are looking at our nutrition from an evolutionary point-of-view to determine how we can achieve optimal health. A primal, paleo or ancestral way of life that will allow us to best work with our bodies, satisfy our basic biological needs, maximize our efforts and turn ourselves into the strong, lean, smart and productive humans that our ancestors were over 10,000 years ago. Now the question is how do we forget everything we have ever known in the modern world about nutrition and embrace the needs and wants of our genes? 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 195 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 363 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 43A Jessica M Tower, Jennifer Rosa, Michelle H McCall, Tori Hartman, Tiffany Magnolia (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, North Shore Community College The Meaning of Life in Film, Fiction, and Philosophy The Meaning of Life in Film, Fiction and Philosophy What is the Meaning of Life? This group project poster will focus on the philosophical theories of the meaning of life in order to paint a picture of said meaning of life. This poster poses questions to the searcher about his/her own meaning of life through philosophy, literature, and film. Upon posing such questions, the viewer will search for meaning through the efforts of those who have paved the way. The philosophical theories that will be covered in the poster include: Camus, Schopenhauer, Klempke, Nozick, Ayer, Nietzsche, Kant, and Kierkegaard. The literary authors that will be covered include: Tolstoy, Morrison, LeGuin, Kafka, and Wilson. And finally, the films include: Kundun, Groundhog Day, Pi, Enemy Mine, The Fountain, Memento, and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. Through this research, and presented in the poster, it became clear that philosophical meanings of life are numerous. Each philosopher, and therefore each person, finds meaning through his/her own life journey. The research concludes that while answers may seem tangible and simple to grasp, they also remain meaningless or elusive to some. Researching approaches to meaning can result in the incorporation of these theories into one’s meaning of life. 364 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 20A Rachel Perry, Shoba Rajgopal (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Women’s Studies, Westfield State University Ecofeminism: Art and Revolution Ecofeminism seeks to both highlight and critique the intersections of racism, sexism and the domination of nature. Art is a tool used to educate, entertain and incite response. Revolution seems the most logical result of the marriage of both art and the aims of ecofeminism. Speaking to audiences on a most visceral level art has the power to bring together elements necessary for revolution in a way that makes it accessible and undeniable. This presentation is accompanied by the presenter’s artwork on Ecofeminism. 365 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 46A Luiz Rodrigues, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College The Root of Enviromental Apathy Man has abused the Earth to an extent that change on a world-wide scale is now evident, yet there are significant numbers of people who dispute these facts. Despite their dismissal of facts, their votes count. In order to enact meaningful legislation, the underlying seeds of enviromental apathy must be identified. This project seeks the cultural roots of this obstinancy, for the purpose of arming policy-makers to overcome willful ignorance. Research into developmental psychology, group psychology, and religious beliefs was conducted to help explain how and why these attitudes create a fundmental disregard for nature. The findings will be sent to key legislators. An understanding of the roots of enviromental apathy may help lead to a solution to the problem of lack of respect for the environment. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 196 Abstracts • Poster Sessions JAPANESE 366 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 30A Lap Ian Lou, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College Culture Similarity and Clash: Gender Presented In Manga and Anime Manga and anime are growing rapidly in America. Many people in America have difficulty understanding the gender roles in manga and anime because of the differences between traditional American gender roles and the gender issues presented in Japanese comics and animations. This project analyzes backgrounds, content, and characters of manga and anime to compare these differences . Although there are likenesses in family roles, there are pronounced differences in sexuality . The project illustrates why many Americans are confused by the gender roles presented in Japanese comics and animations. KINESIOLOGY 367 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 19A Andrea Arabadjis, Joseph Hamill (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, UMass Amherst Fitness Footwear and Kinematic Effects on Walking Gait Introduction: Understanding kinematics coordination of the lower extremity is useful for further comparisons between normal and changed gait patterns. Certain joint movements are characteristic of natural motion of the lower extremity while walking and may be affected by footwear. Footwear such as the category referred to as ‘fitness footwear’ may potentially affect the normal biomechanics of gait in positive and negative ways because of their construction. Purpose: The purpose of this study was to investigate the ankle motion while walking in fitness shoes. Methods: In this study, 12 young females walked in four different ‘fitness’ shoes and a control shoe. They walked at their preferred walking speed in all conditions. Results: The results indicated that there were no statistically significant differences among the fitness footwear and the control shoe for the sagittal plane ankle rotation at touchdown, mid-stance and toe-off (p>0.5). The ankle joint was not significantly altered and showed no effect of the ‘fitness footwear’ on gait. Conclusions: It is clear from the current study that there is little evidence supporting the effects of external factors (i.e. fitness footwear) on gait patterns. Although these fitness shoes are designed to alter gait, it is clear that they are not effective at doing so and may not have a legitimate fitness feature. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 197 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 368 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 09A Kathleen K Meaney, Meghan Blanchard, Teresa Fitts (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, Westfield State University The Relationship of Exercise Motivation to Life Goals among Vigorously Active College Students Purpose: “College is full of exciting new things, from meeting people to living away from home. But, college can also be stressful as you try to develop new routines, live on a limited budget, and manage responsibilities on your own” (Center for Disease Control). It is important for college students to improve their physical activity in order to maintain a healthy lifestyle. Higher levels of physical activity have been found to reduce stress levels and to increase self-esteem. This study examines the relationship between physical activity levels, exercise motivation and life goals among college students within the context of the Self-Determination Theory (Deci & Ryan, 1985). It was hypothesized that students who reported to be more physically active were intrinsically motivated and have more intrinsic life goals Methods: Undergraduate students (N = 60) were administered three questionnaires relating to Physical Activity Level, Exercise Motivations and Life Goals following the approval of the institutional review board. Physical Activity Levels were calculated utilizing the methods outlined in the International Physical Activity Questionnaire with categorical values of Low, Moderate and Vigorous Activity. Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation was determined based on the results of the Exercise Motivations Scale (Pelletier et al., 1995) and the Aspirations Index Scale (Kasser & Ryan, 1996). Correlation coefficients will be computed to determine statistically significant relationships between the level of PA and motivational disposition for college students both male and female. The results of this study will provide important information relating to college campuses introducing on-campus programs that promote intrinsic motivation of physical activity levels, exercise motivations and life goals of college students. This study is part of a larger study of physical activity levels, motivation and life goals. 369 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 10A Kelsey M Crane, Meaghen Chalmers, Teresa Fitts (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, Westfield State University Relationship of Physical Activity Level, Exercise Motivation and Life Goals among Honors Students Purpose: The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship of intrinsic or extrinsic exercise motivations and life goals in a small subset of honors college co-eds. Honors Students within the context of the Self-Determination Theory (Deci & Ryan, 1985). It was hypothesized that honors students would report low physical activity rates despite the fact that they posses high intrinsic exercise motivations and life goals. Methods: 60 Undergraduate Westfield State University Honors students were administered three questionnaires relating to Physical Activity Level, Exercise Motivations and Life Goals following the approval of the institutional review board. Physical Activity Levels were calculated utilizing the methods outlined in the International Physical Activity Questionnaire with categorical values of Low, Moderate and Vigorous Activity. Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation was determined based on the results of the Exercise Motivations Scale (Pelletier et al., 1995) and the Aspirations Index (Kasser & Ryan, 1996), which examines intrinsic and extrinsic life goals. Correlation coefficients will be computed to determine statistically significant relationships among the level of Physical Activity and motivational disposition for Honors Students. The data obtained through this study will offer important information relating to how programming can be developed in order to help improve physical activity rates in Honors students. This study was completed as part of a larger study examining the physical activity levels and motivation of college students. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 198 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 370 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 13A Mariah D West, Chelsea Decoteau, Teresa Fitts (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, Westfield State University Relationship of Physical Activity Level, Exercise Motivations, and Life Goals in Female Dance Company Participants Purpose: To find out what keeps already motivated people motivated to continue on the path they are on. This study will provide more information about reasons for physical activity. This study examines already active college students within the context of the Self-Determination Theory (Deci & Ryan, 1985). This study will examine the relationships between intrinsic and extrinsic exercise motivations to the intrinsic and extrinsic life aspirations in females who participate in a university dance company. It was hypothesized that active undergraduate females would report more intrinsic motivation for both exercise and life goals. Methods: Undergraduate students (N = 60) were administered three questionnaires relating to Physical Activity Level, Exercise Motivations and Life Goals following the approval of the institutional review board. Physical Activity Levels were calculated utilizing the methods outlined in the International Physical Activity Questionnaire with categorical values of Low, Moderate and Vigorous Activity. Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation was determined based on the results of the Exercise Motivations Scale (Pelletier et al., 1995) and the Aspirations Index (Kasser & Ryan, 1996) which examines intrinsic and extrinsic life goals. Correlation coefficients will be computed to determine statistically significant relationships between the level of PA and motivational disposition for female Dance Company participants. The results of this study will provide important information relating to how to facilitate motivation in undergraduate females in order to stay active. This study is part of a larger study. 371 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 02A Ashley Eaton, Teresa Fitts (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, Westfield State University Differences in physical activity level, exercise motivations and life goals among Residential Students and Resident Assistants Currently one in two Americans begins an exercise program, but never completes it (CDC); is time or motivation the issue? Resident Assistants (RAs) are placed in a leadership position that requires them to be role models; they often find their personal health and life goals being compromised. This study examines the level of physical activity, exercise motivations, and life goals amongst RAs with the context of the Self-Determination Theory. It was hypothesized that RAs would be less physically active, but more intrinsically motivated to exercise and express life goals related to personal meaning and health, than Residential students. Undergraduate Resident Assistants (N=30) and Undergraduates living in university resident housing (N = 30) were administered three questionnaires relating to physical activity level, exercise motivations, and Life Goals following the approval of the institutional review board. Physical Activity Levels were calculated utilizing the methods outlined in the International Physical Activity Questionnaire with categorical values of Low, Moderate and Vigorous Activity. Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation was determined based on the results of the Exercise Motivations Scale (Pelletier et al., 1995) and the Aspirations Index (Kasser & Ryan, 1996). A comparison of mean differences comparing statistically significant between the level of PA and motivational disposition for RAs and Residents will be computed using t-tests. The results of this study will provide important information relating to how programming can be developed in order to improve time management and physical activity rates in Resident Assistants and additional programming can be developed to increase exercise behaviors of residential students. It is important to note that this study was completed as part of a larger study examining the physical activity levels and motivation of college students 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 199 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 372 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 05A Christopher Fields, Barry Braun (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, UMass Amherst Effects of a Low-Energy Density Pre-Meal on Food Consumption After Exercise in Women Purpose: Some people replace the calories expended during exercise by increasing food consumption, minimizing the potential for weight loss. This pattern is particularly common in women. For people who are dieting to lose weight, eating a first-course salad can effectively lower food consumption during the subsequent meal. This approach has not been evaluated in women who are using exercise as the primary weight management tool. The purpose of this study is to investigate whether eating a low energy density salad after exercise reduces energy consumption in a subsequent meal when compared to exercise and a meal alone. Methods: 16 sedentary, overweight women ages 18-45 will be tested in a longitudinal, crossover design. As a baseline control (CON), participants will consume a standardized salad and pasta meal without prior exercise. The order of the next two tests will be randomized. Following approximately 50 minutes of exercise at 55% of maximal aerobic capacity, the participant will consume either a salad and meal (EX+SM) or a meal ONLY (EX+M). Outcome measures include perceived appetite via questionnaire, total calories consumed and the rise in blood glucose after the meal. EX+M and EX+SM will be compared to CON and to each other by dependent t-tests. As data collection is still in progress, results and conclusions are forthcoming. The expectation is that, relative to CON, caloric intake will rise in EX+M but not in EX+SM. 373 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 22A Alise M Aalto, Amanda Haber, Teresa Fitts (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, Westfield State University Differences in Physical Activity Level, Exercise Motivations, and Life Goals between Double Majors and Single Majors Purpose: This study examines the exercise habits and motivation types of double major and single major college students, within the context of the Self-Determination Theory (Deci & Ryan, 1985). It was hypothesized that double majors would report more intrinsic motivation than single majors, yet double majors would report less frequent exercise. Studying the exercise habits and motivations of these groups may help us to better understand why college students choose to exercise or not. Method: Undergraduate students (N = 200) were administered three questionnaires relating to Physical Activity Level, Exercise Motivations and Life Goals following the approval of the institutional review board. Physical Activity Levels were calculated utilizing the methods outlined in the International Physical Activity Questionnaire with categorical values of Low, Moderate and Vigorous Activity. Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation was determined based on the results of the Exercise Motivations Scale (Pelletier et al., 1995) and the Aspirations Index (Kasser & Ryan, 1996) which examines intrinsic and extrinsic life goals. A comparison of mean differences between Double Majors (n = 100) and Single Majors (n = 100) will be conducted using t-tests. The results of this study will provide important information relating to how information can be expressed to those students who have busy work loads. Our results are part of a larger study. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 200 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 374 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 06A Devin Kelly, Joseph Hamill (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, UMass Amherst Effects of Instruction on Footfall Patterns in Barefoot Running Effects of Instruction on Footfall in Barefoot Running Devin Kelly, Julia Freedman Silvernail, Joseph Hamill Abstract Purpose: The purpose of this study was to determine whether barefoot running would be influenced by instructions to run with a heel-strike footfall pattern. Methods: Four subjects participated in this study. Three dimensional kinematics and kinetics of each subject were determined as they ran barefoot at a velocity within 5% of 3.5 m/s over a force platform in four conditions presented in randomized order. These included two conditions without instructions, one overground (GNI) and one with a foam mat (MatNI), and two conditions with the instruction of running with a heelstrike pattern, one overground (GInstr) and the other with a mat (MatInstr). Peak dorsiflexion angle, peak plantar flexion angle, sagittal plane ankle angle at footstrike, peak knee flexion, and sagittal plane knee angle at footstrike were determined. Results: There were no significant changes in peak dorsiflexion angle, peak plantar flexion angle, peak knee extension, and knee angle at footstrike. Ankle angle at footstrike was found to be different between conditions. Subjects contacted the ground with a more dorsiflexed ankle in MatInstr than in GNI or MatNI. Ankle angle at footstrike was similar in GInstr to all other conditions. Conclusion: As indicated by a more dorsiflexed ankle at footstrike, than either condition without instruction, subjects were able to run on the mat with a heel strike as instructed. However, subjects were unable to significantly increase ankle dorsiflexion at footstrike when instructed but running without a mat. These results suggest that surface stiffness and comfort are influential aspects of footfall pattern selection. 375 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 15A Heidi Levin, Frank Rife (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, UMass Amherst Multidimensional Analysis of Communication in Physical Therapy: A Cross Cultural Approach Advancements in healthcare knowledge, techniques, and resources have been instrumental in decreasing mortality rates and improving quality life. Although these advancements have benefited the American population as a whole, significant disparities exist between majority and minority groups. Only recently, however, have these disparities become the focus of researchers and organizations aiming to provide equitable healthcare to all populations. The results of preliminary studies suggest that miscommunication is a major perpetuator of these inequities especially in cross-cultural interactions; however, few studies have investigated this cause on a multidimensional level. Through a survey based experimental design, we aim to decrease this knowledge gap by exploring native English speaking patients and nonNative English speaking patients’ perceptions of various communication dimensions. Our results will be analyzed to address three core issues: if differences exist for the overall communication rating between groups, if difference exist for individual dimensions between groups, and how these differences relate to patient’s overall satisfaction with their physical therapy experience. When assessed in conjunction existing literature, these results will begin to illuminate the specific effects of cross-cultural communication on adjunct healthcare fields so that ultimately productive clinical improvements can be made. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 201 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 376 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 16A Joshua Liddy, Richard van Emmerik (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, UMass Amherst Time-to-Contact Analysis of Dynamic Stability during Prolonged Walking in MS Individuals with Multiple Sclerosis (MS) commonly display stability problems during gait that may reflect MS-related gait adaptations. These gait adaptations could be exacerbated by symptomatic fatigue, which is often experienced by individuals with MS. Given that fatigue can influence postural control it is possible that individuals with MS may demonstrate significant impact of fatigue of walking stability. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to compare walking stability between individuals with and without MS following a bout of prolonged walking as a means of increasing symptomatic fatigue. Time to Contact (TtC) analysis and stride parameters will be used to assess stability during walking. Ten MS participants and ten age (40.4 ± 12.3 years, 69.9 ± 20.2 kg, 1.67 ± 0.1 m, 26.1 ± 4.6 BMI) and gender-matched (3 males, 7 females) control participants performed a 30-minute treadmill walking protocol through a range of slow (0.6 m/s), medium (1.0 m/s), fast (1.6 m/s), with pre/post bouts of preferred walking speeds. Kinematic data was collected using an 8 camera reflective marker system (Qualysis) and will be used to quantify the whole body center of mass and it’s TtC throughout the gait cycle as well as stride parameters. Preliminary results suggest that individuals with MS spend longer periods of time in dual support and longer time in stance phase during single leg support. In addition MS subjects also displayed shortened stride cycles suggesting that they may be adopting a shorter stride length. These findings may support a greater influence of fatigue on walking for individuals with MS which may interfere with activities of daily living. 377 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 21A Jenna T Collins, Yezenia Santos Teresa Fitts (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, Westfield State University The Differences between Caucasian and non-Caucasian College Students in Physical Activity Levels, Exercise Motivation, and Life Goals The purpose of this study is to examine the differences in physical activity, exercise motivations, and life goals between Caucasian and non-Caucasian college students. It is important to look at this to better understand why some ethnicities have an increase or decrease in physical activity levels and if there is a relationship between exercise motivation and life goals. This study examines the role ethnicity plays in exercise motivation within the context of the Self-Determination Theory (Deci & Ryan, 1985). We hypothesized that Caucasians would partake in more physical activity and be more intrinsically motivated in both exercise and life goals. Undergraduate students (N = 100) were administered three questionnaires relating to Physical Activity Level, Exercise Motivations and Life Goals following the approval of the institutional review board. Physical Activity Levels were calculated utilizing the methods outlined in the International Physical Activity Questionnaire with categorical values of Low, Moderate and Vigorous Activity. Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation was determined based on the results of the Exercise Motivations Scale (Pelletier et al., 1995) and the Aspirations Index (Kasser & Ryan, 1996) which examines intrinsic and extrinsic life goals. A comparison of mean differences between Caucasian (N = 50) and non-Caucasian (N = 50) college students will be conducted using t-tests. The results of this study will provide important information relating how to better facilitate motivation among people of different ethnicities by developing programming that can help increase physical activity. This study was completed as part of a larger study examining the physical activity levels and motivation of college students. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 202 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 378 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 18A Stephanie Simoes, Sarah Witkowski (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, UMass Amherst Inflammation and Plasminogen Activator Inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) in the Heart: Effects of Estrogen And Physical Activity Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is consistently the leading cause of death in women in the United States. Many attribute the increase in cardiovascular and related diseases to the decline in estrogen that is seen in postmenopausal women and suggest that estrogen has cardiovascular protective effects. Decreased estrogen has been shown to have a high association to increased fibrinolytic components, such as PAI-1. Like estrogen, physical activity seems to have a beneficial impact on CVD and PAI-1 levels. This study was conducted to determine whether estrogen depletion will increase cardiac inflammation and PAI-1 expression and whether physical activity alters the changes that occur with estrogen depletion. Gene expression of markers of inflammation and PAI-1 will be investigated in the heart tissue of female mice in 3 conditions: A) ovarectomized, B) sham surgery for ovariectomy, and C) ovariectomized with estrogen supplementation. Half of each of the 3 groups stated above have undergone exposure to physical activity while the other half have not. In order to perform a gene expression analysis of PAI-1 and related genes, RNA will be isolated from heart tissue and reverse transcribed into cDNA. Real-time PCR will then be performed for each target. Data will be expressed in means ± standard error (SE). Analysis of variance will be used to determine differences between groups and significant interactions will be analyzed with post hoc testing. A significance value will be set at p < 0.05. We hypothesize that a lack of estrogen will increase cardiac inflammation and PAI-1 levels and that physical activity will attenuate the negative effects associated with estrogen deprivation. 379 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 17A Rebecca Slate, Erin Snook (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, UMass Amherst The Relationship Between Physical and Mental Health and Leisure Time PA Among Women The Relationship Between Physical and Mental Health and Leisure-Time PA Among Women Rebecca Slate ABSTRACT PURPOSE: Currently the majority of subjective and objective measures being used to assess physical activity (PA) are able to provide information about the volume, duration, and intensity of the activity, however they do not provide information about the location where the activity is being done. Measurement of PA completed at specific locations could help our understanding of where leisure-time PA occurs. The Movement and Activity in Physical Space Score (MAPS), combines accelerometer (PA) and geospatial (GPS/GIS) data to quantify a person’s movement within their environment, providing objective measurement of leisure-time PA. The purpose of this project is to examine the relationship between leisure-time PA and the physical and mental health of normal (Body Mass Index [BMI] 18.5-24.9), overweight (25-29.9) and obese (>30) women. METHODS: Women (20-50 years; groups of n=10 normal, overweight and obese) attended two testing sessions. During Session 1 participants completed an informed consent, a packet of questionnaires (demographics, SF-36, Beck Depression Inventory) and a 6-minute walk. Participants were given an accelerometer and GPS unit to wear for 5 days. During Session 2, participants’ data were downloaded and processed to obtain MAPS scores. RESULTS: Women with higher BMIs had lower MAPS scores, indicating they did less leisuretime PA than those with lower BMIs. Worse physical and mental health were also seen in women with higher BMIs. CONCLUSION: MAPS scores provided detailed information about the women’s leisure-time PA and higher scores were associated with better physical and mental health. The ability to determine where and how much activity is done could be very useful for developing individualized interventions to increase leisure-time PA. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 203 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 380 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 01A Amanda M McCarthy, Sarah Snow, Teresa Fitts (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, Westfield State University The Differences between Residents and Commuter Students’ Physical Activity Levels and Exercise Motivation This study was completed as part of a larger study examining the physical activity levels and motivations of college students. The purpose of this study is to better understand the reasons behind the low adherence levels to exercise in Americans, specifically the differences between college students who commute or are residents. This study examines the physical activity level and exercise motivation and life goals of commuter and resident students within the context of the Self-Determination Theory (Deci & Ryan, 1985). It was hypothesized that commuting students would report lower physical activity levels and have more extrinsic motivation and life goals than residential students. Undergraduate (commuter and resident) students (N = 60) were administered three questionnaires relating to Physical Activity Level, Exercise Motivations and Life Goals following the approval of the institutional review board. Physical Activity Levels were calculated utilizing the methods outlined in the International Physical Activity Questionnaire with categorical values of Low, Moderate and Vigorous Activity. Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation was determined based on the results of the Exercise Motivations Scale (Pelletier et al., 1995) and the Aspirations Index (Kasser & Ryan, 1996) which examines intrinsic and extrinsic life goals. A comparison of mean differences between commuting and residential students will be conducted using t-tests. The results of this study will provide important information relating to the enhancement of programming for residential and commuter students to develop and maintain physical activity. 381 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 14A Caitlin M Ryan, Carissa Tilton, Teresa Fitts (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, Westfield State University Differences in Physical Activity Level, Exercise Motivations, and Life Goals Between University Athletes and Non-Athletes Purpose: This study is part of a larger study that examines the differences between physical activity level, exercise motivations, and life goals between university athletes and non-athletes within the context of the Self-Determination Theory (Deci & Ryan, 1985). It’s hypothesized that athletes who reported more physical activity would be more intrinsically motivated to exercise and express life goals related to personal meaning and health. The purpose of this study is to develop programs to maintain physical activity levels. Methods: Undergraduate students (N = 142) were administered three questionnaires relating to Physical Activity Level, Exercise Motivations and Life Goals following the approval of the institutional review board. Physical Activity Levels were calculated utilizing the methods outlined in the International Physical Activity Questionnaire with categorical values of Low, Moderate and Vigorous Activity. Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation was determined based on the results of the Exercise Motivations Scale (Pelletier et al., 1995) and the Aspirations Index (Kasser & Ryan, 1996), which examines intrinsic and extrinsic life goals. A comparison of mean differences between athletes (n= 71) and non-athletes (n=71) was conducted using t-tests. The results of this study will provide important information relating to developing programs to maintain physical activity levels. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 204 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 382 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 20A Vesna Todd, Teresa Fitts (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, Westfield State University Differences in Physical Activity Level, Exercise Motivation, and Life Goals Between Students Living in Quiet Living and Standard Living This study examines the differences in physical activity level, exercise motivation, and life goals between students living in quiet living and standard living. The reason we need to take a look at exercise motivation and physical activity levels in relation to the location of college students’ environment is because it is important to see how environmental factors play a role in physical activity levels and aspirations. This study examines exercise levels and life aspirations between college students in a Quiet Living unit and students in a standard area within the context of the Self-Determination Theory (Deci & Ryan, 1985). It was hypothesized that college students living in Quiet Living would report that they are more intrinsically motivated to exercise and express life goals related to personal meaning and health than those living in a standard living unit. Thirty undergraduate students were administered three questionnaires relating to Physical Activity Level, Exercise Motivations and Life Goals following the approval of the institutional review board. Physical Activity Levels were calculated utilizing the methods outlined in the International Physical Activity Questionnaire with categorical values of Low, Moderate and Vigorous Activity. Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation was determined based on the results of the Exercise Motivations Scale (Pelletier et al., 1995) and the Aspirations Index (Kasser & Ryan, 1996), which examines intrinsic and extrinsic life goals. This study was completed as part of a larger study examining the physical activity levels and motivation of college students. LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 383 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 84A Josh Spinner, Annaliese Bischoff (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Landscape Architecture, UMass Amherst Planting and Planning for the Future: Bringing Trees to UMass Amherst The University of Massachusetts Amherst continues to pioneer the way for green campuses throughout the nation with a sustainable and coherent plan for the future. The selection and incorporation of particular types of plantings, specifically tree plantings, provide an opportunity vital in promoting sustainable thinking for future designs. As campus planners proceed with revisions to the Campus Master Plan, implementation which supports the environment is a necessary consideration both now and in the future. The participant and recipient of an honors grant began with researching the campus, community, and meaning behind the successful acquisition of trees and the potential benefits. Through scholarly findings the participant was able to present meaningful research to members of Campus Planning and the potential donor, the Chapman Forestry Foundation, to provide a realistic proposal. The student proceeded by establishing connections and relationships which will hopefully remain intimate even after departure. As the University continues its plan for considerable changes and innovative improvements for the years to come, the research supplies the appropriate design suggestions to integrate sustainable practices as well as growth considerations. The participant will continue to collect data and present his findings to both organizations, setting the stage for a long-term relationship which benefits both the campus and community. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 205 Abstracts • Poster Sessions LEGAL STUDIES 384 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 63C Max Boddy, Susan McPherson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English Literature, Quinsigamond Community College Bioinformatics and Patent Law This presentation examines the emergence of biological data as computable code, and the legal ramifications of this advent. With rapid discoveries in biology and computer science, the line between a person’s physiological properties and intellectual properties grows ever thinner. Thus, the prevalent issues regarding software patenting, cryptography, piracy, and all the baggage of computational endeavors must be addressed if they are to carry over into the biological domain with medical or commercial applications. This presentation will first address bioinformatics both as the field currently stands as well as its predicted trajectory, and then address relevant legal concerns that exist both in perennial laws regarding an individual’s body, and nascent laws regarding software patenting and intellectual property rights. LINGUISTICS 385 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 27A Coral Furtado, Tom Grady (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Linguistics, Bristol Community College Deaf Children and Media This presentation will question what children’s media is geared toward deaf children, what is beneficial in that media, what do hearing children get out of their media and how can she get those same benefits in a program for Deaf children. An original video of traditional children’s songs and stories will present the most beneficial and educational format for deaf toddlers. The performances will be in American Sign Language with an added voice over element in order to incorporate hearing children for a mixed ability setting. The goal is to assess if it is possible to harness the benefits of music-based educational programming and apply those benefits to a visually accessible realm. This will create curricula that can be mainstreamed in a mixed classroom to increase the accessibility of the media for deaf children and families of deaf children. LITERATURE 386 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 24A Ratnasari Lusiaga, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College Nature as Other or Nature as Brother in Moby-Dick Nature as other and nature as brother are two conflicting viewpoints in Herman Melville’s Moby Dick. For the case of other, the project presented looks not only at Captain Ahab, but also the entire, gruesome whale-killing industry in which he he excelled. For the case of brother, the question is asked if it is better to be Queequag, who may be quite adept at killing a whale up close, but is an outsider to the mega-death culture of the fleets. The question must be settled by a considering Ishmael, who walks between both worlds. Sources secondary to the book include museums visits to Peabody Museum of Natural History, the Peabody-Essex museum, and the New Bedford Whaling museum. Sources also include a review of critical literature concerning the novel, the industry, and the environment. The project examines this novelistic snapshot of an entire culture based on the notion of how a man might prove himself by attacking nature. The project considers a key question: Is our current western culture very different from what Melville portrayed more than a century ago? 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 206 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 387 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 26A Jessica Mello, Tom Grady (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Literature, Bristol Community College Exploring Edgar Allan Poe using the lens of psychological criticism Edgar Allan Poe has been described as a mentally unstable individual, and his work is a reflection of his distorted mind. However, there are many who view his works as simply imaginative. In order to make make meaningful connections between the disciplines of Psychology and Literature, this project seeks to examine several works that are similar in nature: (“The Tell Tale Heart”,” The Black Cat”, and “The Raven”). Was Poe’s writing a way of staying sane, or was it an outlet for his imagination? Do these works describe his desires? Is using psychological criticism helpful for understanding these particular works or does it muddle the picture of our understanding? MANAGEMENT 388 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 66C Corinne Bazzinotti, Jeffery Keisler (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Finance, UMass Boston Basis for a Living Wage in the United States This presentation addresses the topic of living wages in the United States. The question for managers regarding living wage is: what is living wage and would it be profitable for my business to incorporate it? Since there is currently little work done on the effects and reasoning of establishing a living wage, I have chosen my topic to be a qualitative jumping-off point for thinking about this issue. My project will determine what arguments are out there for living wage, by different sectors of the public. In order to do this I have undertaken a literature review and developed a code for analysis. For richer information, I have also conducted several interviews with members of different sectors. I expect to find a great deal of diversity in the arguments for living wage, due in part to differing interests amongst the sectors, and also due to the differing demographic interests of the authors and interviewees. I anticipate that the research will help business people and others to better understand the scope of the issue. Furthermore, the research may serve as a catalyst for new research to help with making business decisions concerning living wages. 389 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 08A Julie Broderick, Joan Mahoney (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Management, Worcester State University Sam’s Club Small Business Project The Worcester State University SIFE Team secured a $1500 grant from Sam’s Club to assist a small business (1) improve energy efficiency and (2) impact the bottom. The money will be applied directly to sustainability improvements at the client’s location. We met with the owner of a small restaurant and discussed sustainability issues and identified the following key areas: Signage, web presence, business expansion opportunities, marketing and optimizing current resources. The team then investigated energy audit options, developed a number of alternate signage opportunities keeping budget and local codes in mind, and presented the pros and cons of various website development routes, as well as focusing on Social Media forms such as Facebook and Twitter to market his business. We conducted a SWOT analyses and spent considerable time exploring business expansion opportunities and focused marketing campaigns. Our work was presented to the client and explained in detail. He made decisions on specific directions, which we then further refined. Results will be presented at the conference. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 207 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 390 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 67C Elena Svetlov, Jeffery Keisler (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Finance, UMass Boston The Relationship Between U.S Multinational Corporations Off-shoring and Tax Avoidance This research study examines the relationship between U.S multinational corporations off-shoring and tax avoidance. This paper will address the following research question: To what extent are U.S multinational companies able to strategically reduce taxable income through off-shoring? The research is conducted via the statistical/econometric analysis of data from the off-shoring Research Network database. The findings of this research paper will potentially be valuable to tax economists, policy makers, and business managers as the findings will provide a better understanding of worldwide tax allocation. Also, the findings of this research may be useful for the potential establishment of regulations for the protection of the competitiveness of U.S multinational companies, while potentially maximizing government revenue. 391 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 65C lam Truong, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College Human Imaginary as Scientific Future Today’s technology allows man to manipulate animal DNA and create new hybrid creatures that once only existed in our imagination. The purpose of this project is to see how classic and modern Sci-Fi films reflect humans’ attitudes about the creation of new species. By using online data and Hollywood Sci-Fi films, this study compares the imaginary creatures in movies with the process and outcomes of modern hybrid creations. The project found that many aspects of our movie imagination are guides to actual science. MARKETING 392 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 07A Smbat Defterderian, Joan Mahoney (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Management, Worcester State University Worcester State Hockey Fan Bus Co-Author: Nick Asterito Co-Author: Hurley Kane Worcester State University is a 4-year public institution of higher education with a 23% current residential population and a planned increase to 37.6% within 2 years. Campus related, culture-enhancing social opportunities are in demand. The WSU men’s ice hockey team has struggled with dismal records. During 2010-11 the team improved, posting an 11-12-3 record with a playoff appearance. They currently sit at 8-11-3 and are on track for a playoff spot. Although the team has been improving, fan attendance has not. Average student attendance has been about 30. The lack of home-ice support impacts the moral of the team. The SIFE Team secured funding for a free Fan Bus to transport students from campus to the arena for 2 home games. The bus was created and marketed to address both issues above. Capitalizing on social media, we created a Facebook page (550 friends and followers) and Twitter account, linking the two. From home and away games, we tweeted updates on great plays and scores and began advertising the Fan Bus. Traditional print ads were created and placed in classrooms and the resident halls. A word-of-mouth Buzz campaign was launched with SIFE Team members, hockey players, and resident advisors all talking-up the Fan bus. This multi-pronged push/pull strategy was successful; 48 students rode the first bus and our attendance figure was over 72 student fans. With fan support, WSU proved victorious in the closing minutes. The second bus is scheduled for 2/16 and we hope to improve! 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 208 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 393 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 68C Casey Finigan, Jeffery Keisler (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Finance, UMass Boston Fashion Devotee This research paper investigates the “fashion junkie,” and their behaviors and brand attachment patterns in the fashion industry in comparison to the industry’s average consumer. We use the term “fashion junkie” or “fashion devotee” in our research to describe our focused consumer, which we define as a person who has a high involvement in the fashion industry, and who emphasizes a strong importance of which brand they choose over others. By using data collected from both focus-group interviews and surveys, We expect to develop an understanding of preferences and decision processes of a fashion consumer. We hypothesize that there will be a strong correlation between brand preferences and attachment with self-image as well as media pressures. With this understanding, we will be able to establish a framework of consumer behaviors within the fashion industry, as well as briefly extend that understanding to other industry’s consumers. 394 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 04A Anthony Battaglia, Benjamin Preston, Jacqueline Loiselle, Rich Tsai, Sheridon Moodley, Stephen M Cohen Catalina James, William Diamond (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Marketing, UMass Amherst Increasing the Perceived Tastiness of Healthy Foods About 2/3 of Americans are overweight. Increased overweight occurs in all population subgroups (Briefel and Johnson 2004). Raghunathan et al. (2006) felt that an important obstacle to changing consumption was the “unhealthy = tasty intuition.” That is, “part of the attractiveness of food lies in its perceived unhealthiness” (p. 170). It is therefore important to increase the attractiveness of foods that people believe are healthy. This could involve managing food perceptions through nutritional labeling (Wansink et al., 2005) or changing connotations through descriptive labeling (Arieli et al., 2006). We hoped that increasing the perceived tastiness of a healthy food could be achieved by stating that the healthy ingredient had been added for extra flavor. Thus, the “unhealthy = tasty” intuition could be reversed. Methods Seventy-Four undergraduate students (58.1% female) participated individually in a food-tasting study in return for course credit. They read a nutritional information brochure, tasted foods unrelated to the experiment, and were randomly assigned to three experimental conditions. In the control condition, 26 participants tasted “Seasoned Chips.” In the “Healthy” condition, 24 participants tasted “Whole Grain Seasoned Chips.” In the “Healthy Plus Corrective Labeling” condition, 24 participants tasted “Seasoned Chips With Whole Grain For Extra Flavor.” The chips in all conditions were identical. Results and Conclusions Overall, there were not significant main effects of the manipulations. There were significant correlations between belief that “unhealthy = tasty” and the perceived tastiness of the food. The results suggest that nutritional knowledge may play a role in the importance of the “unhealthy = tasty” intuition. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 209 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 395 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 69C Erica Sherman, Jeffery Keisler (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Finance, UMass Boston Facebook Obsession: Personality Factors Influencing an Individuals’ Usage Prior research has shown that an individual could be addicted to the Internet in general, but no research has been done specifically to social networking sites such as Facebook. This study investigates how an individual’s personality type may affect the amount of time they spend on Facebook, further concluding that they are either overly obsessive or not about the usage thereof. Prior research was conducted using scholarly articles that focused on personality types and Internet addiction. A framework was developed based on different personality theories and the Facebook Intensity Scale. The model is tested using a two-step approach of qualitative and quantitative methods. A series of questions will be asked to determine an individuals own personality type and a second series of questions will be asked to determine the amount of time they spend using Facebook. Based on a sample of undergraduate students we can prove or disprove the theory on personality types directly affecting and individuals Facebook usage. We expect the results to display either a positive or a negative correlation between an individual’s personality type and the amount of time they spend using Facebook. 396 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 70C Eyal Stein, Jeffery Keisler (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Finance, UMass Boston Extreme Enthusiasts in Online and Offline Brand Communities This study focuses on the motivation and influence relationship between enthusiasts, and extreme brand enthusiasts in brand communities both online and off line. We aim to find the motivational and influential differences between on line and off line environments. In the study, we define what an extreme brand enthusiast is, and the trait differences between such an extreme brand enthusiast and a normal enthusiast. We will assess this initial correlation by conducting personal interviews with enthusiasts that are exposed to the influence of extreme brand enthusiasts both on line and off line. We will then conduct an empirical test with an online survey to confirm our results. The influences and motivation are hypothesized to be more effective off line and in person. This research will help to further expand the understanding of the relationship dynamic in brand communities. MATHEMATICS & STATISTICS 397 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 03A Edward A McClain, Leah F Isherwood, Andrew Davey, Sigal Gottlieb (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Mathematics & Statistics, UMass Dartmouth Gegenbauer Post Processing on Fourier Collocation Methods Techniques for relying on finite representation of the Fourier series have become increasingly important in many different fields. Specifically developments in the FFT algorithm have revolutionized many fields. The well known problem of the Gibbs phenomenon in finite representations of the Fourier series, have been addressed by means of post processing. Post processing with Gegenbauer polynomials has been particularly effective in filtering the Gibbs phenomenon. While Gegenbauer polynomials post processing have been useful in eliminating the Gibbs phenomenon, it is unknown how it affects another main source of error in a Finite Fourier Transform, aliasing error. Our project is a numerical experiment in order to gain insight into the effects of Gegenbauer post processing on aliasing error. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 210 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 398 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 22A Brendan DeCourcy, James Canning (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Computer Science, UMass Lowell Analytical and Numerical Investigation of the Alpha-Effect in Geodynamo Theory It is well known that our Earth, as well as other celestial bodies, has a magnetic field. What is not known, however, is the process by which this field is created and sustained. Although not confirmed, Dynamo Theory is widely accepted as a possible mechanism by which our Earth sustains its magnetic field. This theory suggests that the motions of the electrically charged liquid core create the magnetic field our Earth possesses. Though a complete explanation of the dynamo mechanism is still an open problem, there exist a number of theoretical models of dynamos that explain the generation of a stationary magnetic field. All of these models are based on specific physical assumptions about the turbulent motion in the liquid iron core. It is a confirmed and accepted fact that the presence of a turbulent motion is necessary for the dynamo effect. A cylindrical region filled with a moving conducting fluid is considered. The average fluid flow is assumed to be a uniform rotation about the z-axis. This flow is perturbed by a turbulent motion satisfying the α-effect hypothesis: the magnetic field changes in time proportionally to the curl of the field. Inside the region the magnetic field satisfies the advection-diffusion equation with the α-effect term. Outside the region it is governed by the same equation without the α-effect term. The continuity condition on the boundary of the fluid-filled region is satisfied. It is demonstrated that the above system of equations has a stationary solution that describes a magnetic field that does not vanish with time. An explicit expression for this solution in terms of Bessel functions is obtained. The lines of magnetic induction are investigated numerically. 399 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 24A Nicole McCafferty, Sigal Gottlieb (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Mathematics & Statistics, UMass Dartmouth Analyzing Social Networks Our presentation this semester will focus on the information we obtain from analyzing a mock social network. Using a real network would not be feasible because they contain large amounts of data, and using sample sizes have shown bias. A few methods our talk will focus on is breadth-first search and snow- balling. Our first main focus will be to present the code we produce that will generate a mock network. Using that data we will discuss how we went about analyzing it using methods such as, breadth-first search and snowballing. Definitions, matrices and graphs will be used to explain and show connections made through networks. 400 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 23A Laurie Murphy, Sigal Gottlieb (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Mathematics & Statistics, UMass Dartmouth Numerical Solutions for a Basketball Free Throw The main purpose of this paper is to calculate the perfect basketball free throw. In doing so there are several steps stated to follow thoroughly to be able to perfect each angle and velocity needed for each free throw. This paper focused on the boundary conditions with the Fourier series. Additional theorems used in this paper will involve the “Shooter Method” and “Magnus Effect” will be taken into account as well as the Fourier series. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 211 Abstracts • Poster Sessions MECHANICAL ENGINEERING 401 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 78A Rose Beng, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College Are Genetically Enhanced Children the Future? New technology has been developed over the years to alter our appearances, but what if we could alter our genes to enhance our looks? Is it ethical to alter our physical appearance against what nature originally intended? The purpose of this project was to understand how future genetic precedures could be used to enhance physical appearance. Brief explanantions of the procedures were presented to participants and then they were surveyed to gather opinions regarding the ethics of the procedures. The results indicated that the procedures are dangerous and expensive yet there are parents who are willing to pay the in order to ensure that their child’s appearance is “perfect.” The project concludes the majority of people refuse to believe such a process is necessary but standards are needed. 402 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 79A Andrew Costain, Jonathan Rothstein (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Mechanical Engineering, UMass Amherst Analysis of the Drop Impact of Shear Thickening Fluids Shear thickening fluids are a branch of non-newtonian fluids that experience an increase in viscosity at high shear rates. These shear thickening fluids will start as liquid like, but after a force is applied to them they will become more solid. Two different types of shear thickening fluids were examined: Oobleck and a nanoparticle fluid. Depending on the type of shear thickening fluid that is used these fluids may once again become liquid like at very high shear rates. Determining what impact velocities produce what shear rate is very important. Finding these correlations will lead to a correlation between impact velocity and viscosity, and also between impact velocity and response type. In order measure these fluids at different impact velocities they needed to be dropped from varying heights. The impact of the fluids were observed and analyzed using a high speed camera. That analysis showed what impact velocities corresponded to liquid like, solid like, elastic or inelastic responses. In the case of the nanoparticle fluid it was found that even low impact velocities will produce a shear rate so high that the nanoparticle has passed the solid response regime and has gone right into a second liquid response regime. In the case of Oobleck these same impact velocities were found to produce both inelastic and elastic responses depending on how high the impact velocity actually is. Shear thickening fluids are currently used for: body armor, traction control, bomb blankets and jump boots. Hopefully this research will help to find additional possible uses for shear thickening fluids such as printer ink. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 212 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 403 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 46A Andrew Erwin, Frank Sup (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Mechanical Engineering, UMass Amherst Development of a Haptic Feedback Device for Upper Limb Amputees One out of every 200 people in the United States has had an amputation and from 1988-1996 38.5% of those were upper-limb amputations. While prostheses have been in existence since ancient Egyptian times, the human-prosthesis control interface remained largely unchanged until the 1960s with the advent of myoelectric prostheses. While myoelectric prostheses have improved upper limb amputees’ lives, the high visual demand required to operate them has limited their potential and the need for sensory feedback has been indicated in several surveys. Without sensory feedback, amputees must rely on visual attention alone for precise control of the prosthesis, which reduces their performance and ability to multitask. As a result, haptic feedback devices have been explored to create the afferent feedback needed in prostheses. Most notable has been the use of motors to create skin stretch, servo motors to depress the skin, or vibro-tactors to vibrotactile stimulation on the surface of the skin. In this work, a device, consisting of five modules, has been developed which has the capability to create normal stimulation. Each module of the device is light-weight and compact (10 g, 25 x 25 x 11.5 mm) consisting of a wire coil spooled on a non-ferrous core and a neodymium magnet housed in a plastic component. A power supply energizes the coil to repel the magnet on the skin, in order to create tactile feedback. The five modules are linked together in a cross-pattern spaced 25 mm apart. In an experiment with five participants, 20 trials of individual stimulations and 20 trials of pattern stimulations were performed on each participant. Participants reported 86% accuracy in correctly locating a single stimulus and 97% accuracy in distinguishing between four basic stimulation patterns. Future work will capture Electromyography (EMG) signals from a subject to control a virtual hand with feedback provided by the haptic device under development. 404 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 77A Keith MacWilliam, Jon McGowan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Mechanical Engineering, UMass Amherst Analysis of Wind Turbine Integrated Buildings The area of research for the independent capstone project is to analyze buildings with wind turbines integrated into their structure. There have been new buildings constructed that utilize a particular design to funnel wind into a specific area where wind generators can create electrical energy that is used to power the building. Examples of this design are the Bahrain World Trade Center, which directs air blowing off the Persian Gulf into the center of the towers buildings to rotate the three wind turbines integrated into the design, and the Strata Tower in London, which has three wind turbines built in to the top of the building. The estimated electrical energy provided by these wind turbines is enough to power about 8-15% of the total energy required to power the building. While these buildings were designed specifically for this scenario, there are natural building orientations that create this wind funneling effect and can be utilized as effective placements for wind turbines. By walking around the UMass Amherst campus on a slightly breezy day, the spots where the air is funneled through it noticeable. The design and placement of Lederle and Goessman buildings creates this wind effect between the two buildings. Theoretically, this would be an ideal place for a wind turbine that can generate electricity for the buildings it is attached to. The research project will analyze the effectiveness of wind turbines integrated into buildings to see if it can be a viable energy solution to reduce the dependence on nonrenewable resources to generate electricity. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 213 Abstracts • Poster Sessions MICROBIOLOGY 405 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 70C Michael Boucher, Michele Klingbeil (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Microbiology, UMass Amherst Functional characterization of Trypanosoma brucei POLID Trypanosoma brucei is the protozoan parasite responsible for African sleeping sickness, a deadly neglected tropical disease that is endemic in sub-Saharan Africa and for which current treatments are both expensive and toxic. This parasite contains a unique mitochondrial genome termed kinetoplast DNA (kDNA). Unlike any other DNA in nature, kDNA is a network containing thousands of catenated circular molecules (minicircles and maxicircles) that is condensed into a disk-shaped structure. The proteins required for replication of this essential DNA network could serve as new drug targets to combat African sleeping sickness. T. brucei contains three DNA polymerases (POLIB, POLIC, and POLID) that are essential for kDNA replication and parasite survival. The goal of my research is to determine which of the predicted POLID functional domains (polymerase and exonuclease) contributes to the protein’s essential role in kDNA replication. This will be done using site-directed mutagenesis to mutate essential active site amino acids of each domain in order to cripple the function of a single domain at a time. The mutant proteins will be expressed in vivo and RNA interference (RNAi) will be used to deplete endogenous POLID in order to observe growth and kDNA replication phenotypes when only the mutant protein is expressed. Current data show that RNAi induction in the cell line StLID3’UTR leads to ~80% knockdown of POLID mRNA, growth inhibition, and kDNA loss, indicating that it is a suitable parental cell line for mutational analyses. Expression of a tagged version of POLID can rescue the knockdown phenotype. 406 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 74C Xenia Chepa-Lotrea, Michele Klingbeil (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Microbiology, UMass Amherst Investigating the Function of Trypanosoma brucei Kinetoplast DNA Polymerase IC Trypanosoma brucei is the causative agent of African Trypanosomiasis, a fatal disease if untreated. Current medicines are expensive, toxic and difficult to administer. One class of potential new targets includes proteins that replicate the unique mitochondrial DNA network called kinetoplast DNA (kDNA). This structure, composed of catenated maxicicles and minicircles, is essential for parasite survival. RNA interference (RNAi) studies demonstrated that three mitochondrial DNA polymerases (POLIB, POLIC and POLID) are essential to parasite growth and perform non-redundant roles in kDNA replication. However, how trypanosomes use multiple polymerases for replication of the kDNA network is unknown. We hypothesize the nucleotide incorporation function of POLIC is essential, but there exists a large N-terminal region with no predicted function that might contribute to POLIC’s essential role. To determine what region holds the essential function of POLIC, we generated a transgenic cell line that targets the 3’ UTR of POLIC for RNAi knockdown of endogenous protein, and expresses a tagged version of POLIC with a different 3’UTR. In this system, we demonstrate 82% RNAi knockdown of POLIC and rescue of the effects of depleting endogenous POLIC with tagged wild type version of POLIC. We are currently generating a polymerase domain mutant by site-directed mutagenesis, and a truncated N-terminal region mutant to test in the parental POLIC 3’UTR RNAi cell line. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 214 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 407 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 71C Rebecca Cottman, Derek Lovley (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Microbiology, UMass Amherst Geobacter sulfurreducens: The Crucial Role of the Gpm Protein Family in Electricigens Geobacter species are soil-dwelling bacteria that have an important role in the biogeochemical cycles of carbon and iron. Specifically, Geobacter can convert insoluble Fe(III) in the soil to soluble or crystalline Fe(II). It also has the unique feature of a thick mesh of pili for extracellular electron transfer, producing an electrical current when grown on an anode. Geobacter-catalyzed biogeochemical processes are mechanistically related to its ability to produce current. What is not yet understood is how the bacterium removes excess protons left in the cytoplasm as electrons are passed outward by c-type cytochromes and pili. The bacterium must have a method for secreting excess protons or the cytoplasm of the cell would slowly acidify and lead to cell death. The Gpm protein family may be involved in this process because it is unique to, as well as highly conserved amongst, Geobacter species. It also has structures that suggest that it could transport protons across the inner membrane as predicted by protein folding programs. In order to test this hypothesis, we grew Geobacter sulfurreducens wild type and mutant strains in conditions that varied in the level of acidic stress. RNA was isolated from cells growing exponentially in these conditions in order to measure quantitatively the level of gene expression through real-time Q-PCR of reverse-transcribed mRNA. It is expected that the G. sulfurreducens strain that overexpresses the signal transduction proteins Grr1/Ghk1 will show overexpression of all gpm genes, as will the strain in which nucleotide cyclase GnuC is deleted. It is also expected that strains will overexpress the gpm genes in growth media that have a lower pH implying that they are involved in proton removal from the cytoplasm of the cell. 408 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 02A Daniel Flynn, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Bacterial Infections in Developing Countries A major cause of morbidity and mortality in developing countries are bacterial infections. Most developing countries are predominantly located in hotter, more tropical climates which are a perfect environment for microorganisms. There are multiple reasons why people live in developing countries are more susceptible to bacterial infections, some of which are water and food sanitation, work and living conditions, and lack of medical personnel and supplies. Some of the bacterial agents that most affect developing countries the most are Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, and Staphylococcus aureus. In most countries bacterial infections not an issue because of antibiotics, vaccines and the advancements in medicine. Despite the advancements in medicine, however, bacterial infections are still a major problem in these developing countries. By conducting a literature review of peer reviewed research on this topic, I will examine why this issue is occurring, why it is an important issue that needs to be addressed and how countries and organizations can help these developing countries deal with this deadly issue. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 215 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 409 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 73C Tara Mahendrarajah, Jeffrey Blanchard (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Microbiology, UMass Amherst Characterization of Synergistic Isolates From an Adapted Biofuels Microcosm Biofuels produced from a wide range of plant materials are a promising component in the development of alternative energy sources. Microbial soil communities drive biogeochemical processes producing industrially relevant metabolites such as ethanol and propanol from the degradation of plant material. While microbial soil communities are inherently complex, understanding the interactions between microorganisms could shed light on the cooperative degradation of cellulosic material which could further biofuels development. This study seeks to characterize substrate utilization and growth patterns of two bacterial isolates from a soil microcosm. The strains were isolated from a switchgrass adapted microcosm using culture-based methods, and have been morphologically characterized using microscopy. Preliminary culture experiments demonstrate their synergistic growth potential. 16S rRNA sequencing suggests that the two isolates are most closely related to Cellulomonas hominis and Dermacoccus nishinomiyaensis. Growth of monocultures and cocultures will be assessed on various substrates to reveal substrate utilization patterns and metabolic activity, which could enhance our understanding of how microbial communities produce biofuels from plant material. 410 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 01A Christopher Roy, Margaret Riley (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Biology, UMass Amherst Comparative inhibitory activity of colicins and antibiotics against a panel of uropathogenic E. coli: a case for narrowspectrum therapeutics With the emergence of multi-drug resistant bacteria there is a pressing need for the development of novel therapeutics. Since the advent of antibiotic use there has been a steady rise of pathogens that are able to resist many, or even most, of our large arsenal of drugs due to various resistance mechanisms. Given this situation, it is increasingly important to produce therapeutics that mitigate the rate of resistance evolution and thus help to promote drug efficacy. Colicins, a diverse group of toxins produced by E. coli, are one such candidate therapeutic. Here, we present and compare the inhibitory activity of colicins and commonly used antibiotics against a panel of uropathogenic E. coli. Like some existing antibiotics these compounds may prove very effective at combatting infections caused by E. coli, such as urinary tract infections. However, unlike many currently used antibiotics, these compounds are narrow-spectrum, preventing the decimation of beneficial natural flora and ultimately reducing selective pressure for resistance development. In addition, like some antimicrobials deployed today, these compounds could be used in combination to produce powerful inhibitory action against pathogens. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 216 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 411 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 75C Alice Tran, Michele Klingbeil (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Microbiology, UMass Amherst Trypanosoma Brucei Mitochondrial DNA Polymerase POLID: Is it phosphorylated? The unique mitochondrial DNA network of Trypanosoma brucei consists of dozens of maxicircles and thousands of minicircles interlocked like chainmail and condensed into a disk, called kinetoplast DNA (kDNA). The many steps for replicating this intricate mitochondrial genome are spatially and temporally separated. For example, early stages such as minicircle release and initiation occur in the kinetoflagellar zone while later stages such as Okazaki fragment processing are thought to occur at the antipodal sites adjacent to the kDNA disk. One of the three DNA polymerases essential for kDNA replication, mitochondrial DNA polymerase POLID, is known to localize throughout the mitochondrial matrix and to redistribute to the antipodal sites during kDNA synthesis. However, the mechanism by which POLID achieves this dynamic localization remains unknown. To better understand the mechanism governing the dynamic localization, we investigated whether POLID undergoes in vivo phosphorylation. We immunoprecipitated PTP-tagged POLID (IDPTP) from a single expressor T. brucei cell line that expresses only IDPTP protein using IgG sepharose beads which bind to the Protein A moiety of the PTP tag. We then analyzed the resulting eluate by SDS-PAGE and Western blotting and found preliminary evidence indicating that POLID undergoes serine phosphorylation. Our next step is to analyze the immunoprecipitated IDPTP sample by mass spectrometry for specific identification of the phosphorylated residues. Direct evidence of POLID phosphorylation could guide future work, including site-specific mutagenesis of phosphorylation sites to determine whether disrupting POLID phosphorylation also disrupts POLID’s localization pattern, inhibits kDNA replication, and leads to parasite growth defects. 412 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 76C Benjamin Waldman, Steve Sandler (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Microbiology, UMass Amherst Characterization of cellular filamentation caused by deletion of the rep helicase in Escherichia coli K-12 All organisms must replicate their DNA for their species to survive. As the primary goal of life, this process must be protected and regulated to ensure efficient and accurate duplication. However, DNA replication is not perfectly continuous; genetic damage or normal cellular processes can and frequently do cause DNA replication to halt. For example, collisions between replicating DNA polymerase and a transcribing RNA polymerase are inevitable, and can result in replication fork collapse. These conflicts must be resolved and DNA replication must be restarted for cells to remain viable. In E. coli K-12, Rep is a 3’ to 5’ helicase known to play roles in replication fork restart and stability. It has also been shown to be necessary for efficient DNA replication across areas of high transcription. This suggests that rep plays a role in mediating transcription-replication conflicts. Cells lacking rep fail to divide normally, growing on average three times longer than wildtype cells. In this study, we show that deletion of several nucleoid-associated proteins results in suppression of filamentation of cells lacking rep. Inactivation of ihfA, slmA, and fis all result in substantially smaller cell sizes in a null rep background. RpoC del(215-220) is also shown to inhibit this filamentation, suggesting a connection to transcriptional activity. Through use of a parS/parB-gfp system, we show that deletion of rep results in a twofold decrease of completed chromosomes. Fis point mutants were also found to have differential suppression upon rep mutants, suggesting that amino acid 71 is crucial for suppression of filamentation. It is hypothesized that the absence of rep in a cell results in a decreased ability to resolve fork arrest due to transcriptional-replication collisions. We propose that these stalled forks are able to signal slmA to inhibit cell division in an SOS-independent manner and that fis and ihfA deletions suppress this signal because they either decrease the rate of transcription or are part of the pathway to communicating with slmA. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 217 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 413 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 69C Nikita Nayyar, Kewei Zhang, Klaus Nüsslein (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Microbiology, UMass Amherst Membrane Activity of Synthetic Mimics of Antimicrobial Peptides Due to the increasing prevalence of multiple antibiotic resistant bacteria in hospitals and other community settings, the field of healthcare is in need of novel antimicrobial agents to combat this emerging problem. Previous studies have revealed that synthetic mimics of antimicrobial peptides (SMAMPs) possess effective antimicrobial activity as well as low-toxicity towards mammalian cells. Most of these SMAMPs function by disrupting bacterial membranes through non-specific interactions with membrane lipids, which means that resistance is far less likely to develop. These attributes of SMAMPs make them attractive candidates for safe and reliable implementation into therapeutics. The goal of this project was to determine the relationship between the structure of these compounds and their effectiveness as antimicrobial agents. Vesicle dye leakage assays and time-kill assays were used to test for the kinetics of these SMAMPs; E.coli inner/outer membrane permeability assays were performed in an effort to find potential differential leakage between the double membranes of Gram negative bacteria. Furthermore, checkerboard antimicrobial assays were performed to test for potential synergy between different antimicrobial synthetics. Future study will focus on further elucidating the benefits and safety of various SMAMP designs based on previous findings. 414 Concourse 2:30-3:15 Board 72C Shuning Zheng, John Burand (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Microbiology, UMass Amherst A survey of Viral Prevalence Over Time in Apis Mellifera From the Umass Apiary Viruses are known to play an important role in causing disease amongst the European Honeybee population and, consequently, our economy. Western Honeybees kept in the U-Mass apiary were examined over two years (2010 and 2011) for five viruses: Sacbrood Virus (SBV), Black Queen Cell Virus (BQCV), Deformed Wing Virus (DWV), Lake Sinai-1 Virus (LSV-1), and Lake Sinai-2 Virus (LSV-2) using RT-PCR. DWV was the most commonly occurring virus in bees, followed by BQCV and SBV. All three of these viruses are linked to physical symptoms of disease in honeybees, although not all infected bees are symptomatic. LSV-1 and LSV-2, on the other hand, are recently discovered honeybee viruses not yet linked with any disease symptoms. DWV, SBV, and BQCV were found in all of the hives, although at differing prevalence amongst hives and over time. LSV-1, a recently discovered bee virus, was detected in bees from hives examined in 2010 and 2011. Its appearance is sporadic and shows no general trends. LSV-2 has not yet been detected in any samples from 2010 or 2011. A general tendency of virus levels in BQCV, DWV, and SBV was to start very low in the early spring and peak in late summer. DWV prevalence reached up to 80%, BQCV to 50%, and SBV cycled between 0 to 50%. Understanding the viral infection patterns will lead the way to further insights into the epizootilogy of these disease causing viruses in honeybees, protecting the mutually beneficial relationship we have with these important pollinators. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 218 Abstracts • Poster Sessions MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES 415 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 31A McGregory Meneus, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College The Sleeping Lions: Women’s progress in Afghanistan This project explores the progress that Afghan women have made from the Taliban regime to the present Afghan government, and the political, social and economic challenges they face due to the role structure dictated by the cultural practices of the country. Afghan culture is explored using news sources and journal reports to find what the differences in women’s societal roles are compared to men and how this has affected their treatment at the hands of the Taliban. Using women’s treatment under the Taliban as a baseline, women’s progress in the areas of education, politics and security under the new Afghan government is detailed along with the challenges they face today in achieving equality with men. The project concluses that the culture and attitudes are the culprits behind the oppression of women. Progress for women and girls is only sustainable through international pressure on the Afghan government to keep it dedicated to women’s rights. MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 416 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 09A Jessica Royal, Jim Chambers (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemistry, UMass Amherst Roles of TARP analogs STG-1 and STG-2 in C. elegans memory formation Long-term potentiation (LTP) has been identified as the primary model for the molecular mechanism underlying memory formation. LTP occurs when repeated excitation of a neuron increases subsequent synaptic communication involving that neuron. One way that this is made possible is via the upregulation and synaptic localization of α-amino-3-hydroxy5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) receptors following the increased neuronal activity. Auxiliary proteins known as transmembrane AMPA receptor regulatory proteins (TARPs) have been identified as being crucial to this process. Recent research has shown that TARPs play a role both in expression of AMPA receptors at the cellular membrane and in anchoring the receptors at the synapse. However, the direct effects that TARPs have on memory formation remain unknown. Two TARP analogs have been identified in the nematode C. elegans, STG-1 and STG-2. The present study aims to determine the roles of these two proteins in associative memory formation utilizing STG-1 knockout and STG2 knockout mutant C. elegans and a positive butanone learning assay. Animals are exposed to a repetitive cycles of a starvation period followed by access to food and exposure to butanone. Formation of the memory is defined by the animals’ positive chemotaxis towards a spot of butanone on a plate rather than vehicle. Preliminary results indicate that both short-term memory (two hours or less) and long-term memory (16 to 24 hours) are impaired in STG-1 knockout mutant C. elegans as compared to wild-type C. elegans. These data indicate a crucial role for TARPs in memory formation. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 219 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 417 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 10A Miles Sarill, Edward Calabrese (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Biphasic Dose Responses to Phytoestrogens: An evaluation of mechanisms Phytoestrogens are plant-derived chemical constituents with estrogen mimetic effects. Phytoestrogens can include flavonols such as kaempferol and quercetin, coumestans such as coumestrol, and isoflavones such as genistein and daidzein. These compounds are often found in food sources such as soya bean and, as such, are relevant to human nutrition and health. Phytoestrogens have been noted to exert beneficial effects on various diseases such as breast cancer, but their efficacy and safety are disputed. Evidence suggests that phytoestrogens have complex dose response relationships that may be an example of hormesis. Hormesis is defined as a dose response model characterized by low dose stimulation and high dose inhibition, manifesting as a nonlinear j-shaped or inverted-u-shaped dose response curve. This work seeks to evaluate the mechanisms behind the biphasic dose responses of isoflavones and select other phytoestrogens in gene expression and cell proliferation. 418 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 06A Ekaterina Shaikouskaya, Janice Telfer (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Animal Sciences, UMass Amherst Conservation of Molecular Function Between Dinosaurs, the Duck-billed Platypus, and Humans The Scavenger Receptor Cysteine Rich (SRCR) domain is an ancient highly conserved protein domain present in the closely related molecules WC1 and CD163. WC1 proteins are encoded by 13 genes in cattle. Previous studies have shown that 3 out of 13 WC1 genes are involved in response to Leptospira, an emerging global pathogen, and that another WC1 gene is involved in the response to Anaplasma. WC1 SRCR domains bind to Leptospira and other related SRCR proteins bind to other bacteria, such as S.mutans and E.coli. CD163 and WC1 genes have been highly conserved through evolution not only in their structure, but most importantly, in their multiplicity. The sea urchin genome contains over 200 SRCR genes related to CD163/WC1, and their expression changes in response to bacterial challenge. We hypothesize that multiple CD163/WC1 genes were conserved over evolutionary time because they contribute to immune responses via their ligation of important pathogens. In order to test the bactrial binding affinity of WC1/CD163 SRCR domains from human, platypus and chicken, I designed primers to obtain the PCR products, which I purified and ligated into a mammalian expression vector and then transformed into competent bacteria. I will purify recombinant CD163 SRCR domain proteins and test their interaction with Leptospira spp., and Borrelia burgdorferi. Examining the affinity of interaction of CD163 SRCR domains from chicken and platypus with bacteria will test the hypothesis that multiple SRCR domain genes have been conserved over millions of years of evolution because they function as important pathogen associated molecular pattern (PAMP) receptors in the avian and mammalian immune systems. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 220 Abstracts • Poster Sessions NURSING 419 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 76C Irene Berantuo, Susan McPherson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English Literature, Quinsigamond Community College Effects of Compassion on Healing This presentation is to elaborate on the effects of compassion on healing. Compassion is a feeling or showing of deep understanding and sorrow for another who is in misfortune, followed by a strong desire to relieve or lessen the suffering. The feeling of compassion for someone leads to forgiving, giving, empathy, loving and motivation. It has been scientifically proven that being able to forgive someone no matter the situation helps in reduction of negative emotion (anger relief) such as sadness, depression, anxiety, despair and self-esteem. Giving also makes one feel good and as a result has been proven as a healing component which leads to stress reduction. Showing empathy to someone in need helps correct physical complaints through support and nurturing. The person in need feels warmth and closeness by the empathy showed to him/her. Management of a patient’s pain can be done by showing empathy to the person. Additionally, the love showed to sick people has been proven to be palliative medicine to most of them. Love helps one to be relieved from pain and other distressing symptoms. Showing love to someone helps affirm life and regards dying as a normal process. Love as a medicine can enhance the quality of life and may also positively influence the course of illness. Compassion gives way for one to motivate the other who is in need. Motivation is used as healing when there is psychological care stability and the feeling of acceptance not rejection. This presentation will demonstrate that showing compassion to another who is sick or in pain plays an important role on how the person is going to survive or go through the sickness. 420 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 73C Kerryn Kane, Paula Cruz, Kristen Sethares (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Nursing, UMass Dartmouth Stress Levels of Sophomore Nursing Students and their Food Choices Abstract Background The purpose of our study is to analyze what types of food choices sophomore nursing students make when under various levels of stress. According to the literature, changes in eating habits are a coping mechanism for stress. This is a problem because overeating or under eating is a risk for developing long-term eating disorders. Methods This was a non-experimental, cross-sectional, descriptive design and the data was collected from sophomore nursing students. The study was approved by the IRB and each participant was given written consent with the assurance of confidentiality before any information was given. Our data was collected using the Perceived Stress Scale and an investigator developed a Food Questionnaire. Results Our results showed that there was no significant relationship between stress levels and the food choices students made. The stress levels were moderate at 19.68 (0 – 40). Some of our limitations were the small sample, non-gender neutral, only done on the UMass Dartmouth campus, generalized food choices and the food survey was created by the investigators. Conclusions We concluded that sophomore nursing majors experience some level of stress and they relatively chose healthy food choices. Our hypothesis was not supported by our results because even with the levels of stress, there was an insignificant difference in food intake. The findings are only generalizable to the population studies. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 221 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 421 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 71C Paula Jackson, Maureen McRae (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Nursing, Salem State University Vegetarian Diet In Pregnancy: What Women and Nurses Need to Know The purpose of this study was to examine the vegetarian diet and its effect, if any, on the pregnant woman and her developing fetus. Further exploration included whether specific risks exist during the labor and delivery process in vegetarian women. A further focus of the study using a survey tool was to determine the nurses’ knowledge of the effect of the vegetarian diet on pregnant women. Survey results suggest a significant lack of knowledge among baccalaureate nursing students with regards to vegetarian diet in pregnancy. The findings have implications for nursing education and practice. Study findings suggest a relationship between vegetarian diet and specific nutritional deficiencies in the pregnant woman. No specific labor and delivery risks have been reported. 422 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 11A Jessica Jarvis, Kristen Sethares (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Nursing, UMass Dartmouth Relationship between Perceived Stress Levels and Happiness amongst Freshman and Sophomore Nursing Students Background: The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between stress levels and happiness in both freshman and nursing students. High stress levels are related to depression, low self-esteem, poor adjustment to college and lack of social support leading to significant effects on academic performance. Longer hours of studying and lack of free time contribute to physical and psychological symptoms of stress. Methods: This is a non-experimental, correlational, cross-sectional study. Data was collected through the completion of two questionnaires measuring stress levels and happiness levels. Convenience sampling was done amongst freshman and sophomore nursing students attending University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. Results: There was a statistical significant relationship between the variables, stress and happiness. Correlation measured -0.71 indicating a strong inverse relationship between stress and happiness with a p value of 0.000. Stress total score mean measured to be 18.2 with a standard deviation of 7.8 and a happiness score mean of 7.3 with a standard deviation of 1.6. Conclusions: Based on the finding, it would be beneficial for nursing students to participate in stress relieving activities as a way of coping with stress. No unexpected findings were found. The data supported the hypothesis regarding the inverse relationship between stress levels and happiness and the data correlated with the information in the literature review. The findings of the study are only generalizable to University of Massachusetts Dartmouth freshman and sophomore nursing students. If this research study could be conducted on other campuses’ nursing programs, these findings may be generalizable to greater populations. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 222 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 423 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 74C Anna-Rae LeClaire, Kristen Sethares (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Nursing, UMass Dartmouth Stress Levels and Drinking Habits in College Students Anna-Rae LeClaire, Meg Doherty, Kim Saunders, Jackie Bousquet Stress Levels and Drinking Habits in College Students Abstract: Background: Students who experienced higher levels of stress were more likely to report alcohol abuse to relieve stress. (Cronin, 69, 2006) Freshmen experience the most problems related to drinking and the association between heavy drinking and problems begins to decline through senior year and beyond college. (O’Hare, 43, 2006) There is a significant positive correlation of .47 between perceived stress and drinking to cope in a survey of 351 college students. (Rice, 444-445, 2010) Purpose: The purpose of this study was to determine the relationship between stress levels and alcohol consumption in college students. Method: The research design used was non-experimental, prospective, and correlational. Informed consent was obtained from each subject and IRB approval was obtained from the University. Data was collected using the Quantity-Frequency Alcohol Measure and the Perceived Stress Scale, from students on the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth campus. Results: The mean age of our subjects was 20.49 years old. In our sample, 45.9% of the subjects identified as female, while 54.1% identified themselves as male. In the study, 48.6% of subjects were studying majors in the College of Arts and Sciences, 16.2% were majoring in Engineering, 8.1% were Nursing majors, and 13.5% reported their major as Other. Students reported drinking more than five days a week on average and the average number of drinks consumed was about two. The top reason for drinking among college students was to have fun. The correlation between stress levels and drinking was r=-.114. Overall, students reported that they were rarely likely to drink when stressed. Conclusions: Based on this study, it is recommended that nurses understand the prevalence of drinking in college-age students and recognize how it can become a risk factor for disease. Also, drinkers may engage in high-risk behavior that could increase health risks. Further study is needed in this area to obtain more accurate data using a larger sample size. 424 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 72C Abigail Roy, Barbara E. Stanley (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Nursing, UMass Amherst Health Care Providers Description of the Culture of their Practice Environment The purpose of this descriptive study is to explore the culture of two different health care environments; the acute care setting as well as the community health center setting. Interviews were conducted with healthcare workers/ nurses to determine their perception of the cultural sensitivity of their work environments and explore similarities and differences between their work settings. Interview questions utilized Leininger’s Cultural Care Model and focused on nurses’ experience, the culture and socioeconomic status of the clients they serve as well as the health facility’s support for the delivery of culturally competent care. Descriptive statistical methods will be used to analyze the results and examine for similarity, trends and differences between the two settings. Preliminary results may reveal that the majority of nurses in both care settings believe their facility is culturally sensitive and that staff make efforts to provide care in a culturally sensitive environment. This study will contribute to the knowledge of cultural diversity in acute care and health clinic settings and could be utilized to improve the delivery of cultural competent care. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 223 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 425 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 12A Michael R Massoud, Selina K Foster, Kasey Sullivan, Kristen Sethares (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Nursing, UMass Dartmouth The Effects of Stress on Sleepiness in College Students at Umass Dartmouth Background: Adolescents and young adults require nine hours of sleep, but most receive only seven or eight. College stressors which can affect the amount of sleep in adolescents and young adults include changes in living conditions, academic pressures, and social environment. Studies have found that college students with high levels of stress are at increased risks for negative outcomes such as suicide, smoking, drinking, and eating disorders. Purpose: The purpose of this study was to determine if there was a correlation between stress levels and sleepiness in college students. Methods: This study was a non-experimental, prospective, correlational study that examined the relationship between the variables of stress and sleepiness. Four different researchers collected data from 40 undergraduate college students from different grades, majors, ages and genders. The Epworth Sleepiness Scale and Perceived Stress Scale were used which were both found to reliable and valid. IRB approval was given to this study and all participants gave informed consent. Results: There was a positive correlation (r =.78, p =.069) between stress and sleepiness, but it was not statistically significant. Students reported high levels of stress and sleepiness. The results only applied to the target population, but further studies are recommended for other nurses on multiple campuses or with a larger sample size. 426 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 75C Nicole Tremblay, Kristen Sethares (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Nursing, UMass Dartmouth The Effects of Exercise on Stress Levels in College Students Title: The Effects of Exercise on Stress Levels in College Students Nicole Tremblay, Marissa Mattei, Marissa Chapin, Kathryn Hermanski, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, College of Nursing Background: Stress is a major issue college student’s face that can cause physiological changes that affect health (Flinders & Plante, 2008). Evidence indicates that the transition from high school to college accounts for a decline in the level of physical activity and exercise patterns (Ames, Bian, DiClemente, Moore, Weiler, & Werch, 2007; Bartholomew, Herbert, & Kirkpatrick, 2005). Poor academic performance, increased pressure to meet high academic standards, and decreased self-esteem account for a reduction in the time spent on recreational and physical activities (Eli, Laurence, & Williams, 2009). Method: A nonexperimental, cross sectional, descriptive correlational study was completed. IRB approval was received from the University where the research was conducted. After consent was obtained, data was collected using the Godin LeisureTime Exercise Questionnaire and the Perceived Stress Scale at one time from 40 college students. Results: Inclusion criteria for this study included being a college student and ranging from ages 18 to 23. The students had to be enrolled in the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth and could either be a resident at the college or a commuter. The data was collected in a common area on campus, the residential dining area at one point in time, during dinner. The Perceived Stress Scale showed a mean score of 14.8. This represents that out of the maximum stress experience of a possible 40.0, most students were experiencing very limited stress within the past month. The Godin-Leisure Time Exercise Questionnaire expresses a mean score of 47.1. This represents that on average, strenuous, moderate and light activity are not often carried out throughout the 7-day week for a period longer than 15 minutes. As expected, our research demonstrated an inverse relationship between stress and exercise (r =-.106). Conclusions: Stress and exercise share an inverse relationship, meaning that as exercise levels increase, stress levels decrease amongst the college students. Physical and mental exercises have been suggested throughout the literature to improve cognitive function and physical health and wellbeing. Students transitioning from high school to college experience immense amounts of stress that force these students to make decisions regarding daily activities to include in their schedule and which activities to go without. It is implied that the large amounts of stress spiral so fast out of control because of the little knowledge students have regarding coping with stressors. It is important for nurses in hospitals across the country in both primary care facilities and health services on campus to teach these young adults about the positive effects that come with frequent heart-rate increasing activities to not only promote longevity but to limit the negative consequences of stressors that are easier to control. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 224 Abstracts • Poster Sessions NUTRITION & FOOD SCIENCE 427 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 24A Eric Brack, Emmanouil Apostolidis (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Chemistry, Framingham State University Determination of Phenolic Phytochemical Stability Over Extended Period of Storage of the Brown Seaweed Ascophyllum Nodosum and Effect on In Vitro Antioxidant and Type 2 Diabetes Management Potential ABSTRACT PURPOSE: Ascophyllum nodosum is a brown intertidal seaweed native to the Northeastern American coast. Previous research with water extracts have indicated there is a potential for A. nodosum-mediated type 2 diabetes management linked to the phenolic antioxidant content, via inhibition of -glucosidase and -amylase, two carbohydrate hydrolysis enzymes known to be important factors in the onset of type 2 diabetes. METHODS: In this experiment we evaluated the effect on the long term storage of up to eleven years (2000-2011) from the time of harvest of A. nodosum dried powered on the total phenolic content, using the Folin-Ciocalteu Assay, and subsequent antioxidant potential, in terms of DPPH free radical scavenging activity, and the in vitro α-glucosidase and α-amylase inhibitory activities. Five grams of dried sample were extracted in 100 mL of distilled water for 30 minutes at 90℃. RESULTS: The total phenolic content was higher in seaweed samples harvested in 2011 (21 mg/g GA eq. DW) and decreased with extended storage time (10 mg/g GA eq. DW in 2000). The antioxidant activities, in terms of 1, 1-diphenyl-2picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) free radical scavenging activity, correlated with the phenolic contents observed, with seaweed samples harvested in 2011 having the highest (90%) and 2000 the lowest (60%) antioxidant activity. Similar effect was observed in terms of α-glucosidase inhibitory activity, with samples harvested in 2011 having the highest inhibitory potential (74%) and samples harvested in 2000 the lowest (25%). The α-amylase inhibitory activity will be further evaluated, to confirm the above findings. In addition, the phenolic profile of the extracts will be identified using HPLC, to determine possible change in the phenolic profile over storage time. CONCLUSION: Our findings indicate that the total phenolic content and subsequent bioactivity of dried A. nodosum powder is decreasing over storage time. This research provides essential information for further commercial utilization of A. nodosum by determining the effect of storage on the quality of final product. 428 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 25A Julia Curran, Hang Xiao (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Nutrition & Food Science, UMass Amherst Synergistic Inhibition of Colon Cancer Cell Growth by Polymethoxyflavones and Simvastatin in Combination Colon cancer is the second leading cause of death among cancers. Epidemiological evidence suggests that certain compounds from fruits and vegetables can provide protection against colon cancer. The present study investigated the potential synergistic inhibitory effect of a combination of polymethoxyflavones (PMFs), a class of novel flavonoid compounds from orange, and simvastatin (SVST), a cholesterol-lowering drug, on human colon cancer HT29 cells. The synergistic inhibition of cell growth by PMFs and SVST was demonstrated by 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) assay. Among the major PMFs, nobiletin and tangeretin showed strongest synergistic interaction with SVST in inhibiting colon cancer cell growth. Most interestingly, we found that the major urinary metabolites of nobiletin and tangeretin, 4’-hydroxy nobiletin and 4’-hydroxyl tangeretin, respectively, also showed strong synergy with SVST in inhibiting colon cancer cell growth. For example, combined treatments with these metabolites at 15 μm plus SVST at 5 μm produced 80% inhibition on HT29 cells after 72 hrs of incubation, while higher doses of these metabolites at 30 μm alone or SVST at 10 μm alone only produced marginal inhibitory effects. Further studies confirmed that combined treatments of these metabolites with SVST also produced strong synergy in inhibiting colony formation of colon cancer cells. To investigate the mode of action of these different combinations, we are conducting experiments to determine the effects of these combinations on cell cycle progression and apoptosis of colon cancer cells by flow cytometry. These experiments are expected to provide important information on the mechanism by which the combinations of PMFs and SVST synergistically inhibit colon caner cell growth. Overall, our results demonstrated a strong synergy between PMFs and SVST, which provide a basis for further mechanistic investigations. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 225 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 429 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 23A Kayla Seto, Julie Goddard (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Nutrition & Food Science, UMass Amherst Analysis of the Roughness of Tomato Picking Buckets The objective of this research was to develop a procedure to imitate the roughness of tomato picking buckets. New bucket bottom were scratched using mending plates when placed in a sieve shaker. The roughness of the bucket bottom was then analyzed and compared using an optical profilometer. This method was effective in imitating the roughness of the original but only for a small area. Other forms of scratching will be tested in future experiments. PHILOSOPHY 430 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 41A Lamya Nur, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College The Bible and the Qura’an in animal rights. Despite the fact schools teach people the importance of treating animals humanely, the rights of animals have always been overlooked. People eat animals, live with animals, abuse animals, and sacrifice animals. The purpose of this study is to investigate what the Qura’an and the Bible teach about animals. In particular, the study investigates what animals are special, what animals are forbidden to eat, and what are the consequences for abusing animals. This study was conducted using the Qura’an, the Bible, scholars commentaries, and the explanations by “the people of the book and the Sunnah.” Both traditions encourage animal rights, and warn of the consequences of abusing animals. However, the Bible and the Qura’an differ in legislation about what animals not to eat. The study concludes that both the Qura’an and the Bible stress ethical treatment of animals. Given the ethical treatment in these texts, both western and eastern societies should stress animal rights. PHYSICS 431 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 20A Olivia Campbell, Grant O’Rielly (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Physics, UMass Dartmouth Gain Calibrations for the BUNI Large-Volume NaI(Tl) Detector at MAX-lab One of the most critical questions in nuclear physics today is how to describe the properties of protons and neutrons. Previously, these particles were thought to be elementary but we now understand that they are made up of smaller particles, quarks, which cannot be observed in isolation. Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD) is a set of theories believed to provide the framework for explaining these properties. A number of different approaches to solving QCD calculations at low energies exist. Comparing the results from high quality measurements with predictions from various quark-based theories provides a way to test theories. Pion photoproduction near threshold is one fundamental nuclear reaction where both theory and experiment can provide accurate answers. A measurement of pion photoproduction from the neutron is currently being performed at MAX-lab in Lund, Sweden. Using a liquid deuterium (heavy hydrogen) target, the pion cannot escape to be detected directly but is instead captured in the target and produces a high-energy gammaray. Three large-volume sodium-iodide detectors were used to detect these gamma-rays. Each gamma-ray corresponds to the production of a pi-minus, thus the number of gamma-rays is related to the number of pions produced which can be compared with the theoretical predictions. The detectors have a core surrounded by a segmented cylinder. During the data acquisition period, daily calibration runs were made using a Thorium-Carbon gamma-ray source to measure the gain of the cylindrical segments. These calibrations ensured that changes in the detector gains were accurately monitored and corrected for during the data analysis. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 226 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 432 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 17A Olivier Dantiste, Chandra Yelleswarapu (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Physics, UMass Boston Linear and Nonlinear Photoacoustic Studies of Glucose Solution Glucose is a simple sugar and an important form of carbohydrate for the human body. Our body is finely tuned to circulate the right amount of glucose in the blood. Cells use glucose as a primary source of energy. However, when glucose concentrations are not within normal range, the person is diagnosed with Diabetes--hypoglycemia when it is below normal range, hyperglycemia when it’s above. Using photoacoustics (PA) as a way of monitoring blood glucose concentrations, we studied optical absorption properties of glucose molecules. Photoacoustics is a process in which light beams rapidly heat the sample which thermally expands and produces acoustic waves. The generated acoustic waves are detected using a piezoelectric transducer. Thus, rather than detecting the absorption signal directly (optical absorption signal to electrical signal), the absorption signal is first converted to heat, then to acoustic pressure, followed by an electrical signal (optical absorption signal to heat to acoustic to electrical signal). Photoacoustic experiments are conducted in the near-IR region to study the linear and nonlinear absorption properties of glucose solution. At low incident intensities, the absorption and hence the PA signal varied linearly with the incident intensity. However, as the incident intensity is increased beyond a threshold value, the absorption is saturated and the PA signal became constant. The experimental data is fitted to a simplified two-level absorption saturation equation and the saturation intensity (Isat) value is obtained. The long term goal of this project is to assess the concentration of glucose using the Isat values. 433 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 19A Khayla England, Grant O’Rielly (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Physics, UMass Dartmouth Measurement of the Total Cross Section for pi-minus Photoproduction Near Threshold at MAX-lab In nuclear science, researchers strive to describe the properties of nucleons (the proton and neutron) using the framework provided by Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD). QCD is a theory of the strong force, one of the four fundamental forces of nature, and describes the interactions between quarks, which form particles such as protons and neutrons. A number of theoretical approaches to solving the QCD equations for nuclear processes exist. To test these different approaches, the theoretical predictions can be compared with results from experimental measurements for nuclear reactions where both theory and experiment can provide accurate answers. One such reaction is pion photoproduction near threshold. Pion photoproduction is a fundamental nuclear process in which a photon interacts with a nucleon to produce a nucleon and a [positively, negatively, or neutrally charged] pion. A measurement of the total cross-section very close to threshold for pion photoproduction from the neutron is currently being performed using the Tagged Photon Facility at MAX-lab in Lund, Sweden. This facility is able to provide a photon beam with a well-known energy and flux, which are crucial to the experiment. Liquid deuterium (heavy hydrogen) was used to provide the neutron target. Due to the target thickness, the pi-minus particles were not detected directly but instead were captured on another nucleus to produce a gamma ray, which easily exited the target and was detected using three large NaI detectors: CATS, BUNI, and DIANA. An overview of this measurement and preliminary results will be presented. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 227 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 434 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 21A Jillian Giles, Cecil Joseph (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Physics, UMass Lowell Examining the Long Term Exposure Effects of Low-Power Terahertz (THz) Radiation on Bacillus subtilis Medical and security Terahertz (THz) applications are currently being developed. As a result, there is a need to further investigate the effects of THz radiation on biological systems. In this study, a 94 GHz mechanically tuned Gunn Oscillator was used to irradiate Bacillus subtilis. The bacteria were cultured in trypticase soy broth (TSB) and placed in polystyrene 96 well plates. The samples where irradiated during logarithmic growth phase for 1, 2, and 24 hours. Both the experimental and control plates were kept at approximately 25°C during exposure and their temperature was monitored using thermocouples interfaced with a computer via Labview software. The population density in each well was evaluated by measuring the optical density of each well at 600nm immediately before and after irradiation. The metabolic activity of each well was evaluated by adding tetrazolium dye, XTT, to each well after the exposure period and measuring the optical density of each well at 490nm after 2 hours of incubation. 435 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 16A Frank Kettenring, Chandra Yelleswarapu (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Physics, UMass Boston Dual-plane In-line Holographic Microscopy – Simultaneous Recording of In-line Holograms to Study Fast Dynamical Processes Digital holography is based on the classical holographic principle, with the difference being that the hologram recording is performed by a digital image sensor. In DHM, the interference pattern between the object and reference beams is recorded using a CCD or CMOS device and the object information is reconstructed numerically with a computer. It is a non-destructive, full-field, and label-free imaging technique. Off-Axis DHM and Phase-Shifting DHM (PS-DHM) are two widely employed techniques to reconstruct the object information for suppressing the undesired dc and negative-order diffracted waves. While the off-axis DHM does not make efficient use of whole area of the detector, PS-DHM requires at least three sequential holograms. However, a large number of biological processes such as cell membrane fluctuations, cell swelling, neuronal activity, and cytoskeletal dynamics occur at shorter time scales. Visualizing these fast dynamical processes requires a microscopy technique that not only can achieve high acquisition rate but also facilitates quantitative phase and/or three-dimensional information. Recently we developed a novel in-line DHM technique, based on the recording of two interferograms at slightly different planes and numerically reconstructing the object information. Here we present results based on simultaneous recording of the two required holograms using two identical CCD sensors. A Labview routine is developed to grab the holograms simultaneously. Simultaneous recording eliminates phase errors caused by mechanical vibrations and air turbulences. This increased acquisition rate together with the improved reconstruction capability of the current technique may find applications in biomedical research enabling visualization of rapid dynamic processes at the cellular level. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 228 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 436 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 18A Christopher Seymour Seymour, Grant O’Rielly (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Physics, UMass Dartmouth Photon Beam Monitors at MAX-lab An important objective for nuclear scientists is to describe the properties of nucleons in terms of the framework provided by Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD). The various theoretical approaches can be tested by comparing the predictions from the theories with the results from accurate measurements. The Photon Tagging Facility at MAX-lab in Lund, Sweden is capable of tagging photons with energies up to 200 MeV, which is ideal for testing fundamental nuclear processes in the low-energy region. Exploring the pion photoproduction reaction near threshold will provide new high-quality data to compare with the predictions from various QCD-based theories. Careful monitoring of the photon beam characteristics is paramount to the success and accuracy of the experiment. Two beam monitoring systems are now in use with the tagged photon beam at MAX-lab. One system, the x-y Beam Monitor provides a way to detect horizontal or vertical shifts in the photon beam position. The second device, the In-Beam Monitor, is used to keep track of the photon flux and to monitor the tagging efficiency during the data acquisition. These measurements are crucial for the overall experiment. An overview of these two beam monitor systems, and their performance will be provided. 437 Auditorium 3:30-4:15 Board 15A James West, Susan McPherson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English Literature, Quinsigamond Community College Applied Principals of Physics This presentation will detail the applied principals of physics, and what they mean for our future. The topics covered will include the history of physics, focused specifically on quantum physics history as well as quantum computers and the fundamental issues surrounding them and what they could mean for us, and, how these tie in with Quantum Entanglement. Additionally, String Theory, and how it could impact us, and wormholes, and how we could use them, will be explored. PLANT, SOIL, AND INSECT SCIENCES 438 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 33A Andrea Colbert, John Gerber (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Plant, Soil, and Insect Sciences, UMass Amherst Market your Market: Developing a comprehensive plan for the Amherst Farmers’ Market Across the nation, Farmers’ Markets provide an opportunity to connect food producers with the local community. The demand for fresh and healthy produce is rising, but not all managers are familiar with the practice of market research or know how to reach their target audiences most effectively. Employing new resources to increase accessibility (i.e. accepting food stamps), market managers must now focus their attention on expanding their customer base. A marketing plan for the Amherst Summer Farmers’ Market will be developed through the exploration of specific market related metrics. Ultimately, this marketing plan aims to attract a diverse new customer base and lay down a framework for “marketing the market”. Research will include interviews with managers from a variety of settings as well as secondary data from sources such as the Massachusetts Department of Agricultural Resources. With the basic framework of a specific marketing plan in place, other managers will be able to customize this plan to fit their own needs and become familiar with some of the most current and effective marketing strategies. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 229 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 439 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 27A Theresa Copeland, John Gerber (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Plant, Soil, and Insect Sciences, UMass Amherst Mushroom Farming in Western Massachusetts The Pioneer Valley of Western Massachusetts, is home to a vibrant local agricultural community. Many of the farms in the area focus on growing vegetables, with a smaller number also offering meat, flowers or eggs. However there are few local mushroom growers of any capacity, and the existing ones appear to either pick wild varieties or grow only shittake (Lentinula edodes) on logs outdoors. With farmer’s markets increasingly becoming a place where people can get the majority or all of their food for the week, the lack of mushrooms is apparent. Mushrooms are a nutritious food that can be grown year-round and due to the strong buy-local movement in the region, it seems likely there is a market for mushrooms at this time. This project outlines a business plan for growing mushrooms on a small scale. It examines potential markets, competition, partners, growing methods, and the legal ramifications of starting one’s own farm. Eating locally is of vital importance in the face of climate change and peak oil, and adding mushrooms to the list of foods the Pioneer Valley provides is a noble enterprise. 440 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 30A Hannah Haskell, John Gerber (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Plant, Soil, and Insect Sciences, UMass Amherst Save the Seeds: Planning for a Seed Bank in the Pioneer Valley Seed banks are an organized way of storing and cataloging seeds from plants in a specific area. On a large scale, these banks are important resources in the event of threats to plant species caused by climate change, disease, and natural disaster. Seed banks that are more localized provide growers with the ability to preserve their crops, and therefore their livelihood. This project explores the possibility of organizing and maintaining a seed bank in the Pioneer Valley of Western Massachusetts, and presents a plan of action to begin the process. This project will allow local farmers and gardeners to ensure their crops for future seasons and allow local botanists to help protect wild and native plant species in the area for generations to come. 441 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 28A Christina Kollisch, John Gerber (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Plant, Soil, and Insect Sciences, UMass Amherst A Call for Partnerships: Youth Participatory Evaluations for the Holyoke Food and Fitness Policy Council Through its Call for Partnerships Program (CFP), the Holyoke Food and Fitness Policy Council (HFFPC), an organization founded in 1995 to tackle food access issues, was able to provide grants to local agencies. Without the help of these grants, many projects, such as the Nuestras Raices Harvest Festival, the afterschool gardening program, and the YMCA bike shop would not have been realized. In this project, youth participatory evaluation techniques and communitybased strategies were utilized to evaluate CFP programs for efficacy, collaboration, and the need for more support. Over the course of three months interviews were conducted alongside local youth group members to gather information on CFP programs. This information was compiled to understand what worked effectively and what did not, and most importantly how the HFFPC might be of better assistance in the future. Evaluation of the Call for Partnerships Program is imperative to best utilize resources within the Holyoke community. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 230 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 442 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 31A Andrew Locke, John Gerber (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Plant, Soil, and Insect Sciences, UMass Amherst Strengthening a Community Food System Using an Integrated Farming Plan Locally grown nutritious food has become increasingly popular and many people are now more interested in personal health and environmental quality. To help people explore this goal, more small, local farms are needed to serve the increasing customer base and ensure the health of the community. Today, there is not a lack of food in this country, but rather a lack of good nutritious food. Between the synthetic chemicals used on produce, the reliance of large farms on non-renewable energy resources, and the amount of time and energy that goes into getting industrial food to our plates, many people have become concerned about the impact of the food industry on our health and the environment. The best way to produce good nutritious food is by supporting intelligent, sustainably minded and environmentally friendly farmers. Using a “closed loop system” to guide the overall farming plan, this project will produce nutritious and eco-friendly food products. The closed loop system is designed to keep usable resources on the farm by cycling nutrients and carbon through the integration of plants and livestock. This project will produce a well-researched and sciencebased farming plan over consecutive years on a small, family farm in Truro, MA for the purpose of growing sustainable food, creating profit, and keeping the community healthy. 443 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 29A E Alexa McKenzie, Joseph Elkinton (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Plant, Soil, and Insect Sciences, UMass Amherst Effects of adelgid density on hemlocks’ terpenoid production The hemlock woolly adelgid (Adelges tsugae) is an aphid-like, sap-feeding insect introduced from Japan that is decimating the eastern hemlock (Tsuga canadensis) throughout the eastern United States. In Massachusetts, hemlock woolly adelgid is damaging and occasionally fatal to hemlocks, but the growth of the adelgid population is limited and stabilized by density-dependent mortality. Previous research shows that much of this mortality is caused by decline of the tree in response to adelgid attack, but the mechanism is not understood. Recent evidence suggests that densitydependent mortality may be observed within the first year of infestation, implying an immediate rather than cumulative mechanism. When attacked by insects, hemlocks increase production of terpenoids, a class of plant defense chemicals particularly important in conifers that may variously deter, poison, or prevent maturation of insects. The specific effects of terpenoids on adelgids and their role in defending hemlocks against adelgid attack are poorly understood. This study examines whether terpenoid levels increase in direct proportion to the population density of adelgids feeding on a branch. If this effect is found, the tree’s terpenoid defense response would be implicated in the density-dependent mortality limiting adelgid density, suggesting terpenoid composition as a key factor in selecting and potentially breeding trees that can survive in the presence of hemlock woolly adelgid. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 231 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 444 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 32A Julianne Scott, John Gerber (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Plant, Soil, and Insect Sciences, UMass Amherst Creating Awareness for Chronic Lyme Disease Establishing awareness and support for those affected by chronic Lyme disease is important to the health of communities in the United States. While an estimated 300,000 people are affected with chronic Lyme disease each year, many people remain unaware of the existence of the disease. Lyme patients are often left feeling that their wellbeing and health are not the top priority of health-care providers and research institutions. This project aims to create increased awareness of the disease in the Amherst, Massachusetts community, while establishing a support group for those affected. Bringing people together to share experiences and solutions provides a valuable resource to individuals and families struggling with the physical and emotional challenges of Lyme disease. An electronic survey will be administered to a sample population to assess the current level of understanding of Lyme disease in the area. This initial survey will serve as a comparative tool to evaluate the current level of awareness of chronic Lyme and how this may change in the future. Perspectives on Lyme will be gathered through interviews and research with scientific and medical professionals, patients, and community members. The completion of the project will create access to accurate and current Lyme information and provide support for those affected with the disease in Western Massachusetts. 445 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 26A Steven Zych, John Gerber (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Plant, Soil, and Insect Sciences, UMass Amherst Chicopee Chicken Peace: Collapsible Coops to Publicize Pro-Chicken Ordinances The objective of this project is to design movable, collapsible chicken coops especially suited for populated areas. This will promote urban agriculture using tactical management, increasing individual health and strengthening communities, while creating an incentive for more pro-poultry ordinances. The Urban Chicken Movement has gained national recognition for its economic and social value, but a negative public perception of raising poultry in cities is still prevalent. Laws and restrictions that are designed to cause difficulty for inspiring stewards vary from city to city. This can be disheartening, particularly when citizens are trying to build the confidence needed to move a community towards a sustainable future. Compared to traditional stationary housing, this revamped design takes a preventative approach, drafted structurally to deter pathogens and odors, simultaneously revitalizing depleted city soils while providing urbanites with a source of food and companionship. These safe and sanitary coops operating in close proximity to neighbors, will motivate more people to raise poultry, thereby decreasing our dependency on the corporate food system, and enhancing individual and communal independence. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 232 Abstracts • Poster Sessions POLITICAL SCIENCE 446 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 64C Charles Gale, Robert Darst (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Political Science, UMass Dartmouth To Fence or Not To Fence: Explaining Border Controls in the Developing World PURPOSE: Border fences, paradoxically, have become a popular exercise among countries in the 21st century during a period of international economic openness. As free trade and the open borders that complement it spreads, why do developing countries try to restrict cross-border movement by building border fences? METHODS: This paper draws upon foreign newspapers, policy reports, and scholarly works to examine three distinct cases: (1) India, which has built a wall along its border with Bangladesh; (2) Saudi Arabia, which began building a wall along its border with Yemen in the early 2000s, stopped construction for several years, and then resumed construction; and (3) the Dominican Republic, which has not built a wall along its border with Haiti, despite a high influx of illegal immigrants with effects that would lead one to expect a Dominican-built border wall. RESULTS: If a developing country experiences large inflows of illegal immigrants who may pose a real or perceived threat to its security (India and Saudi Arabia), that country will build a border fence regardless of its neighbor’s efforts to help control the immigration (Saudi Arabia). No fence will be built if the immigration is considered an international issue or poses no security risk (Dominican Republic). CONCLUSION: Construction of border walls in the developing world depends on several factors: the threat the immigrants pose to the receiving country, the state of relations between the bordering countries, and the placement of responsibility of the control of immigration. The most important factor is the threat the immigrants pose to the security of the receiving country. PSYCHOLOGY 447 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 26A Sydney Adams, Rebecca Spencer (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst Positive Emotional Memory Processing Over Sleep PURPOSE: Sleep enhances emotional memory consolidation (Baran et al., 2012; Payne et al, 2008; Hu et al, 2006;). However, the effect of sleep on emotional reactivity is a highly debated topic. An existing model suggests that sleep reduces emotional reactivity of negative emotional memories (Walker and van der Helm, 2009) based on nap and sleep deprivation studies (Nishida, 2009; Gujar 2011). On the contrary, recent evidence comparing overnight and daytime consolidation suggests that sleep may protect the individual’s initial negative emotional reactivity (Baran et al, 2012; Lara-Carrasco et al, 2008). METHODS: Using an incidental memory task, the present study aims to determine sleep’s role in positive emotional memory consolidation and emotional reactivity. Participants rated emotionally positive and neutral pictures over two sessions separated by 12 hours. There were two groups. The Sleep group was tested first in the evening (starting between 8-10pm) and again in the morning (starting between 8-10am). The wake group began in the morning (between 8-10pm) and finished in the evening (between 8-10pm). RESULTS: Changes in ratings of valence and arousal as well as recognition accuracy were compared across sleep and wake groups. Memory for positive stimuli was better over sleep (F(1,69)=, p=.057). However, no such memory benefit was found for neutral stimuli. There were no significant changes in emotional reactivity over sleep or wake. CONCLUSION: This is the first study to provide evidence of a selective sleep benefit for memory for positive stimuli. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 233 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 448 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 32A Jennifer Ly, Justine Alpert, Deborah McMakin (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University The Hidden Barriers: How Music, Background Noise, and Anxiety Affect Working Memory Capacity Daily Life provides many detours from our present mindset. This experiment tested the effects of music and background noise on working memory capacity (WMC) and levels of anxiety. College students (N=60) were randomly assigned to one of four experimental conditions and were asked to complete a digit span task. The four sound conditions were vocals paired with either high or low levels of background noise and non-vocals paired with either high or low levels of background noise. Each participant completed a series of 4 trials during their assigned experiment condition. Results will be analyzed using a repeated measures ANOVA. It is hypothesized that participants exposed to vocal music with a high level of background noise would show lower levels of WMC than participants who were exposed to non-vocal music and low levels of background noise. Implications for the effects and/or benefits of noise vs. music on learning in college students will be discussed. In addition the impact of distractions such as noise on levels of students’ anxiety will be discussed. Keywords: WMC, working memory capacity, background noise, white noise, anxiety, vocal, music, non-vocal, Digit Span Task. 449 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 24A Angela E Pandolfino, Alexandra Anastos, Deborah McMakin (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University Labeling and Its Influence on Perceptions of Diagnosed Social Anxiety Disorder For millions of people suffering from social anxiety, social interactions can be a source of dread. The goal of this study was to expand on previous research examining perceptions of others towards those exhibiting social anxiety disorder in conjunction with expressed behaviors, gender, and labeling. A sample of 240 undergraduates (120 women), were randomly assigned to read one of four scenarios depicting either a male or female character expressing behaviors associated with social anxiety disorder who were even labeled as having a social anxiety disorder or not. Participants reported their perceptions of and willingness to engage with the character by answering a series of questions relating to the scenario. Participants then completed self-report measures on social anxiety, social avoidance, and perceptions of mental health issues. Results will be computed using a 2x2 between subjects ANOVA. Results should indicate that men reading of a male scenario character without a label of social anxiety disorder will have more negative perceptions then any other group. In addition, it is expected that men will report more negative perceptions of those with mental illness and more negative attitudes towards seeking treatment for mental illness than will women. Results will be discussed relative to treatment programs for those with social anxiety disorder since affected individuals place such a great emphasis on the perceptions of those around them. College student populations will be specifically addressed Keywords: Social anxiety disorder, gender, labeling, perceptions 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 234 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 450 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 05A Samantha L Glynn, Sarah Arena, Deborah McMakin (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University Health Anxiety Among Male and Female College Students College students face many stressors when adapting to college life. Some of these stressors arise as a result of health concerns. This study examined the rates and levels of health anxiety in college students across gender and place of residence. A sample of 240 undergraduates, 120 women, read one of four scenarios depicting either a male or female commuter or resident student whom on the way to class, came in contact with peers who were exhibiting symptoms of the flu. The participants then answered a series of questions about the scenario character and reported on their personal feelings about health and illness, as well as preventative measures they might take to avoid becoming sick. Results are expected to demonstrate that will women report higher levels of health anxiety than men, and that they will report taking more preventative measures than will men. It is also expected that resident students living on campus will be perceived to have higher levels of health anxiety than commuter students. Female resident students will be perceived to have the highest levels of health anxiety among all groups. Results will be discussed relative to ways that colleges can help prevent the anxieties students may feel relative to their health and ways that they can help students overcome their anxieties. 451 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 78A Steven Ayala, Susan Dutch (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Westfield State University A Review of the Neuropsychology Literature on the Etiology of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder This study reviews and evaluates the literature in the major scientific journals in Neuropsychology to determine what is known at the present time about the etiology of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD). The literature review will focus on Position Emission Tomography (PET) and functional Magnetic Resonance Imagery (fMRI) studies done on individuals who suffer from OCD. A review of the literature revealed the presence of abnormal metabolic activity in several regions of the Cerebrum, including the Orbital Frontal Cortex, the Anterior Cingulate Gyrus, and the Caudate Nuclei). These cortical areas appear to be hyper-metabolic in individuals with OCD. Additional findings support the notion that antibodies associated with streptococcal infection may induce hyper metabolic activity in some individuals. Because infection diseases may play a role in the manifestation of OCD, prophylactic treatment of such illnesses may prove be a successful method in preventing OCD from occurring. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 235 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 452 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 08A Alina Gusev, Allison Hannan, Caitrin Walsh, Marysa E Mezzetti, Nicholas S Fulone`, Rebecca M Brossoit Sophia M Dimartino, Alina Bahlavouni, Rebecca Spencer (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst Age-Related Changes in Sleep-Dependent Consolidation of Visuo-Spatial Memory Purpose: Sleep plays a key role in memory consolidation. We hypothesize that changes in sleep physiology in older adults result in a reduction of the active, performance-enhancing effects of sleep, while the passive, protective role of sleep against online interference remains intact. Our study uses a spatial memory task to test whether memories consolidated over sleep. We also used an interference task to examine whether memories were resistant to subsequent interference following sleep and wake in young and older adults. Methods: We tested 34 older adults (mean=66 yrs; SD=7.4 yrs) and 59 young adults (mean=24 yrs; SD=2.8 yrs). Session 1 involved the encoding phase where participants learned the locations of 20 images on a computer screen. Following encoding, immediate recall was tested. After a 12hour interval that consisted of either wake (“Wake” group) or overnight sleep (“Sleep” group), participants returned for session 2 where they were either introduced to the interference condition prior to delayed recall, or were directly tested for delayed recall without interference. Results: In the interference condition, for young adults, performance was significantly superior in the Sleep group (n=8) relative to the Wake group (n=10) [F(1,16)=8.7, p=.009], and trends towards significance in older adults [Wake n=6; Sleep n=5; F(1,9)=4.027, p=.076]. The Age (Young v. Older) x Condition (Sleep v. Wake) interaction was not significant (F(1,25)=0.644, p=.43). Conclusions: These results suggest that spatial memories are actively processed over sleep, making them resistant to subsequent interference, in young adults as well as in older adults. 453 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 10A Hannah Barrett. Brian Lickel (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst The Social and Psychological Implications of Hearing Loss ABSTRACT PURPOSE: There are large gaps in research concerning the social and psychological well-being of those with hearing loss. While the body of research on that topic is developing, it still requires more attention, since many of the findings of existing studies are outdated and inconsistent with one another. The present study explores predictors of social and psychological well-being, such as perceptions of communication efficacy among deaf/hard-of-hearing (DHOH) individuals, with stigma awareness as a mediating factor. METHODS: 207 DHOH individuals participated in an online survey that assessed the nature of their hearing loss, their perceptions of the ease of their communication with others, and their self-reports of stigma and well-being. RESULTS: Results showed a negative correlation between levels of hearing-related stigma and well-being. Regression analyses demonstrated that perceptions of communication efficacy predicted experiences of stigma and satisfaction with life. In addition, mediation analyses indicated that stigma partially mediated the relationship between communication efficacy and life satisfaction. CONCLUSION: Examining the associations between DHOH individuals’ perceptions of communication efficacy and social and psychological well-being has important implications for future research. With a better understanding of the factors that contribute to DHOH individuals’ quality of life, steps can be taken to improve their experiences. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 236 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 454 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 23A Rebecca Daniels, Michelle Beecoff, Anna Flanagan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University The Perceived Effects of Quality and Type of School on Academic Achievement This study was designed to examine how the type and quality of schools affect perceptions of academic achievement. Participants included 118 college students. They completed self-report measures on their academic behavior. They then completed questions about a fictional character who was either in a private or public school of high or low quality. The questionnaires were about academic motivation, academic confidence, academic misbehaviors, and home lives. Results showed that the type of school did not affect perceptions of academic achievement whereas the quality of school did. This may lead to further research on school quality and how to improve low quality schools. 455 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 41A Tobias Bennett, Rebecca Spencer (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst A Comparison of Extinction Memory in Healthy Heterosexual and Lesbian Women PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to investigate and extend previously reported sex differences in fear conditioning and extinction memory retention by comparing the performance of heterosexual and lesbian females in a Pavlovian fear conditioning and extinction task. We hypothesized that lesbian females would retain more extinction memory than heterosexual females after completing this task. METHODS: Participants were healthy heterosexual and lesbian females with no history of reproductive or neurological disorders. They viewed colored lamps on a computer screen, two of which were paired with an aversive shock to condition fear. The conditioned fear of one color was subsequently extinguished by viewing it repeatedly without the paired shock. After 24 hours, participants were tested for retention of extinction memory by measuring skin conductance response to the extinguished conditioned stimulus. Lesser skin conductance response indicated greater extinction retention. RESULTS: Preliminary results found that after conditioned and extinguished fear-eliciting stimuli, heterosexual women retained an average of 58.32% (SD = 41) of extinction memory and lesbian women retained 37.32% (SD = 69). However, these results are not yet significant. CONCLUSION: Results suggest that contrary to our hypothesis, heterosexual women are retaining more extinction memory than lesbian women. However, more participants are needed to determine significance. A power analysis suggests that 14 participants in each group will be enough to determine significance with 80% accuracy. If future data support our hypothesis, they would suggest there are phenotypical differences between heterosexual and lesbian women that affect fear conditioned memories and cognition. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 237 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 456 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 07A Elizabeth McNulty, Samantha L Blache, Julie Bernazzani, Deborah McMakin (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University The Impact of Commitment Level and Gender on Communication Methods between Romantic Partners Today new technologies have created more options to choose from in terms of communication than ever before. This study was designed to explore the impact of both commitment level and gender on the methods of communication used within romantic relationships. Surveys were randomly distributed to 240 college students. Participants were asked to read one of four scenarios depicting either a male or female who was either in a highly committed relationship or in a non-committed relationship. Participants were asked to rate their level of agreement with which forms of communication the scenario character would use to communicate with his/her romantic partner based on the perceived commitment level of the scenario character. Participants also provided information regarding their personal choices of communication methods with his/her romantic partner and provided demographic information. We expect our results to indicate that men will perceive scenario characters to use more indirect methods of communication than women. In addition, we expect that college students who read about a scenario character depicted in a non-committed relationship will perceive the scenario character to use less direct methods of communication than scenario characters depicted in a highly committed relationship. Our findings will discuss the implications of more indirect and less personal methods of communication being utilized by college students. Recent developments and dependence on technology will also be discussed. 457 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 18A Rima Bonemery, Deborah McMakin (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University Kiss and Don’t Tell Much research has examined the acceptability of emotional infidelity and sexual infidelity based on gender. However little is known about the perceptions of the different types of sexual infidelities in regard to forgiveness. This study explored college students views on different types of relationship infidelities. The sample included 250 (half women) at a small northeastern university. The majority of participants were Caucasian and ages ranged from 18-25 years old. Surveys were randomly distributed, such that an equal number of participants read scenarios depicting either a long term or short term relationship and either an act of kissing or sexual intercourse infidelity. Participants provide demographic information and completed the following scales: Rosenberg’s Self Esteem scale, Forgiveness Scale, Dyadic Trust Scale, and Relationship Issue Scale. A 2 X 2 X 2 Between Subjects ANOVA is expected to reveal that people will be more likely to forgive an act of kissing more so than sexual intercourse. Furthermore, they will be more likely to forgive their partners transgression in a long term relationship more so than a short term relationship. Results are expected to suggest that women will be overall more forgiving of infidelity than men. Understanding of forgiveness towards infidelity and its impact on relationship development among college students will be discussed. Key words: infidelity, forgiveness, gender, relationship duration, cheating, monogamous, 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 238 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 458 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 44A Erin L O’Reilly, Emily R Phillips, Adrianna Bourdon, Deborah McMakin (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University Gender Differences and Reciprocal Liking: The Role of Physical Attractiveness While reciprocal liking is a mediating factor in potential partner selection, the level of attractiveness of the potential partner may also influence the response of reciprocal liking. The present study was designed to assess gender differences in response to reciprocal liking, and the role of physical attractiveness of the self and potential partners among students at a small northeastern university. Participants included 240 college students (50% women), who were either single or in a relationship. Participants completed a short questionnaire and were randomly assigned to one of eight scenario conditions depicting either an attractive or unattractive male or female pursuing a peer. After reading the scenario, participants completed the Reciprocal Liking Scale (BOP-RLS), the Physical-Concept Scale (BOP-PCS), the Desired Partner Scale (BOP-DPS), the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale (Rosenberg, 1965), and finally, demographic information. We anticipate finding support for gender differences in men and women’s reported levels of perceived reciprocal liking for physically attractive and unattractive potential partners. Additionally, it is expected that there will be a strong positive correlation between self-esteem and self-attractiveness for men and women, as well as a strong positive correlation between body-esteem and rated self-attractiveness for men and women, respectively. Implications for gender differences in response to reciprocal liking when selecting a romantic partner will be discussed. Keywords: gender differences, reciprocal liking, mutual interest, liking, partner selection, dating, “love-is-blind bias”, relationships, physical attractiveness, attraction, self-esteem, self-concept, self-perception. 459 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 17A Alysia Boyle, Paula Pietromonaco (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst Congruence between Spouses’ Perceptions and Observers’ Ratings of Support: The Moderating Role of Attachment Style Positive perceptions of spousal support have been linked to a variety of health benefits, such as lower mortality rates and improved emotional well-being (Cohen, 2004; Uchino, 2009). Past research has suggested that perceptions of support may vary due to individuals’ attachment style, which guides their expectations and behaviors in close relationships. Although previous work has examined the connection between attachment style and perceptions of support, few studies have examined how the perceptions of people with more secure or insecure attachment styles align with observers’ ratings of actual behavior. The present research investigated this question with a sample of 225 newlywed couples who attempted to resolve a marital conflict. We predicted that newlyweds’ attachment style would contribute to differences in their subjective perceptions of support and their supportive behaviors. Both partners’ behaviors were rated by third-party observers regarding how supportive they were of their spouse during the conflict discussion. Partners also reported their own perceptions of how supportive they were of their spouse and how supportive their spouse was of them. Results revealed that husbands higher in avoidance (i.e., uncomfortable with intimacy) perceived both themselves and their spouse as less supportive, although neither they nor their spouse were rated as less supportive by third-party observers compared to husbands lower in avoidance. Wives higher in avoidance also perceived both themselves and their spouse to be less supportive compared to wives low in avoidance, but only the wives were rated as behaving less supportively by third-party observers. The reverse effect was seen in wives high in anxiety. Anxious wives perceived both themselves and their spouse as less supportive as compared to wives lower in anxiety, but only their husbands were rated as less supportive by third-party observers. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 239 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 460 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 13A Brianna M Sostilio, Meghan Bullock, Deborah McMakin (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University Relationship Violence Among College Students Relationship violence among young adults and teens has been on the rise. Both physical and verbal abuse has increased in these young adult relationships. This study investigated college students’ acceptability of intimate partner violence within long-term and short-term college relationships. Participants included 240 undergraduates (120 men) of whom majority were Caucasian. Participants were randomly assigned to read one of four scenarios depicting either physical or verbal abuse in either a short term or long term relationship. Next they completed questions relating to their acceptability of abuse on the scenario, the Buss Perry Aggression Scale, Rosenberg Self Esteem Scale, and Relationship Satisfaction Scale. Results are expected to show that men will report greater acceptance of aggression in intimate relationships than will women. Additionally, students will report greater acceptance of aggression in short-term relationships than in long-term ones. Implications for addressing these issues on college campuses will be discussed. Keywords: acceptability, aggression, short-term relationship, long-term relationship 461 Concourse 11:35-12:20 Board 72C Jarad Bushnell, Susan McPherson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English Literature, Quinsigamond Community College The Appeal and Subliminal Influence of the Golden Ratio: A Psychological Approach The Appeal and Subliminal Influence of the Golden Ratio A Psychological Approach J. T. Bushnell ABSTRACT PURPOSE: Throughout history, the visual charisma of the golden ratio has been the intrigue of philosophers, mathematicians, architects, and artists. It is said that when the proportions of an object or shape are closest to that of the golden ratio (1:1.618) they are more visually engaging. In the 1860s, psychologists took interest in this seemingly intrinsic, optical charm. Around the same time, marketers did as well. Since then, many studies have been conducted on the golden ratio’s effect on human emotion and the psyche. This paper hopes to establish a connection between the psychological influences of the golden ratio when subtly incorporated into modern marketing design. METHODS: Using scholarly texts and psychology studies conducted between 1860 and 2008, this paper traces the collective scientific conclusion that there is a visual agreeableness contained within the golden ratio and that it does, in fact, influence human emotion. RESULTS: Early studies which concluded in favor of a proportional appeal were criticized due to the rudimentary research techniques of the time. Leading up to 2008, a distinct timeline is present which consists of studies which all concluded in favor of a certain visual charm. Each newer study eliminated the shortcomings of the previous, was retested, and concluded that there is a firm relationship between human emotion and the golden ratio. CONCLUSION: Through this century-long collection of psychological data, a connection between the golden ratio and human emotion has been proven. With this, coupled with advertising’s increasing interest in the golden ratio’s psychological appeal, marketers have been garnering much consumer attention by designing ads, brands, logos, layouts and packaging according to a 1:1.618 ratio. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 240 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 462 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 37A Audrey Carr, Nancy Forger (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst The Effects of Sex and Age on Postnatal Cell Death in the Mouse Amygdala Programmed cell death, or apoptosis, is central to the normal development of the brain. This study tracked the time course of apoptosis in the mouse brain, specifically focusing on three areas of the amygdala. The amygdala has been shown to be involved in emotional processing and fear, as well as many other functions. Certain regions of the amygdala show sex differences in adulthood. Dying cells were stained using immunocytochemistry and the volume of these regions, as well as the number of dying cells per region, were quantified on postnatal days 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, and 11. We found that males had a significantly higher volume in the basolateral and medial amygdala by day 11. Our study is the first to suggest a sex difference in the volume of the basolateral amygdala. Additionally, we found a strong age effect, with cell death generally decreasing as the animal aged. However, the density of dying cells in each area peaked at a different time point, suggesting region-specific sexual differentiation in the amygdala. 463 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 34A Maheen Chaudhry, Rebecca Ready (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst Differential Effects of Stress on Nonverbal Subtests of WAIS-IV High stakes decisions are based on neuropsychological test data, such as diagnosis of specific learning disabilities and mental retardation. Thus, it is crucial to understand how stress affects test scores on the most contemporary IQ measure, the WAIS-IV. Previous studies have shown negative effects of anxiety on performance on various cognitive tasks; however, these studies either used a single assessment technique or tested only one or two tasks from previous versions of the WAIS. The current study sought to examine the relationship of anxiety, determined by both the self-report measures and physiological data, and performance on the WAIS-IV. Stress is expected to negatively impact performance on perceptual and visuospatial tasks significantly more than performance on verbal tasks. Participants (n=25) were administered the WAIS-IV, the PANAS, TIPI, and stress self-reported data were obtained. The four saliva samples, each followed by a PANAS, were evenly spaced out throughout testing to obtain a comprehensive measure of physiological stress response. Results indicate that the WAIS-IV Perceptual Reasoning Index (PRI) significantly correlates with selfreported anxiety (r = -.40, p < 0.05) and with average cortisol (r = 0.41, p = 0.05). Contrary to the prediction, the results imply that higher levels of cortisol may positively affect performance on perceptual reasoning tasks. Nonetheless, people who reported higher test anxiety performed worse than those who reported lower test anxiety. This finding implies that certain levels of stress might be beneficial to performance on perceptual tasks, whereas it has no significant effect on verbal performance. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 241 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 464 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 21A Jacqueline M Messina, Haley Chrisos, Anna Flanagan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University Effect of Relatedness and Emotional Valence of Images on False Memory and Accuracy This study was designed to examine the effects of emotional valence and relatedness on false memory and memory accuracy. Participants included 116 undergraduate students between the ages of 18 to 24 who were randomly selected to view one of four PowerPoint presentations in a classroom setting. Each presentation represented a different emotional valence (neutral or negative) and relatedness (related or unrelated) of images. Each of the 54 black and white images within each presentation was shown on a projection screen in the front of the classroom for approximately 2 s each. Prior to the PowerPoint presentation, participants’ self reported mood and self-esteem were examined. After the presentation of images, a demographics questionnaire was distributed to the participants as a buffer activity. Once the buffer activity was completed, a recognition test assessed participants’ level of false memory and overall accuracy recognition of presented images. It was found that neutral and related images produced more false memories than negative and unrelated images. Overall, emotional valence and relatedness of images had no effect on the accuracy of memory. Additionally, participants’ mood and self-esteem were unrelated to both their false memory and accuracy. Implications for the reliability of eyewitness testimonies and mental health diagnoses are discussed. 465 Concourse 11:35-12:20 Board 68C Tesiah Coleman, Michele Wolfson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Cape Cod Community College Human Trafficking Throughout this project light will be shed on the history and current state of human trafficking in many countries around the world. One hundred and sixty one countries are affected by human trafficking, says the Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking. Human trafficking has been, and continues to be, an issue faced by countries all around the world. According to The Advocates for Human Rights, both sex trafficking and labor trafficking are the second largest, as well as the fastest growing, criminal industries in the world. While looking at the history of this industry, special note will be taken of the psychology effects on the victims involved. The Advocates for Human Rights noted that ninety-eight percent of forced commercial sexual exploitation are women and girls. Women and girls also represent as many as fiftysix percent of forced economic exploitation. Through looking at the history of human trafficking around the world, as well as in the U.S, we can begin to understand the catastrophic effects human trafficking has on its victims. We can slowly become aware, and take steps towards putting an end to this immoral industry. 466 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 77A Laura Coutinho, Susan Dutch (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Westfield State University Healthy Choices in Coffee Consumption The medical community talks often about an obesity epidemic that is plaguing the United States. They implore people to make healthier choices such as taking the stairs instead of the elevator, and making healthier choices with regards to food and drink. One of the American staples in the daily diet is coffee. A large number of Americans go to establishments and order coffee on their way to work to help start their day. This experiment seeks to find out if people act on the recommendations for healthier choices when they order coffee. It is hypothesized that women will make more healthy choices than men when they order their coffee. This hypothesis is based on the fact that the media sends messages to women every day on the importance of looking good, with both beautiful and underweight models. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 242 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 467 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 23A Victoria Creedon, Rebecca Ready (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst Age and Emotion Films: Age differences in physiological and emotional responses to mood-inducing films Age influences the way in which we interpret, respond to, and regulate emotions. We employed mood questionnaires, such as PANAS, DAES, and BDI, to monitor the states of our participants’ emotions throughout the experiment, during which time our participants were subjected to positive and negative valence film clips. Our study consisted of 20 adult participants from three age groups, young, midlife, and older. Upon analysis of these data, we expect to see age differences. Previous research shows that older adults report fewer negative emotions than younger adults (Charles et al., 2001). We expect this trend to be similar to our findings. We expect that mood recovery from the negative stimuli will be profound in older adults, regardless of the state of memory. These findings will allow a more complete understanding of age differences in emotional reactivity and regulation. 468 Concourse 11:35-12:20 Board 74C Todd Crivello, Susan McPherson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English Literature, Quinsigamond Community College Epigenetics This presentation shall examine the emerging paradigm of epigenetics. Epigenetics is becoming more popular among research institutes and universities as the twenty-first century continues to pass by. The presentation will give a brief history of epigenetics and how it becomes a topic of research. The history will lead up to the modern age, where researchers such as Bruce Lipton and Dawson Church are looking into the interesting topic of epigenetics. Through their research and others’, the topic of epigenetics will be explained. The theoretical uses of epigenetics will also be covered. Taking the idea of the theoretical possibilities, the presentation will display various studies that have been done using the concept of epigenetics as a therapy for certain diseases. The studies will showcase treatments on diseases such as cancer and myeloma and the results of these clinical studies. The presentation will wrap up with an eye towards the future of epigenetic research. The presentation will explain that the human genome is in the process of being mapped. Once mapped, the concept of epigenetics can be applied much more effectively to cure diseases. The presentation will show the efforts that are being made to map the human genome. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 243 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 469 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 13A Dasha Daniels, Rebecca Spencer (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst Sleep Dependent Consolidation of Value Based Learning in Young Adults PURPOSE: Value based learning requires deciphering between important and irrelevant information (Castel, McCabe & Balota, 2009). Research indicates that young adults remember information of high value more accurately and frequently than low value information, suggesting that correct recall increases as value increases (Castel, Farb & Craik, 2007). The present study aims to investigate the effects of sleep on value-based learning. Sleep enhances memory consolidation. Recent research suggests that this sleep benefit may be selective, e.g. depending on expected future relevance (Wilhelm et al., 2011) or emotional salience of the material (Payne et al, 2008). This study investigated whether the sleep benefit would be specific for material that is deemed to be of higher value. METHODS: Young adult participants (aged 1830) were tested over two sessions divided by 12 hours of daytime wake or overnight sleep. Participants studied words that were each assigned a numerical value between 1-20 and were instructed to remember as many words as possible as well as to try to score as high as possible (calculated by the sum of values each correctly recalled word). Session 1 consisted of learning and immediate free recall of word-value pairs. Session 2 consisted of delayed free recall, cued-recall and recognition based on the previous word-value pairs learned during session 1. RESULTS: Sleep group participants remembered more words in general and obtained higher recall scores than the wake group, and consequently were more likely to recall not only more words but also words of higher value; F(1,32) = 5.102, p = .031. In addition, participants who slept were more likely to accurately recognize words from the first session that were mixed among a group of foil words; F(1,32)=13.895, p = .001. CONCLUSION: Sleep selectively enhances important information over less important information in value-based learning. 470 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 26A Jaclyn Duridas, Cynthia Prehar (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University Personal Space as a Function of Intruder and Sitter Gender This study used naturalistic observation to investigate the influence of gender on personal space preferences. Building on prior research, it was hypothesized that intruders would give female sitters less personal space than male sitters. Secondly, it was predicted that female intruders would require less personal space than male intruders. Participants included 62 male and female students in a computer lab at a small, public university. Four researchers coded intruder gender and gender of the person already sitting. The number of vacant seats between the intruder and the sitter was also recorded to measure personal space preferences. Coders achieved high inter-rater reliability (97-100% agreement) on all variables. Chi-square analyses were used to examine both hypotheses. Contrary to expectations, no relationship emerged between gender of the sitter and personal space given to them (p = .12) or gender of the intruder and personal space preferences (p = .45). Timing of the observations was a limitation in this study as intruders had few choices of where to sit during busier observation times. Future studies could improve upon this limitation by observing personal space preferences in larger locations or during slower times of the day when more choices are available. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 244 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 471 Concourse 11:35-12:20 Board 70C Tami Durrigan, Tom Grady (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Bristol Community College Current Risky Fads Related to Alcohol Abuse This presentation will investigate the psychological and social perspectives on teen alcoholism. The reasons for engaging in risky behaviors will be explored, including the latest invention teens are using to get “high” fast. It will include how this form of ingestion leaves no signs of alcohol consumption because the alcohol enters the blood stream directly through the colon and not the stomach. It will include the significant impact this newly developed behavior has made on the world since been reported in the media and labeled and “epidemic”. 472 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 45A Luke Eglington, Erik Blaser (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Boston Toddlers With ASD Are Better at Visual Search Without Trying Harder: A Pupillometric Study Introduction: Recently, we found that 2.5-year-olds with Autism Spectrum Disorder are much better than age-matched, typically developing controls at ‘feature conjunction’ visual search (e.g. finding the target up to 2-3x as often in a fixed duration trial, Kaldy et al., 2011). But how does the ASD group achieve superior performance? One hypothesis is that they exert greater cognitive effort than typically developing children (searching more dedicatedly and/or faster), while another is that they search more efficiently. To examine this, we compared changes in pupil dilation (a standard measure of cognitive effort, Beatty, 1982) during search. Methods: A unique aspect of our search paradigm is that it does not require verbal instructions, making it ideal for populations with weak language skills. 17 typically developing toddlers and 17 with ASD participated (diagnosis was confirmed by ADOS, mean age: 29.6 +/- 4.8 months). Test stimuli consisted of four single-feature trials (color and shape; set sizes 5 or 9) and nine conjunction trials (set sizes 5, 9 or 13) in mixed blocks. The display was presented for 4 seconds, then the target item rotated; acting as feedback and reward. A Tobii T120 recorded eye movements and pupil diameter throughout. Results: There were no significant differences in pupil changes between the ASD and the typically developing group during search, or any of the other trial events (onset, offset, reward animation). Conclusion: Pupillometry indicates that toddlers with ASD do not exert greater cognitive effort (i.e. search harder) in conjunctive visual search than typically developing children (consistent with measures such as number of fixations and overall search time per trial, which are also not significantly different). Instead, the ASD group’s superior performance is likely due to perceptual and attentional factors that raise target saliency and hence the efficiency of guided search. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 245 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 473 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 06A Lauren Doyle, Taylor Ehrhardt, Deborah McMakin (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University Transitions: Perceptions of Stress for Freshmen and Senior Undergraduates as a Function of Gender and Level of Support The many transitions of college for most individuals can bring about high levels of stress. This study investigated the negative impact stress may have on an individual’s life if one does not have a fully functioning support system present. A sample of 240 (120 male) undergraduates ranging in age from 18 to 25 years participated in this study. The sample was comprised of a majority of Caucasian students varying in class status. Participants were randomly assigned to read eight different scenarios about college students experiencing different levels of academic support in stressful situations; such that an equal number of males and females read each scenario. After reading about the scenario character, they answered a series of questions about how they perceived the scenario character would react to stress. Then they completed measures of every day stressors, and levels of support. Based on results from a 2X2X2 Between Subject Anova, it is predicted that college students will perceive senior college peers as experiencing greater levels of stress than freshmen peers. Research will be discussed in relation to the implications of stress related factors as they relate to student social supports on college campuses. Findings will also be discussed as to the impact stress and social support may have on academic success. keywords: college students, stress, social support, sex, college, academic success, life transitions, coping 474 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 05A Vanesa Estrella, Kim Hicks (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Holyoke Community College T he Dynamics and History of Doctor/Patient Relationships This research explored the dynamics and history of doctor and patient relationships between the times of the Ancient Egyptians to present time. With current quality care being patient-centered, going back in history reveals that this was not always the case. Doctors were originally high regarded as being the expert, whereas the patient was obedient, putting his or her full trust in their doctor’s expertise. With today’s advanced technology, there’s an expectation of doctors and patients to look upon each other as equals, coming to a conclusion of treatment that satisfies both parties. There’s a concern that patients who do not raise their voices are often not given as high quality a care compared to patients who do. Research was done through an internet search of databases and articles, as well as asking related questions from medical professionals themselves. With this information, a chronological list of centered care was compiled, a possible correlation discovered between relationships and world events. It was also discovered how often the dynamics changed, especially with the importance of patient rights and technological advancements of medical care. Also, with the recognition of the individuality of both doctors and patients, care was varied. The research is a large, ongoing process with no real conclusions in sight. What is known today may change tomorrow. Despite this, current research reveals that there has been a great change in history with likely more to come. Unfortunately, not all doctors or patients adhere to today’s current patient-centered expectations and this leaves gaps in care quality and equality. It’s unsure as to whether future shifts will be more in favors of patients or in favor of the medical professionals who care for them. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 246 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 475 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 22A Lauryn Fennell, Anna Flanagan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University The Perceived Effects of Coping Style and Spirituality on Stress Level and College Adjustment It is important to investigate how individual factors interact with environmental and sociocultural influences to better individual outcomes during transitional phases. Therefore, understanding the perceived differences in experienced stress levels and college adjustment as affected by coping style and level of spirituality may help students during periods of transition. This study investigated the perceptions of experienced stress and college adjustment as influenced by coping style (task-, emotion-, and avoidance-oriented) and level of spirituality (none, internal, and external). There were 242 undergraduate college participants, aged 18 to 26 years, of whom 78.9% were women and 87.6% were Caucasian. After informed consent procedures, participants completed one of nine scenarios that varied coping style (task-oriented; emotion-oriented; avoidant-oriented) and spirituality level (external; internal; no affiliation). Participants completed two surveys assessing the scenario character (Student Stress Scale and College Adjustment Test), three surveys assessing participant data (brief COPE, Student Stress Inventory, and College Adjustment Test), and a brief demographics. As expected, avoidance-oriented characters were perceived to be significantly more stressed and be worse adjusted to college than task- or emotion-oriented characters. Also, the character with no spiritual affiliation was perceived to be significantly more stressed. Participant data reflected that students who were externally spiritual exhibited better college adjustment than students who were both internally and externally spiritual. Additionally, externally spiritual students exhibited less stress than students who reported being internally and externally spiritual. Further implications are discussed. 476 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 31A John A Ward, Timothy Flynn, Deborah McMakin (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University Academic Parental Pressure: To Cheat or Not To Cheat Academic dishonesty has been on the rise in recent years (Newstead, Franklyn-Stokes, & Armstead 1996). The first step in correcting the problem is to understand some of the motivations behind cheating. This study examined such motivations in a sample of 240 undergraduate participants ranging in age from 18-25 years. Participants were randomly arranged to read one of four scenarios depicting either a male or female college student with either high or low levels of parental pressure to achieve. Next they completed a questionnaire assessing the scenario characters likelihood of cheating along with personal information. Results will be analyzed using 2 X 2 Between Subject ANOVAs’. It is expected that students will report a greater likelihood of scenario character engaging in academic dishonesty when parental pressure is heightened. It is also expected that students will report male scenario characters to engage in more cheating regardless of parental pressure than female students. Results will be discussed in terms of prevalence of cheating in relation to parental pressure and potential coping strategies for students. Key Words: Parental Pressure, Cheating, Plagerising 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 247 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 477 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 16A Nicholas Fox, Anna Flanagan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University Perceived Effects of Biological Sex and Gender Stereotyped Careers on Occupational Stress and Gender This study investigated college students’ perceptions of biological sex and gender stereotyped occupations on gender and occupational stress. Data were collected from 127 undergraduate students (64 male, 63 female) with a mean age of 20.37 years (SD=1.37) from a small Massachusetts state university. Participants were randomly assigned to read one of four scenarios. The scenario described a character as being male or female with a masculine or feminine occupation. The perceived gender, masculinity or femininity, and the perceived stress of a scenario character were assessed through the BEM Androgyny Test and the Perceived Stress Scale. The gender and the stress of the participants were then assessed using the same measures. Differences in ratings of gender were found in the perceptions of the scenario characters as well as the participants. For the scenario character, it seemed as if gender stereotyped occupation had a stronger influence on gender perception than biological sex. This was suggested by higher ratings of masculinity for a female firefighter than for a male nurse. In regard to participant ratings of gender, male participants rated themselves more masculine than the female participants did. There were no differences found in the participant stress ratings for perceptions of the scenario characters or for the participant data. Interestingly, participant stress levels were correlated with the number of reported work hours per week. Results suggest that stress levels may not reflect the type of work but the amount of time spent working. Implications for future research in gender studies are discussed. 478 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 09A Caitlin Gauvin, Linda Isbell (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst The Effect of Mindfulness Meditation and Mortality Salience on Judgment of Social Transgressions and Death-thought Accessibility Mortality salience (i.e., the knowledge of one’s impending death), has a negative emotional impact on individuals by inducing fear. Such effects often lead to negative judgments of individuals and situations involving social transgressions, and also lead to increased accessibility of thoughts related to death. This study examines the extent to which mindfulness meditation can be used to reduce or eliminate these effects. Two hundred participants were randomly assigned to one of four conditions: mindfulness/mortality salience, mindfulness/control (no mortality salience), nonmindfulness (control) /mortality salience, and non-mindfulness (control)/control (no mortality salience). To prime for mindfulness, we guided participants through a mindful eating task in which they were led to eat three small food items (raisin, chocolate covered pretzel, and a vegetable chip) in a highly experiential manner. In the non-mindfulness (control) condition, participants were not provided with these instructions and instead simply sampled the food items. Regardless of condition, participants wrote about each food item. Next, participants were asked either to answer questions about their own death (mortality salience conditions), or about watching television (control conditions). Following a distracter task, participants read and rated the severity of social transgressions described in a series of vignettes. Finally, death thought accessibility was measured using a word-completion task. Although data collection is not yet complete, we expect to find that mindfulness meditation will decrease the severity of individuals’ judgments of social transgressions. In addition, we predict that mindfulness will similarly decrease death thought accessibility. Such findings would shed important new light on the helpful role that mindfulness may play in regulating challenging emotional experiences. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 248 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 479 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 20A Richard D Wiggill, Elizabeth Gilliam, Cynthia Prehar (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University Type of Touch as a Function of Initiator and Recipient Gender The importance of gender in predicting differences in touch initiation and reception was explored using naturalistic observation on a university campus. Participants were 68 mixed- and same-sex dyads who were unaware they were being observed. Observation and coding occurred in public areas on weekdays during the daytime. A chi square analysis revealed that, overall, males initiated more touches (p = .02) and received more touches (p < .001) than females. However, females initiated and received more non-hand touches than males. These findings help to update research on gender and touch from the 1990’s (e.g., Hall & Veccia, 1990; Willis & Dodds, 1998). Future research could benefit from examining a larger and more diverse sample. 480 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 21A Corinne Golash, Paula Pietromonaco (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst The Relationship Between Risky Family Background and Marital Satisfaction Risky families, in which children are exposed to overt conflict, aggression, and a lack of warmth, can produce numerous deficiencies within a child’s emotional regulatory mechanisms, thus affecting their emotional and psychological functioning in adulthood. The present study investigated associations between risky family background and marital satisfaction. Two-hundred and fourteen heterosexual couples (N = 428 individuals) completed individual questionnaires about themselves and their relationship with their spouse, in addition to discussing an area of conflict in their relationship. It was found that exposure to a harsh family environment during childhood was associated with lower marital relationship satisfaction. Potential applications and implications of this research are outlined. 481 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 39A Kathy S Vieira, Tyler J Guay, Hannah Gorman, Deborah McMakin (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University The Influence of Alcohol and Relationship Status on Perceptions of Rape Victim Blame Sexual assault is a widespread issue on college campuses and this study was conducted to help gather information on college student’s perceptions on sexual assault. In addition, purpose of this study was to expand on previous research by examining college students’ perceptions of victim blame in sexual assault. Our group focused on contributing factors such as alcohol, relationship status, gender stereotypes, and how these factors could influence victim blame. A total of 240 undergraduate participants ranging in age from 18 to 25 years from a small state university were randomly assigned to four conditions involving a sexual assault. Participants read one of four scenarios depicting a sexual assault, either with the presence of alcohol with either a stranger or an acquaintance. Next they completed the Rape Myth Acceptance Scale, the Double Standard Scale, a personal demographic questionnaire, and an Alcohol Consumption Scale. Results will be analyzed by using a 2 X 2 X 2 between factors ANOVA. It is predicted that participants’ perceptions of victim blame will be influenced by a number of contributing factors. Implications of our study will be derived in terms of college student’s awareness of attributions made about sexual behaviors in a college environment. Keywords: college students, sexual assault, victim blame, gender stereotypes, double standard, rape myths 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 249 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 482 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 79A Amber Goulart, Seth Surgan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Worcester State University Check You Out! Facial Symmetry and Self Esteem Among College Women The current study looks at facial symmetry and self-esteem based on Festinger’s (1954) social comparison theory. Previous research (Cash, Cash, & Butters, 1983; Baldwin & Wesley, 1996; Tiggemann & McGill, 2004) has established that self-esteem is affected by comparison between oneself and one’s peers. Other research has found that comparing one’s own attractiveness to others’ can significantly affect self-esteem (Cash, et al., 1983; Thorton & Moore 1993, Thorton & Maurice 1999). This research, however, has been vague about what sorts of comparisons count and which do not. This purpose of this project is to isolate facial symmetry as the dimension along which comparisons are made. Data collection will begin at the end of February. Students will be measuring the symmetry of either their own face or a face that is either symmetrical or asymmetrical. Using a one-way ANOVA with planned comparisons, we hope to find that students who measure their own face will have lower self esteem students measuring the facial symmetry of others. However, those who are measuring the facial symmetry of an asymmetrical person will have higher self esteem than those who are measuring the facial symmetry of a symmetrical person. 483 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 19A Stephanie Gover, Dan Anderson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst The Differential Effects of Media on Parent Language This study assessed the difference between parent-child interactions during storybook reading as compared to television viewing. Forty 30-month old children were randomly assigned to either watch TV or read a storybook with their parent for 30 minutes. Each condition had 20 parent-child dyads. The video observations were transcribed for parent language and coded for average length of utterances, number of new words, and total number of utterances. It is predicted that the quality and quantity of parent-child interaction will be enhanced, during storybook reading compared to the parentchild interaction during television viewing. 484 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 46A Thomas Gregory, Michael Milburn (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Boston Authoritarian Attitudes towards Environmental Issues with Mortality Salience The scientific community is almost in total agreement that burning fossil fuels today is the greatest contribution to carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Evidence also indicates that pollution and deforestation has disturbed the earth’s ecosystem. However, there are individuals who believe these scientific findings are a “hoax,“ invented by environmentalists and left wing liberals designed to force conservational changes to society. A person classified as a high Right Wing Authoritarian (RWA) is defined by a strong desire for conformity, conventionalism, social conservatism and either a natural tendency to follow orders, or dominate others. Current research has found an association between conservative values such as conventionalism and denial of environmental issues. Studies have shown that high RWA’s have consistently rejected warnings of disaster from environmental problems and believe that science and technology will be able to alleviate any pollution problems that mankind has created. Confronting environmental destruction requires acknowledging a serious threat. This threat could stimulate high RWA’s to become defensive and engage in system-justification. According to System Justification Theory, the way a person feels about their social system depends on existential needs to feel safe and secure in it. Previous research has also shown that salient reminders of death increase the need for cultural validation, resulting in affection for those that share cultural beliefs and distain for those who threaten them. This experimental research shows how high RWA’s express a lack of concern for environmental concerns, and how mortality salience manipulation enhances their lack of concern. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 250 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 485 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 19A Delia Guo, Pamela Ludemann (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University The Effect of Spirituality on Health Behavior and Well-Being of College Students’ Coping in Response to Stressful Situations This study was designed to examine gender differences in spirituality and the effects on health favoring behaviors, well-being, and coping with stress in a college student population. A sample of 127 men and women read positive or negative scenarios depicting characters facing familiar stressful circumstances and rated anticipated cognitive and social coping responses. Self-report questionnaires on spirituality, life satisfaction, optimism, self-actualization, health locus of control, relaxation methods, and demographics were also completed. Results showed that those scoring high on spirituality tended to be optimistic, felt in control of their health, and exercised regularly. Women and those identifying as spiritual reported praying as a relaxation technique and recommended use of positive cognitive and social coping methods for handling stress. The result of this study may be of use to campus counselors when offering supportive services or developing programs related to stress management given the strain of balancing academic, social, financial, and family roles. 486 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 02A Andrew Allen, James Haley, Wayne Klug (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Berkshire Community College Do nationality and socioeconomic status predict views on poverty and wealth? A comparative analysis of attributions by Russian and American college students An “attribution” is a causal explanation based on a guess—often a biased one. With regard to income inequality, the authors hypothesized that people of different SES, or living in countries with different economic systems, would make attributions for poverty and wealth that reflect their class’s or country’s dominant assumptions. They analyzed responses to an internet questionnaire from 450 randomly-selected university students, recruited by e-mail, in Russia and the United States; they also compared responses from different socioeconomic statuses within the U.S. Russian attributions were significantly more “structural” (citing circumstances) than those of Americans, although paradoxically, with respect to poverty, they were also somewhat more “dispositional” (citing reasons within the individual). Significantly more dispositional were American attributions for wealth. In the U.S. alone, attributions by students of lower SES were more structural than those by students of higher SES, although unexpectedly, there were no significant differences among the strata in dispositional attributions. Results suggest that the overall Russian preference for structural explanations reflects the country’s socialist history, but that capitalist “shock therapy” imposed there in recent decades—dominating the lives of young adult respondents—may account for their ambivalence about the causes of poverty. Within the U.S., too, recent developments may offset tradition: the preference for structural explanations by students of lower SES may reflect the influence of the current recession, while a capitalist tradition of “blaming the victim” may account for the absence of class-based differences in dispositional explanations for poverty. Results support claims that people’s social “understandings” reflect competing ideologies. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 251 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 487 Concourse 11:35-12:20 Board 71A Helen Hardy, Susan McPherson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English Literature, Quinsigamond Community College Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation: A New Treatment for Depression Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation, known as TMS, is a new method of treating depression in a non-invasive, painless way, without the need for medication. A magnetic coil is placed on the head over the left frontal cortex of the brain. Magnetic impulses are then sent through the skull to the brain to stimulate the neurons. This process is repeated numerous times over a period of two weeks. While TMS is a very new treatment with only a handful of clinics, it is hoped that in the future it will become a more widely used alternative to anti-depressant medications. The focus of this presentation will be to shed light on this new therapy. 488 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 38A Grace Hauck, Maureen Perry-Jenkins (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst Rocking the Boat: The Instability of Low-Income Single Mothers’ Family Structure and Role Overload PURPOSE: The percent of births to unmarried mothers in the United States increased from 18.4% in 1980 to 40.6% in 2008. Although a great deal of research has focused on the effects of family structure on parent and child outcomes, more recent research suggests that beyond family structure, the more important aspect to examine is instability in structure. Specifically, it has been shown that multiple shifts across statuses such as married, cohabiting, and single are far more problematic than family structure per se. The current study examines how family structure and instability in family structure (e.g., noncohabiting partnered, cohabiting partnered, married, or living alone) is related to new mothers role overload across the transition to parenthood. METHODS: The current research uses data from the Work and Family Transition Project, a longitudinal study of 207, primarily single and cohabiting, low-income mothers, experiencing the transition to parenthood. Mothers were interviewed in their homes 5 times across the transition to parenthood and provided information of family demographics, mental health and major life changes. RESULTS: At the start of the study, there were 30 married mothers, 80 mothers cohabiting with the biological father, and 94 single mothers. After the first year, only 1 of the 30 married mothers had gotten a divorce In contrast, 22 of the 80 cohabiters had a change in family structure, and 24 of the 94 single mothers experienced a change. Thus, although a majority of families remained stable, a sizable percentage experienced significant changes in family structure over the first year of parenthood. CONCLUSION: Future analyses will explore how stability or instability in family structure over the first year of parenthood predicts maternal well-being. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 252 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 489 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 09A Julianne LeGere, Rebecca Holmes, Anna Flanagan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University The Perceived Effects of Romantic Attachment Style and Family Structure on Quality of Romantic Relationships and Sexual Behaviors and Attitudes The purpose of this study was to examine how romantic attachment style and family structure may affect perceptions of romantic relationship quality and sexual behaviors and attitudes. Participants were 173 college students between the ages of 18 and 25 years who read scenarios depicting a character with either a secure, avoidant, or anxious attachment style and an intact or non-intact family structure. Participants answered survey questions about romantic relationship quality and sexual behaviors and attitudes based on the scenarios. Results indicated that participants perceived anxious and avoidant scenario characters to have lower quality romantic relationships than secure scenario characters. Participants also perceived secure scenario characters and scenario characters from an intact family to have more positive sexual behaviors than avoidant or anxious scenario characters and scenario characters from non-intact families. Results regarding perceptions of sexual attitudes were mixed. Implications for adolescent health and education are discussed. 490 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 27A Joanna Hong, Paula Pietromonaco (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst Spouses’ Attachment Styles as a Predictor of Salivary Alpha-Amylase Responses to a Conflict Discussion Purpose: Assessment of salivary alpha-amylase (sAA) as a non-invasive marker for sympathetic nervous system has gained great attention. Analysis of sAA has been readily used to assess physiological responses to stressful external stimuli. A growing literature indicates that attachment style may be closely connected to physiological responses to stress, but little is known about the link between attachment and sympathetic nervous system responses to stress in adults. The current work examines this link, which may have important implications for adults’ emotional and physical health outcomes over time. Methods: Participants included both members of 225 newlywed couples. Each spouse provided saliva at times that reflected physiological stress before, during and after a conflict negotiation task with their partner. Participants also completed a variety of questionnaires, including a standard measure of adult romantic attachment that assessed the two dimensions of attachment avoidance and anxiety. Results: As expected, more insecurely attachment individuals showed disrupted patterns of sAA activity in comparison to those who were more secure. In particularly, attachment avoidance predicted higher salivary alpha amylase before the conflict and lower recovery after the conflict discussion ended. Conclusions: Attachment style is associated in a theoretically meaningful way with salivary alpha amylase responses to an interpersonal stressor. Future work will examine the interconnections between this marker and related stress hormones (e.g., cortisol) for individuals with different attachment styles. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 253 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 491 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 27A Jessica Hopkins, Anna Flanagan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University Perceived Effects of Parental Depression on the Children’s Academic Beliefs, Risk for Depression, and Quality of Relationships with their Parents This study examined college students’ perceptions of the effects of parental depression on the children’s academic beliefs, risk for depression, and quality of relationships with their parents. Research was conducted on a small state university campus. Participants included 168 undergraduate students between the ages of 18 and 41. They read one of six randomly assigned scenarios describing a school-aged boy or girl with a depressed mother, a depressed father, or two depressed parents. Participants answered questions about the scenario characters’ academic beliefs, risk for depression, and quality of relationships with their parents. Participants also completed a depression inventory about themselves and some demographic information. Consistent with hypotheses, results showed that participants perceived scenario characters with two depressed parents as having a higher risk for depression than scenario characters with one depressed parent. Also, participants perceived daughters as having a lower quality relationship with their depressed parents than sons of depressed parents. This study also revealed that college students perceived parental depression as having no effect on children’s academic beliefs. These results imply that college students perceive parental depression as only having an effect on certain aspects of a child’s life. 492 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 82A Elizabeth Howard, Seth Surgan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Worcester State University Video Game Habits and Personality The purpose of this study is to understand the relationship between personality characteristics and video game preferences and behaviors. Previous research on video games and behavior has focused on the correlation between video game habits and violence (Chory & Goodboy, 2011; Eastin, 2006). This study extends previous research by addressing other personality aspects and their correlation to video game habits. This study investigates the relationship between video game habits and tolerance of ambiguity, the big five personality traits and adventurousness. The relationship between the video games and personality traits will be assessed using a hierarchical regression, which will allow for the examination of both the relationships for individual traits and for combinations of traits. This study will include between 50 – 100 undergraduate participate from Massachusetts state university who will complete 4 questionnaires designed to assess video game habits, Adventurousness, the Big Five and Tolerance of Ambiguity. Our data analysis using hierarchical regression will be aimed at testing the degree to which the different personality traits predict video game habits. We hope to find support for the following hypothesis Hypothesis 1: A high score on the openness to experience scale, desire for adventure scale and tolerance of ambiguity will predict a tendency to play action/adventure style games. Hypothesis 2: A high openness to experience score, but a low desire for adventure and tolerance of ambiguity scores will predict a tendency to play social games. Hypothesis 3: A high tolerance of ambiguity score will predict a tendency to play puzzle games. Hypothesis 4: A high score on adventurousness, tolerance of ambiguity, openness to experience and extraversion will predict a tendency to play MMORPGs. Hypothesis 5: A high score on adventurousness, tolerance of ambiguity and openness to experience will predict a tendency to play RPGs. Hypothesis 6: A high scores on adventurousness and tolerance of ambiguity and a low score in extraversion will predict a tendency to play strategy games. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 254 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 493 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 14A Deanna Julian, Hal Grotevant (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst Impact of Community Climate on Mental Health of Lesbian, Gay, and Heterosexual Adoptive Parent Families As increasing numbers of lesbian and gay (LG) couples are adopting children in the US (Gates et al., 2007), there are both arguments supporting and opposing this process. Studies have demonstrated that children of same-sex and othersex parents develop in similar ways (e.g., Biblarz & Savci, 2010; Farr et al., 2010). There is also evidence that LG adults may experience “sexual minority stress” as a result of discrimination and stigma, which may lead to increased depression and anxiety. (Goldberg & Smith, 2011; Meyer, 2003). In this study, Bronfenbrenner’s (1979) ecological theory provides the framework to compare effects of community climate, or the degree of support for LG people within a specified area (e.g., county) (Oswald et al., 2010), on mental health among adoptive families with same-sex and other-sex parents. Data is used from the US Census (2000) and from a larger project of adoptive families headed by same-sex and other-sex couples (e.g., Farr et al., 2010). Preliminary analyses have revealed that gay fathers are more likely to live in areas with higher proportions of same-sex couples than heterosexual couples and in such areas LG parents reported higher overall outness, r(112) = .22, p = .026 and increased recognition of their same-sex relationship by the community, r(112) = .19, p = .044, supporting further research into how community climate affects mental health. By indicating that environment has important impacts on the mental health of LG adoptive parents, this study could support the benefits of social changes in creating more LG-supportive community climate. 494 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 22A Jessica Kent, Rebecca Spencer (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst Effects of Napping on Emotional Memory in Preschool Children PURPOSE: Sleep benefits memory in healthy young adults, but for other developmental stages, this relationship is less clear. Preschool-aged children are at a unique point in development where their sleep habits are changing dramatically from biphasic (overnight sleep and a mid-day nap) to monophasic sleep (no longer napping). They are rapidly developing cognitive, motor and emotional skills. Therefore, it is important to investigate the role of napping in the context of these developmental changes. In this study, we investigated how napping affects preschoolers’ ability to remember emotional information METHODS: Children were tested on their memory for faces that were described as either “mean” or “nice” following a typical mid-day nap, as well as following a similar period of time in which children were required to stay awake. They were also tested the following morning to ensure for lasting results. RESULTS: Data was collected during immediate, delay 1, and delay 2 recall phases. Analyses were run to find the percent correct difference scores from the subjects’ responses. The results of the 24 hour recall suggest that material was better remembered after sleep versus staying awake during nap time. CONCLUSION: This trend suggests that napping in preschoolers promotes better memory for emotional stimuli. This further insinuates that missing a nap, which leads to inadequate sleep, in children this age may hinder emotional processing. In addition, children who get less sleep may observe and react differently to outside stimuli compared to those children who are well-rested. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 255 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 495 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 08A Savannah M Young, William Lopez, Lauren LaCava, Pamela Ludemann (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University Animal Rights: Gender Differences and Emotional Responses and Views of Acceptable Uses of Animals in Research, as Pets, and as Food Sources The purpose of the study was to examine gender differences in views of animal rights, animal empathy and cognition, and emotional responses and attitudes toward the use of animals in research, as pets, in entertainment, and as food products. Also of interest was how these attitudes and views inter-related. Participants included 165 college students, 85 of whom were women. Men and women were assigned to viewing one of four categories of animal stimuli (2 X 2 inch black and white images) pertaining to the categories of food, lab use, sport, and pets. While viewing the stimuli, surveys on beliefs in animal cognition and feelings of animal-based empathy, attachment, liking, and attitudes towards various uses were completed. Results indicated that women overall were against the use of animals in all categories presented except as pets. The results also indicated that belief in cognition were related to animal-based empathy, liking, and attachment. Further, compared to me, women overall had higher scores on belief in animal cognition, which was correlated with empathy, liking, and attachment to animals scores. These findings may be useful in the development of screening procedures for individuals planning to work with or own animals to better ensure humane care. Understanding factors underlying views of appropriate animal treatment may help to improve handling methods, especially in food product and research facilities, for both the animals and workers. 496 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 14A Amanda C Kenzerski, Meaghan Lafferty, Deborah McMakin (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University Influence of Personality Traits, Physical Attractiveness, and Financial Stability as they Impact Romantic Attraction Romantic attraction, and what makes someone romantically desirable, is something that we encounter in our daily lives. The present study examined the influence of personality traits on perceived romantic attractiveness. A total of 120 female college students were randomly assigned to read one of four scenarios depicting a hypothetical male character who was described as either introverted or extroverted, and either agreeable or disagreeable in nature. Next they were asked to complete questionnaires about how they value financial stability, personality traits and physical attractiveness in a romantic partner. A 2x2 between subjects ANOVA will be completed to examine women’s reported values placed on financial stability, personality traits and physical attractiveness of potential mate. Based on the literature, it is expected that women will value extroversion and agreeableness more than introversion and disagreeableness as well as physical attractiveness and financial stability in a potential mate. These results will suggest that personality, appearance, and financial stability are essential in romantic attraction. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 256 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 497 Concourse 11:35-12:20 Board 73C Leewood Lane, Susan McPherson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English Literature, Quinsigamond Community College The Unconcious in Action: Nightmares and Lucid Dreams The human mind is one of the most complex and powerful machines in existence. Crucial to the power of that machine is the conscious, or the mental construct of the mind for the purpose of delineation of self and other. And to run the conscious, the mind requires several controls on its perception of reality. But what about those times when the controls are off? My project explores extreme states of the mind in its resting time, lucid dreaming and night terrors, when the governors that rule how we interpret our world are shut off and the mind runs freely. I will show how these states are studied as well as the predominant ideas behind their causes. Finally, I will demonstrate what these and future discoveries can mean for humanity in the years to come. 498 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 15A Andrea E Lam, Michelle Lechtanski, Anna Flanagan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University The Perceived Effects of Birth Order and Agreeableness on Romantic Relationship Quality This study examined the perceived effects of birth order and agreeableness on the quality of romantic relationships. One hundred and thirty-two college students were randomly assigned to read one of four scenarios about a couple that either matched or did not match in birth order and agreeableness. In addition to answering scenario based questions, participants evaluated their own relationship quality based on their personality, and whether their partner and their own birth order matched. Participants perceived that couples with the same level of agreeableness and a different birth order had the highest relationship quality. For participant data, those who reported high levels of agreeableness had a higher relationship quality. However, no significant difference was found for birth order match. Implications for sustaining successful relationships are discussed. 499 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 80A Alicia Leland, Holly Ketterer (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Worcester State University Family Environment and Impulsivity in Adolescence Previous research demonstrates that family environment has an impact on developing children. Negative home environments may result in externalizing problems (e.g., impulsivity) in children. The purpose of this study was to replicate quantitative research investigating the relationship between impulsivity and family environment in an adolescent sample, and also to make an original contribution to the extant literature by creating a qualitative interview to measure impulsivity. The primary hypothesis was that there would be a negative correlation between impulsivity and family functioning. Additionally, it was expected that the following variables would be related to increased impulsivity: living in a single-parent home, being first born, being strongly influenced by peers (rather than family members), increased reactivity, and increased social desirability. To test these hypotheses, self-report questionnaire data was collected from 469 (165 male, 302 female, 2 did not indicate gender) college students from a small northeastern university, 10 of whom also participated in an impulsivity interview. The self-report questionnaire measured the following variables: impulsivity, family functioning, reactivity, peer versus parent influence, and social desirability. ANOVA, T-tests, and correlations were used to analyze the data. Results showed there was a negative correlation between family functioning and impulsivity r = -.16 (as family functioning decreased, impulsivity increased), a negative correlation between social desirability and impulsivity r = -.44 (as social desirability increased, impulsivity decreased), and a positive correlation between peer vs. parent influence and impulsivity r = .32 (as peer influence increased impulsivity increased). Exploratory results will also be presented. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 257 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 500 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 04A Irina Orlovsky, David M Gilman, Brian Long, Rebecca Spencer (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst Sleep Effects on Cognitive Sequence Learning PURPOSE: Sleep has been demonstrated to benefit motor sequence learning in healthy young adults. It has yet to be determined whether sleep is benefitting the motoric or the sequential aspects to this task. Animal literature has previously shown neuronal replay of motor sequence tasks during nREM sleep, which was associated with better task performance. While this supports a sequencing sleep benefit, this has yet to be conclusively studied in humans. We sought to examine cognitive sequential learning in healthy young adults. METHODS: In session 1, participants learned to navigate through a computer maze task. Throughout this maze participants were given cues that they might pick up on to learn to better complete the task. In session 2, participants again navigated through the ten rooms; however, in order to probe sequence learning, as opposed to simple stimulus-associations, we included cues that were previously beneficial to performance out of their correct sequence order. Participants had a 12 hour intermission between the two sessions, either containing sleep or no sleep, depending on the condition they were assigned to. The sleep group also had their overnight sleep recorded electrophysiologically to assess which sleep stage is most associated with sequence learning. RESULTS: Independent samples t-tests revealed that sleep did not benefit task performance (p= 0.63). CONCLUSION: Results suggest that sleep does not benefit cognitive sequence learning. Further research is necessary to determine sleep’s role in sequence learning. 501 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 40A Maggie Kirkbride, Michaela Plaster, Bethany MacRae, Deborah McMakin (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University Gender Differences and Sexuality: An Exploration of the Sexual Double Standard In terms of sexual behavior, what may be considered appropriate for one gender is often not so for the other. This study examined college students’ perceptions of gender differences in regard to the sexual double standard. Participants included 240 undergraduates between the ages of 18 and 25 who were randomly assigned to read one of four scenarios featuring either a male or female college student who was portrayed as either being promiscuous, with 20 sexual partners, or not promiscuous with one sexual partner. Participants then completed a series of questions regarding perceptions of the scenario character’s sexual behaviors, self-report measures regarding their own attitudes about sexuality in general, gender role stereotypes, sexual peer pressure and demographic information. A 2 X 2 between subjects ANOVA will be used to analyze the results. It is expected that patterns of an existing sexual double standard will emerge. Findings will be discussed relative to implications of sexual promiscuity as it relates to reputation status among college students. Key Words: sexuality, double standard, sexual activity, college students, gender Sexual double standard: The belief that it is acceptable for one gender, males, to be sexually promiscuous while it is unacceptable for females to be sexually promiscuous. Sexual Activity: Vaginal, oral, and anal intercourse. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 258 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 502 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 28A Marcia L Stafford, Jodie Morrell, Anna Flanagan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University The Perceived Effects of Parents’ Sexual Orientation and Genetic Relation to Their Late Adolescent on the Late Adolescent’s Acceptance of Self and Others This study expanded on limited research of college students’ perceptions of the effects of parental sexual orientation (heterosexual, lesbian, gay) and genetic relation (biological, adopted) on late adolescents’ acceptance of self, others, and parents. College students (n = 156) read one of six randomly assigned scenarios. Follow up measures were then completed. Results suggested that participants believed the scenario character raised by adoptive heterosexual parents would have the highest level of acceptance of self. Participants also believed that when the scenario character had gay parents, a higher level of acceptance of others would be present. No significant findings were found for acceptance of parents. Findings suggested that college students’ resistance to homosexual parenting could be attributed to the fact that the majority of participants were from heterosexual families. Additionally, findings that involved adoption suggested that college students believed that adopted parents wanted their children more than biological parents regardless of sexual orientation. 503 Concourse 11:35-12:20 Board 67C Jessica Morse, Michele Wolfson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Cape Cod Community College The Socio-Economic Suppression of Working-Class Women Women have not been treated on an equal socio-economic level even when lawmakers seek to establish wages that would allow for survivable standards of living. This was due largely to the types of careers open to them; domestic service, unskilled factory hands, etc. The focus of this research paper will be to examine economic suppression of working-class woman with the implementation of minimum wage which prevented them from obtaining a job or career that would enable them to support their family. Although this project will be primarily about women in the workingclass, other groups who were affected will be examined as well. Research sources will include “Nickel and Dimed” by Barbara Ehrenreich, “Neither Mother nor Breadwinners” from Feminist Economics by Ellen Mutari, et al., and will also draw on research from the actual laws that were brought about at the turn of the century. 504 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 25A Alicen Murray, Deborah McMakin (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University Perceptions of Academic Performance and Motivation in College Athletes This study was designed to examine college student perceptions of athletes and their academic performance. It also was designed to view gender differences and if that effected college student’s perceptions. Participants included 240 students (120 of which were women) at Framingham State University, believed to be between 18 and 24 years of age, a majority of participants were Caucasian. Participants were randomly assigned to read one of four scenarios. The scenario characters were a male or female college student described as an athlete or not. The participants were given self-report measures to complete in order to evaluate their perceptions of an athlete verses non athlete’s academic motivation, and achievement. Furthermore the measures were designed to assess if gender of the scenario character and the participant effects college students perceptions on a student’s academic performance based on their athletic status. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 259 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 505 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 18A Andrea Norton, Hal Grotevant (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst College Preparation with High School Students in the Treehouse Community The base of my project was to create a group in which high-school students living in the Treehouse community could explore the various college options available to them. The student residents of Treehouse have experienced the foster care system in some capacity. This is a yearlong project in which I have been able to work with various groups of students. My work for the first half of the year involved helping two high-school seniors put together their applications and complete their essays. Both students were able to apply to multiple schools by the end of December. I will spend the second half of the year working with juniors and some sophomores and focus more on the college search process and preparation for applying in the coming months (test taking, resume building, etc.). Participants in the group meet weekly to discuss general topics related to college searches and applications and also to address any individual concerns about the process. Parents of the participants, Treehouse faculty, and the students themselves have been responsive to the program. 506 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 29A Chelsey O’Connor, Vanessa Diana (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Westfield State University Seeing the World through Sensitive Eyes: What is Sensory Processing Disorder? PURPOSE: Sensory Processing Disorder is not very well known in the medical world. Informing the audience about what this condition is and, more importantly, what it is not will help provide understanding of and encourage appropriate, effective treatment for this new disorder. METHODS: Using personal experience and medical research, he presenter defines common symptoms and treatments for Sensory Processing Disorder. RESULTS: The presenter was born with Sensory Processing Disorder and her family struggled to find the correct diagnosis and treatment. Because it is not well known and is not recognized as its own specific disorder, most professionals believed the presenter was autistic. Misdiagnosis is very common for children who suffer from the same disorder. Although sensory integration problems go along with autism, it does not necessarily mean an individual must have one with the other. Many families are dealing with misdiagnosis of their children because of their own and doctors’ lack of knowledge on the subject. Even when a child is diagnosed correctly, there are very few options for treatment; and some of the best treatments are not covered by insurance companies. CONCLUSION: Sensory Processing Disorder is its own standalone disorder and needs to be recognized as such. It needs to be put in the DSM as its own condition so that misdiagnosis will not occur and so that money can go into testing for future treatments and medication. 507 Concourse 11:35-12:20 Board 75C Lisa O’Donnell, Teresa Lyons (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Salem State University The Presence of Others and Helping Decisions Participants, who read a scenario, self-reported how likely they would be to intervene to stop a fight between a male and female on the street. Contrary to previous bystander research results, participants who imagined that they were with five other people, as opposed to one other person, were more likely to intervene to help the female when she was physically attacked by the male. Participants were also more likely to help the female victim when they were told that the other people with them would agree to help also. There was no interaction between the two independent variables. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 260 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 508 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 48A Ashlee M Rossi, Nicholas Laquidara, Cori Ostrowski, Deborah McMakin (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University Looking Beyond the Playground: College Students’ Perceptions of School vs. Workplace Bullying The recent events surrounding cyber bullying has brought new attention to people’s awareness of the types and consequences of bullying. This study examined college student awareness of workplace bullying versus school bullying by comparing perceptions of relationally versus physically aggressive behaviors in both the school and workplace setting. Participants included 240 college students (120 men). Each participant was asked to complete a questionnaire consisting of scales measuring aggression, acceptance of others, and prior experiences with bully behavior at both work and school. The questionnaires also included an evaluation of the occurrence of bullying behavior in one of four possible scenarios that varied in setting (work or school) and the type of aggression displayed (physical or relational). Questionnaires were randomly distributed such that an equal number of participants read each scenario. Results will be analyzed using a 2X2X2 between subjects ANOVA and correlational analysis to compare participants’ awareness of bullying incidences within the context of setting, type of aggressive behavior, and past experiences with bullying. Implications for the perceptions of both physical and relational aggression, as well as the effect of lower levels of selfesteem and acceptance of others on aggression will be discussed. This survey assesses how college students, with limited or no prior workplace familiarity, interpret bullying behaviors beyond their school experiences. Findings may show that those entering the workforce will not be prepared for these types of aggressive behaviors. 509 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 35A Rebecca Owen, Rebecca Spencer (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst Body Image, Mood, and Anxiety after Viewing Images of Healthy Weight Models Negative body image is associated with eating disorder vulnerability. Media industries often promote images of very thin models, leading to general bias in favor of slim body shapes and increased vulnerability to eating disorders, anxiety, and depression. Recently, prominent companies that market products to young women have developed ad campaigns which doubly serve as public service announcements promoting healthy and realistic body ideals. In this study we examined whether ad campaigns for healthy and realistic body ideals are effective. We found that for individuals with low self-esteem such an intervention significantly increased the body mass index of one’s body ideal, while individuals with normal self-esteem were unaffected. We conclude that ad campaigns for healthy and realistic body ideals may be successful at improving body image in viewers in the long term. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 261 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 510 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 24A Katherine Papazian, Dan Anderson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst The Effects of Media Exposure on Children’s Toy Play PURPOSE: While children under 3 years have difficulty learning from video, research has shown that it can alter their behavior. One way in which it can have an influence is by affecting their everyday play behaviors. METHODS: Thirtymonth-old children (n=24) will be recorded while they watch either a 30 minute episode of The Teletubbies or a 30 minute episode of The Night Garden. Afterwards, participants will play with a selection of toys for 15 minute recorded free play session. The toys include a set of Teletubbies toys, a set of Night Garden toys, and a set of control toys. Recordings of participants’ behavior will be coded for attention to the television, amount of time spent with each toy, and the number of times the characters’ names were mentioned during the play period. HYPOTHESES: It is predicted that participants who watched more television will spend more time playing with the characters from the program that they just viewed. It is also predicted that participants who watched more will be more likely to speak the names of characters. Taken together, this research could suggest that children can, indeed form product preferences and brand loyalties from an extremely early age, as past studies have shown that children are more likely to prefer and remember the names of products that they have been exposed to more frequently. 511 Concourse 11:35-12:20 Board 69C Shannon Peebles, Phyllis Wentworth (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Bristol Community College Creativity, Intelligence and Mental Illness, and the Drive for Medicated Normalcy This study will examine the correlation between creativity, mental illness, and intelligence, as well as look at the current state of preferred “normalcy,” where psycho-active drugs are more common than learning proper coping mechanisms and where genetic selection might be an option in our not so distant future. Furthermore, this study questions if this condition could act as a stimulus to push for a selected-medicated normalcy that could potentially stifle creative and intelligent minds, hindering their potential of future contributions that could help further humanity. The final aim of this project is to create awareness and to dispel some of the stigmas that are associated with people who have been with diagnosed with mental disorders. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 262 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 512 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 28A Ariana Roche, Jennifer DiGrazia (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University Beyond Friendsickness: A Good Home Life Doesn’t Always Lead to an Easy Transition to College In fall 2011, a record-breaking number of approximately 19.7 million students were expected to enroll in American universities and colleges according to the U.S. Department of Education National Center for Education Statistics (2010), many of whom are high school graduates immediately making the transition to college after graduation. My study researched the effect of home life on students’ adjustment to college at Westfield State University to prove that a good home life resulted in a difficult adjustment. While research by Elizabeth Paul and Sigal Brier helped explain the effects of friendsickness on first-year students’ adjustment to college (2001), I argue that a student’s home life may provide a fuller understanding of why a first-year student may struggle in college. Friendsickness is often an indicator that the student had a fulfilling home life, one in which stable friendships ensured strong bonds, confidence, and sense of self. Surveying fifty undergraduate students at Westfield State University I reflected on those findings with the results I found through my research with the use of the College Adjustment Test (CAT) developed by Pennebaker, Colder, and Sharp (1990) to measure adjustment as well as a survey I created to measure adjustment and record demographics of the sample. A correlational study was then performed to compare the data from the two surveys. My results suggest that a good home life may make for a difficult adjustment to college. The data showed mixed results but much of it was in support of the original hypothesis. This study can be useful to counselors, residential life staff, and even psychologists to identify why students have a difficult time adjusting to living in a college setting. 513 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 01A Nathan Besnoff, Joseph Schwarz, Wayne Klug (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Berkshire Community College Too Tense to Care? The Relationship Between Stress and Empathy in an Undergraduate Population As students who were increasingly stressed by academic and other demands, the authors sensed that they were becoming less empathic—less able to extend themselves to others. They wondered if there was a general phenomenon at work: As stress increases, does empathy decline? Are the two variables negatively correlated? One hundred twenty community college students answered validated questionnaires measuring their levels of stress and empathy. Contrary to hypothesis, the authors found a moderate positive correlation between the two variables. Lending support to this finding was a t-test, based on a median split of stress scores, that revealed a significantly higher level of empathy in the high-stress group. Results suggest that the experience of stress may actually heighten empathy for others who are also coping with stress. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 263 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 514 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 10A Robin Selwitz, Pamela Ludemann (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University The Effect of Music and Prosocial Lyrics on Mood, Memory and Stress This study was designed to explore the effects of music and pro-social lyrics on mood, aggressive cognitions, stress and short term memory. Three groups of college (n = 85) were exposed to one of three music conditions while completing a word memory task, an aggression word completion task, and pre and post assessments of stress and mood. Music conditions consisted of the song, “Heal the World” by Michael Jackson with lyrics, without lyrics, and with no music playing. Contrary to expectations, no significant differences by music exposure condition were found, but trends were in the expected directions. Lack of significance may have been the result of measure insensitivity. Memory effects preand post-exposure were noted. Across music conditions, participants with positive moods tended to recall more words in general as well as larger number of nouns and pro-social words. The students with more positive moods also tended to have lower stress levels, and lower stress levels were associated with greater word recall. Students scoring high on aggressive-cognitions remembered more pro-social words and non-nouns. In addition, it was found that students who used multiple memory strategies were able to remember a larger number of words than those relying on single strategies. Music therapists and academic support personnel may find the information useful when recommending memory or study strategies. Possible design flaws might also shed light on the designing of future studies. 515 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 29A Kristyna Smith, Anna Flanagan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University The Effects of Type of Intervention on Implicit Racial Attitudes The current study investigated implicit racial biases and their potential to be reduced by an intervention. Specifically, the current study used an Implicit Association Test (IAT) to measure implicit racial attitudes toward people of Middle Eastern descent. The sample included 49 non-Middle Eastern participants, all of whom completed the Modern Racism Scale and a Culture Quiz to highlight their explicit racial attitudes and cultural knowledge prior to the intervention. An IAT, which varied Caucasian and Middle Eastern male faces with positive and negative words, followed the intervention. Results indicated that the intervention (positive, negative, neutral) did not influence participants’ implicit biases as measured by the IAT. However, results did suggest participants had implicit racial attitudes toward people of Middle Eastern descent. Participants’ reaction time to associate positive words with Middle Eastern faces was slower than their reaction time to associate positive words with Caucasian faces, and participants’ reaction time to associate negative words with Middle Eastern faces was faster than their reaction time to associate negative words with Caucasian faces. Results may be representative of the current social climate in the United States and how that environment can shape a population’s attitudes toward an entire race. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 264 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 516 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 07A Alycia Sullivan, Rebecca Spencer (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst Effects of Sleep on Memory Consolidation of Motor/Procedural Learning PURPOSE: Sleep enhances memory consolidation. Research from our lab suggests that this sleep benefit diminishes with aging in a task specific manner; while we observe similar sleep benefits on a declarative word-pair learning task in young and older adults, older adults do not get a sleep benefit for a procedural motor sequence learning task (Wilson et al., 2012). In this study we focused on a procedural task which does not have a sequential component - a mirror tracing task. METHODS: Male and female participants traced figures on an iPad with visual feedback coming only from a mirror placed in front of them. Young (ages between 18-30) and healthy older adults (ages 50-80) participants were tested over two sessions separated by an interval of daytime wake (i.e. the “Wake” group) or overnight sleep (the “Sleep” group). Sleep was recorded using polysomnography (PSG). Changes in performance (reaction times and accuracy measures) were compared between sleep and wake groups. Furthermore, based on previous findings that REM sleep may be critical for this type of learning (Plihal and Börn, 1997) we looked for correlations between measures of REM sleep (duration and latency) and overnight changes in task performance. We had three main hypotheses in this experiment: 1) Young adults will trace faster and more accurately after a period of sleep as opposed to wake, 2) Performance changes in accuracy and tracing time will positively correlate with REM sleep, 3) This sleep benefit will be diminished in older adults and there won’t be any correlation between measures of REM and task performance. RESULTS: Preliminary results suggest that sleep benefits task performance in young adults. Compared to the wake group, the sleep group participants showed greater improvement in reaction time and time spent outside of the tracing area. However, preliminary results do not reveal such a sleep benefit in older adults. CONCLUSION: Young adults get a sleep benefit on a procedural non-sequential task whereas this effect is diminished in healthy older adults. 517 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 36A Sneha Suresh, Wilmore Webley (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Microbiology, UMass Amherst Default Network Activity Differentiates Adolescent and Young Adult Relatives of Persons with Bipolar Disorder and Schizophrenia INTRODUCTION: Hyperactivity and hyperconnectivity of the “resting state” or “default mode network (DN)” of brain function is observed in patients with schizophrenia and their high-risk first-degree relations (HR-SZ) where the neural network exhibits greater activation during rest than during task performance. This might suggest that the network is a potential endophenotype for psychosis. Our research examined where hyperactivity in the DN is specific to such familial risk for SZ or if this pattern extends to first-degree relatives of BDP, who exhibit many overlapping symptoms, using functional MRI scans. METHODS: Subjects were 19 HR-SZ, 10 HR-BDP, and 20 healthy, control subjects selected to be comparable on age (13-27), sex, education, handedness, and IQ. All subjects were unmedicated and free of psychotic or other Axis I disorders. During functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), subjects alternated between rest and performance of 0-back and 2-back working memory tasks. Mood was assessed on the day of scanning. Working memory task-related suppression of the FMRI signal was examined using SPM2 (Department of Imaging Neuroscience, London, UK)(www.fil.ion.ucl.ac.uk/spm/). RESULTS: There were no group differences in working memory task performance or mood state. HR-SZ and HR-BDP (who were well-matched in WM performance) exhibited distinct patterns of WM-related task suppression and FC. HR-SZ exhibited reduced parahippocampal (PHP) task suppression. In contrast, HR-BDP exhibited exaggerated task-suppression of the DN that was greater than both controls and HR-SZ. Non-suppression of the middle temporal and occipital regions of the DN was correlated with measures of psychoticism with all three groups of the experiment. CONCLUSION: HR-BDP and HR-SZ show distinct connectivity patterns in the DN. To our knowledge, this is the first time this has been reported. If replicated, these patterns may represent basic differences in pathophysiologic risk for the two psychotic disorders. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 265 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 518 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 38A Lauren Szymula, Rebecca Spencer (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst Comparisons of Sleep Architecture Between Younger and Older Adults PURPOSE: It is fairly well established that sleep quality declines with age. In general older adults sleep for the same amount of time as younger adults, but have greater numbers of arousals, and experience a reduction in some of the sleep stages, such as slow wave sleep (SWS) and REM sleep. However, few studies have directly and quantitatively compared age-related changes in all aspects of sleep physiology. This project evaluated the physiological difference in sleep structure between younger and older adults. METHODS: Sleep physiology was collected with polysomnography over one night. This data was scored for sleep staging, as well as assessed for sleep fragmentation. RESULTS: Results replicate earlier findings that older adults and younger adults did not significantly differ on measures of total sleep time or time spent in NREM2 sleep; however older adults did wake more often, and had reduced SWS compared to younger adults. DISCUSSION: A better understanding of sleep differences between the young and old may facilitate our comprehension of how sleep may affect the processes of aging. 519 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 33A Joseph Terranova, Geert de Vries (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst Acute Restraint Stress Activates Vasopressin and Oxytocin Cells in the Supraoptic Nucleus of Male and Female Rats In this study, we investigated sex differences in the stress-induced activation of the neurotransmitters argininevasopressin (AVP) and oxytocin (OXT) using the immediate early gene, c-FOS, as a maker of neural activation. We used an acute restraint stress paradigm, where male and female wistar rats were subjected to a one-time 30-minute restraint test. Following the restraint test, animals were perfused with 4% paraformaldehyde and brain tissue was immunohistochemically processed for c-FOS, vasopressin-neurophysin, and OXT. Neural activation of AVP and OXT was measured in the supraoptic nucleus (SON) using immunoflurosence and confirmed by confocal microscopy. Restraint animals exhibited significantly greater activation of AVP and OXT in the SON than non-restrained controls. There were no significant sex differences in the activation of AVP and OXT in the SON. Our results further elucidate the neurobiological mechanisms of stress and reveal potential therapeutic targets for stress-related disorders. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 266 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 520 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 17A Oanaki Torres, Pamela Ludemann (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University University Students’ Personal and Perceptions of Others’ Academic Motivation: Exploring Family and Personal Factors of Academic Achievement The purpose of this study was to clarify the area of academic achievement motivation and the various factors that influence college students, including personality traits, learning approaches, goal setting, and family attachment. Participants were 95 college students, of whom 81% were women, with a mean age of 20.6 (SD = 2.11) years. Students were asked to complete surveys regarding perceptions of family attachment, their personality traits, and approaches to learning. Results indicated personality traits of agreeableness, conscientiousness, openness, and emotional stability were positively related to academic achievement, as were the learning approaches of academic efficacy and mastery goal orientation. In contrast, performance avoidance goal orientation was negatively related to academic achievement. College students did not perceive family attachment as influential on academic achievement. These findings may be of value to students, faculty, and college and university administrators. It is important that students understand that their course performances in college are the results of dynamic and complicated relationships between personality, anxiety, intrinsic motivation and extrinsic motivation. Colleges and universities could alter the methods of their advising and support programs to focus more on working with students to discover their motivations as they enter and progress through college, allowing time for gains in self understanding, instead of focusing largely on future career success. 521 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 81A Emily Tripp, Holly Ketterer (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Worcester State University Coping Skills and Impulsivity in Late Adolescence Previous research has found a negative relationship between coping skills and impulsivity in adolescents. The better the adolescent’s coping skills, the less impulsive the adolescent tends to be. The purpose of this study was to replicate previous work by examining the relationship between coping skills and impulsivity in an adolescent sample, and also to make an original contribution to the literature by creating a new coping skills measure in the form of a structured interview. The primary hypothesis was that coping skills (assessed using quantitative and qualitative measures) would be negatively related to impulsivity. Additionally, it was expected that the following variables would be related to increased impulsivity: reactivity, peer influence, and social desirability. Participants included 469 freshman college students (165 males, 302 females, 2 unreported). The study was completed in two phases. The first phase involved 10 students who completed the coping skills structured interview and a questionnaire packet, which included quantitative measures of coping skills, impulsivity, reactivity, peer and parent influence, and social desirability. In the second phase, 459 participants completed the same questionnaire packet in their freshman seminar classes. The data were analyzed using T-tests, ANOVAs, and correlations. The analysis showed that there was a significant negative relationship between impulsivity and coping skills, r = -.24, p<.01. There was also a significant negative relationship between impulsivity and social desirability, r = -.44, p<.01. Finally, there was a significant positive relationship between peer and parent influences and impulsivity, r = .33, p<.01. Exploratory results will also be presented. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 267 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 522 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 25A Alexandra Walls, Rebecca Spencer (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst Changes in Motor Sequence Learning Over Sleep and Wake in Older Adults. Learning of a serial reaction time task can be dissociated into motor-based learning and goal-based learning in which perceptual learning is required to guide motor performance. Goal-based learning is correlated with visual pattern memory, while motor learning is purely muscle memory. Young adults show a sleep benefit in their goal-based learning not witnessed after a period of wake, yet their motor memory shows slight improvement over wake. Our hypothesis is that this pattern of offline learning will not be seen in older adults, due to changes in sleep architecture that occur with aging, particularly the decrease in slow wave sleep. The participants are split into eight groups consisting of young and old adults, testing over wake versus over sleep, and goal based memory versus motor memory. The two session study begins with instructions to press a key one key to the right of the on-screen prompt. During the second session, participants press the key directly corresponding to the visual prompt. During the second session, motor learning is probed by keeping the finger sequence the same, while goal based learning is investigated through not changing the on-screen pattern. Currently 10 subjects in each group have been tested, with older adults showing no sleep benefit over goal based learning while young adults appear to receive a benefit. 523 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 15A Amanda Winkler, Linda Isbell (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst Effects of Direct-to-Consumer Advertising on Knowledge and Perception of ADHD Each year the average American views an estimated sixteen hours of direct-to-consumer advertising (DTCA), which many claim improves knowledge about medications. Yet to date, no research has been done to investigate whether DTCA affects viewer knowledge, or perception of an advertised disorder. This study was conducted to determine whether exposure to an Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) medication advertisement leads to changes in individuals’ knowledge about and perceptions of ADHD. We also explored the different effects of the audio and visual portions of these ads, which often appear to be incongruent. To do this, participants were randomly assigned to view an advertisement for a non-stimulant ADHD medication under one of three conditions: (1) full advertisement (audio and visual), (2) visual component only, or (3) audio component only. A fourth condition was included as a control (no ADHD ad). After viewing the advertisement, participants completed an ADHD knowledge measures, reported their attitudes about ADHD, and completed a series of demographic questions. We predicted that individuals exposed only to the audio advertisement would score higher on the ADHD knowledge measure than those exposed to either the visual-only or the full advertisement. In these latter cases, we expected that the visual images would serve to distract individuals from learning the information. Although data analysis is on-going, preliminary analyses are consistent with these expectations. Such findings may have important implications when evaluating the impact of DTCA on the psychological community’s on-going battle against stigmatizing disorders. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 268 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 524 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 30A Kira Wong, Pamela Ludemann (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Framingham State University The Link Between Music Preference and Locus of Control: College Mainstream Music Fans’ and Their Perception of Responsibility Some research suggests that people who listen to music that is a more arousing medium (i.e. heavy metal, rock, alternative, R &B, and pop) tend to be more aggressive than people who listen to less arousing music (i.e. country, jazz, classical, indie, etc.). This study was designed to examine the relationship between music preferences and locus of control. Participants included 106 students, mean age of 19, who were randomly assigned to read either a heavy metal music scenario or a classical music scenario. In both scenarios, a scenario character was depicted as having plans to attend the indicated type of musical event with friends but forgot to purchase a ticket. Perceptions of the character’s likelihood of acting responsibly and irresponsibly were assessed. Self-report measures of locus of control, drinking motives, aggression, and egalitarian attitudes were also completed. Results showed that external locus of control was associated with low levels of hostility and other forms of aggression were related to drinking motives, egalitarian attitudes, and money spent on drugs/alcohol. Contrary to expectations, perceptions of the scenario character’s level of personal responsibility did not differ by type of music event presented. However, students’ personal music preferences did impact some reported behaviors. Specifically, those who preferred mainstream music were more verbally and physically aggressive than students who listen to non-mainstream music. These findings emphasize the links among gender attitudes, views of alcohol and other substance misuse, and aggression, which may be useful in anger management classes or rehabilitation facilities. 525 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 02A Sarah Zimmerman, Maureen Perry-Jenkins (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, UMass Amherst Mothers’ and Fathers’ Parenting Style and Children’s Social Competence PURPOSE: Social competence is an important developmental skill that has been linked to children’s academic achievement and positive mental health. It has been theorized that children develop social competence through socialization and parents have been found to be a primary influence in the socialization of children’s development of social competence, especially early in life. Much research has suggested that negative parenting styles (e.g., control, harshness) are related to children’s negative social skills. The current study examines the relationship between parenting styles and children’s social competence during the transition to the first grade, which represents an important developmental milestone that draws on children’s social skills as they negotiate the new world of school. METHODS: Using videotaped parent-child interactions completed when the child was six years old, parenting styles have been coded for criticism, lack of cooperation, and control. Children’s social competence scores are derived from teacher reports on the Behavioral Assessment System for Children. RESULTS: For fathers, less cooperative parenting was related to fewer leadership skills for daughters (r = -.35; p < .05) and fewer social skills (r = -.324; p = .06). For mothers, less cooperative parenting (i.e., more directive parenting) was related to more social skills (r = .42; p < .05) and leadership skills in sons (r = .43; p = .109). In addition, more strict maternal parenting was related to more leadership skills for sons (r = .40; p = .05) CONCLUSION: The most interesting findings emerged as a function of gender. More controlling parenting on the part of fathers was related to poorer social skills for daughter, but more controlling behavior on the part of mothers predicted better social skills for sons. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 269 Abstracts • Poster Sessions PUBLIC HEALTH 526 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 90A Emmanuel Mensah, Ahmed Abubakar, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Chronic Stress and Cardiovascular Disease in African Americans The number of people affected with chronic stress continues to increase in all Americans. Thirty-four percent of Americans are living with chronic stress. Lifelong chronic and cumulative exposures to social and economic stressors have been linked to chronic illness such as diabetes, obesity, and cardiovascular diseases. However, many studies have shown that African Americans are more prone to chronic stress and are more prevalent in cardiovascular diseases than their counterpart. My project aims to review the link between chronic stress and cardiovascular disease in African Americans. There is a marked increase in chronic stress from economic factors such as job insecurity, mortgage crisis, and other forms of stressors in our society today and this may have contributed to the incidence of cardiovascular disease in African Americans. A targeted intervention in stress reduction and management for this minority group could reduce incidence rate of cardiovascular diseases in African Americans. 527 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 57C Shifat Ahmed, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Amherst’s Take on Tobacco Tobacco is the leading preventable cause of death due to cancer, heart disease, stroke, and lung diseases. According to statistics from the Center of Disease Control (CDC), 16.1% of Massachusetts’ adult population who are 18 and over are current cigarette smokers. Also, 20.9% of college students are smokers. This data shows that there is a need for intervention on college campuses. The University of Massachusetts Amherst, among 400 other colleges around the United States, is beginning an initiative called “A Tobacco-Free UMass Amherst”. In order to ensure the success of this initiative it is essential for the surrounding community to understand the effects of tobacco intake. The aim of this project is to increase awareness of these issues in communities that surround the university. The project is targeting the adult population. We will evaluate their knowledge of health implications of cigarette smoking. This will be done by presenting a presentation to the employees at the Amherst Town Hall, Amherst fire department and UMass Housing. We will conduct a survey before and after the presentation to compare the knowledge of the participants. The presentation will be informative and health related and will highlight both positive and negative aspects of cigarette smoking. We also want to evaluate the viewpoints that Amherst residents have on this initiative. Through this project we hope the residents of the town of Amherst will gain a better understanding of the effects of smoking, participate and support in this initiative, and increase their own knowledge regarding smoking. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 270 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 528 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 60C Kendall Bennett, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Strength Training Instruction in Youth: A Missing Link in Physical Education While aerobic activity is often recommended by many organizations such as the Centers for Disease Control and the World Health Organization to improve overall health and prevent disease, little encouragement is given to strength training programs. The purpose of this study is to examine the effect of strength training on various body types and to suggest a method to implement strength training in the public school system. Variables such as height, weight, maximum bench press, maximum squat, and maximum power clean are compared with a test of overall strength to assess the effect of weight-bearing exercise. Total body strength will be measured by the average watts an individual can generate in one minute of rowing, as rowing engages most major muscle groups in the body. In addition, a review of literature is conducted regarding the benefits of weight-bearing exercise on school-aged children. Initial results reveal a significant correlation between body weight and total body strength (R2=0.40225). Correlation is also seen between maximum bench press and maximum power clean with total body strength. In conclusion, weight-bearing exercise is beneficial for increasing strength, improving motor control, and preventing injuries in youth, particularly in individuals with a lower Body Mass Index number. Strength training can be implemented in physical education programs in an inexpensive and efficient manner to instruct youth on safe and age-appropriate methods of improving total body strength. 529 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 63C Caroline Brown, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst High Adolescent Fertility Rates in Nicaragua: a discussion of the determinants, health concerns, and suggested health measures According to the World Health Organization’s 2010 Health Statistics, Nicaragua’s fertility rate amongst adolescents is the highest in Latin America; approximately half of female Nicaraguans give birth before they reach twenty years of age. Adolescent pregnancy is problematic because the children of adolescent mothers are known to be at higher risk for a multitude of health complications such as: low birth weight, higher infant mortality, and premature weaning from breast milk. However, complex issues such as, but not limited to, a lack of sexual education in schools, the catholic church’s strong presence in political and social spheres, and the powerful existence of the male machismo mindset, make Nicaragua a perfect host for adolescent pregnancies. In spring of 2011, I worked as an intern in the labor and delivery unit of Cesar Amador Molina Regional Hospital, a public, government- funded hospital in Matagalpa, Nicaragua. Throughout the duration of my internship, I witnessed a large number of adolescent obstetric patients firsthand. In fact, in March of 2011, on of the months I was interning, 22.1% of women entering the labor and delivery unit were 19 years or younger. Nicaragua’s Ministry of Health has identified adolescent fertility as a public health issue, but neither the country’s National Health Plan of 2004-2015 nor its Millennium Development Goals include preventative programs that provide solutions to this national problem. My research seeks to investigate and discuss the social, economic, and political determinants of Nicaragua’s high fertility rate by combining my personal experiences abroad with a critical analysis of the current published literature on the topic. Additionally, I will create a culturally- relevant health pamphlet targeted at pregnant Nicaraguan adolescents with suggestions towards maintaining a healthy body throughout pregnancy. Given the complexity of adolescent fertility, I theorize that efforts in the field should be focused predominantly on making sure those adolescents that are currently pregnant receive the proper health information necessary to stay both informed and healthy throughout their pregnancy. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 271 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 530 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 04A Brittany I Bausch, Jennifer Castelly, Lillian Lwanga, Angela Casado-Diaz, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Hypertension Prevalence in African American Women compared to Caucasain Women This analysis will focus on the health disparity of hypertension in the United States among African American women and Caucasian women. As of 2008 44% of African American women, aged 20 years and older, suffered from hypertension compared to only 33% of Caucasian women from the same age group. This report will document the relationship to one’s diet and resource availability to the onset of hypertension through examination of African American women and Caucasian women as the focal groups. The higher prevalence in African American women seems to be a result of both environment and lifestyle factors. Through examining prior research, it is essential to highlight that if the government plays an active role in health awareness, then a reduction in health disparity can be seen. 531 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 53C Azra Caus, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst The Efficacy of Meditation in Stress Reduction and the Importance of Belief in Meditation for College Students There are financial and physical costs of stress, including loss of work, hospital visits and health care costs. Stress affects the body by causing issues with blood pressure, heart health, the immune system, sleep and anxiety. Mood also affects stress by sending chemical signals to one’s brain. In addition, behavior involves stress influences by affecting ways in which one responds to their stress. About five students will be recruited to participate in a 21-day meditation challenge, including myself. There will be pre-test and post-test questionnaires, as well as interviews with focus groups. Computerized biofeedback testing will be performed on me before and after the meditation challenge in the Mind/Body Medicine Clinic at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst, MA. The Center for Mindfulness in Medicine, Health Care, and Society in the University of Massachusetts Medical School in Worcester, MA will be visited to evaluate and question the efficacy of meditation in stress reduction and importance of belief for meditation. Meditation is expected to drastically reduce one’s stress levels in a healthier manner. The act of meditating will help discover conducive ways in which stress can be handled, preventing financial and physical burdens in the future. 532 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 54C Stefanie Chin, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Women Awareness and Action in the Promotion of Paraben-free Health Beauty Items Many everyday health, cosmetics, and body cleaning products contain chemicals like parabens that research has shown are adversely associated with breast cancer. Parabens have been found in samples of breast cancer tumors. Many women are affected by breast cancer, and use products on a daily basis that contain parabens, such as shampoo, conditioners, deodorant, body lotion and so on. Many foods also contain parabens as a preservative. It is important for the general population, especially women and children, to be aware of possible effects associated with the continuous use of parabens. I plan to identify ways to provide the statistical and research-based information to the general female population so they may gain awareness, seek out non-paraben products, and ultimately empower them with knowledge and ideas to take action with a petition to the FDA for the regulation of safer health and beauty items in the United States by the end of this semester. This project will include an outreach effort on Youtube with a video on parabens made available, and possibly creating a Facebook informational page and brochures to reach out to a range of females, informing both adolescents and adults. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 272 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 533 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 03A Kristen Clark, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst A Breastfeeding Intervention for HIV Positive Mothers in Sub Saharan Africa The 2011 World AIDS Day Report stated that there were approximately 16.6 million women living with Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) globally. Of these infected women, 76 percent live in Sub-Saharan Africa. Although a diagnosis of HIV is troubling for all women, it is particularly challenging for mothers of the Sub-Saharan regions. Due to the limited availability of Anti-Retroviral (ARV) drugs and clean water supplies, these women must often deal with the dual repercussions of mother to child transmission (MTCT) and infant infection from contaminated water and food sources. Recent World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines recommend that the HIV positive mothers of Sub-Saharan Africa should discontinue the use of commercial formula and utilize their own breast milk, in conjunction with ARV therapy, to reduce MTCT. Yet, due to restrictions of mobility, decision-making, and access to resources, these women lack education on the correct method of feeding. The purpose of this poster is to create a combination treatment and educational program available for HIV positive mothers of Sub-Saharan Africa. Using recommendations by the WHO, and international breastfeeding initiatives, we will develop a plan to educate mothers on the benefits of breast feeding in conjunction with ARV treatments. Our goal is to increase the proportion of these women who exclusively breastfeed, ultimately improving infant nutritional status and reducing the vertical transmission of HIV to infants. 534 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 70C Ketsia Clermont, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst The Efficacy of Ready to Use Therapeutic Foods in Treating Malnourished Children in Haiti Concern has arisen in recent years over the availability of natural resources. As availability of these resources is increasingly becoming limited, issues of food security have presented themselves in the developing world. Children are disproportionally affected by a lack of food availability in these resource poor settings. Poverty, food scarcity, economic instabilities and social conditions impact the availability of food immensely. Worldwide, some 55 million children under the age of five suffer from acute malnutrition, 19 million of them from the most serious type- severe acute malnutrition (SAM).(UNICEF) In response to this crisis, the international community has intervened to provide home based therapies to address this issue. In recent years Ready -to- use therapeutic foods, or RUTF , have been introduced in Haiti, where approximately 1 in 7 children are malnourished. RUTF is a generic term including different types of energy dense foods, such as spreads or compressed products suitable for feeding children with SAM. Children enrolled in home based therapies have shown an 85% recovery rate when treated with RUTF within a 6-week period. This therapy proves to be a good short term response to SAM, however this treatment does not account for increasing food production, economic hardship and the overall social conditions. There are a number of different supplementation schemes that need to be analyzed in determining the most effective intervention. A comprehensive program can effectively reduce rates of malnutrition. This program should be focused on giving the affected population the ability to treat SAM themselves. They should be incorporated not only in the administration of RUTF but also the production of it. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 273 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 535 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 49C Arielle Cline, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst The Springfield Sleep Study In 2009, the Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) of Springfield, MA was 6.1%, alarmingly high compared to the state average of 4.7%. Upon taking a closer look, it was noted that several of these deaths were caused by unsafe sleep positions and environments and essentially could have been avoided. A public health initiative, The Springfield Safe Sleep Study, has been established to lower the IMR and advocate for safe sleep practices, particularly among Springfield’s large African American and Latino populations. It is speculated that the IMR rate is higher among these populations because of socioeconomic class as well as racial and ethnic disparities. How the media portrays safe sleep practices as well as cultural beliefs all influence how and where an infant is put to sleep. As a research intern for The Springfield Safe Sleep Study, this project will investigate current practices among Springfield families, define safe sleep procedures and determine the best methods to broadcast this message most effectively in the community. Part of the research process will be analyzing data collected during focus groups and observing the reactions and results of various safe sleep campaigns nationally. By accomplishing these goals, it is predicted that the knowledge among Springfield parents and caretakers will increase and the overall IMR will decrease. 536 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 94A Kendall Connors, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Infant Mortality and Means of Childbirth Infant mortality rates in the United States have long been an area of concern to the public health community. While there are a number of reasons for this, this capstone project will focus on the possible link between infant mortality and giving birth in a hospital versus having a midwife deliver in the home. Women may not know the options they have when it comes to childbirth and I feel that this information is vital with the rising rates of infant mortality. The Capstone project will target expectant mothers as well as those making attempts to conceive. It will be done through the distribution of pamphlets in hospitals, pharmacies, and birthing clinics/classes along with administering workshops. At the workshops, there will be a poster of general information with some statistics regarding the topic. It will be interactive and question and answer based so the women/couples can get answers to their own questions and concerns. This will be an educational campaign providing information about the possible advantages and disadvantages of giving birth in the hospital as well as those of giving birth at home with a midwife. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 274 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 537 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 92A Mariah Crowley, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Heart Disease Among Hispanic Women in Massachusetts Heart disease is the number one killer of women in the United States. In Massachusetts, Hispanic women face heart disease nearly 10 years earlier than Caucasian women. Obesity, high cholesterol, poverty, language barriers, physical inactivity, and lack of information all contribute to increased risk factors for women of color. According to WomenHeart 29% of Hispanics compared to 68% of white women are informed that heart disease is the leading killer of women. Traditional diets high in cholesterol, including fried foods and lack of exercise, are places to make community changes . Previous research states that 60 % of Hispanic women report engaging in no physical exercise program at all. Health education programs on heart disease have shown to be very effective on lowering the risk of having a cardiovascular disease. Brookside Community Health Center, a health center for Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, provided an opportunity for women 50 years or older, many of whom were Hispanic, to participate in a heart healthy program for a period of 10 weeks. The program was designed by two Health Career Connection interns and myself. The program consisted of educating these at risk women about healthy recipes, stress management techniques, exercising routines such as yoga and zumba, and general cardiovascular health education. We also helped them sign up for fitness centers, and provided them with educational materials on how to take care of their overall health. The participants were recruited by referrals from primary physicians. These patients were diabetic, overweight or had a background of heart disease. The goal of the program was not only to educate these women on heart disease, but was also for the patients to develop a partnership with their doctors. Brookside Community Health Center is a newly designated patient Centered Medical Home. The Patient Centered Medical Home is a health care setting that facilitates partnerships between individual patients, and their personal physicians . Three weeks into the program, 80% of the participants reported to be engaging in physical activity daily, and 95% reported to be eating in smaller portions, and low in cholesterol. This capstone will include final results of the program. 538 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 68C Ashley Cubbedge, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Sex Education in High Schools There has been a distinct change in sexual education programs in the US in the last 20 years but how these changes have affected teen sexual activity must be examined. In a survey done by the Center for Disease Control they found that between the years of 1991 and 2009 that there was an overall decrease in sexual activity among teenagers between the ages of 15 to 18 years of age, and that there was also an increase in condom use among these students. Sex education programs are an important part of awareness for adolescents to learn about sex and how to protect themselves. This project will be looking at the different sex education programs and comparing how effective they are for students. Unprotected sex can lead to many health problems. These programs can help prevent unsafe sex among teens and can increase health and awareness. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 275 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 539 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 87A John Dau, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst The Impact of HIV/AIDS in South Africa South Africa is one of the Sub-Saharan Africa countries with the highest prevalence of HIV/AIDS. According to World Health Organization, more than 5 million people in the country are living with HIV/AIDS. The prevalence of HIV/AIDS is higher among youth and young adults. It’s estimated that 40% of the South African population is less than 15 years of age and that 15.64% of young adults age 15-24 are HIV- positive. The cause of HIV/AIDS prevalence among young people in South Africa is due to lack of safe sexual behavior and proper sexual education. This research project will examine the impact of HIV/AIDS on South African’s young generation and economic development. Since the disease mostly affects young adults of working age, the level of productivity in the country decreases, especially in the workplace, due to staff illnesses, absenteeism, and death. In addition, HIV- positive and negative mothers as well as orphaned children of deceased victims widely affect the country’s economic development. The government of South Africa together with international humanitarian organizations needs to employ better intervention and services to stop the widespread of HIV/AIDS in the country. 540 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 95A Madeline DePina, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst A Strategy to Combat The Discrepancy In Infant Mortality Rates Between African American And Caucasian Women Twice as many African-American babies are at risk of death before age one as compared to White American babies. Racial factors among disparities in infant mortality have been consistently recognized in the United States; differences in infant mortality rates between the groups have even increased in recent years. Today African-American infants have 2.4 times the infant mortality rate compared to non-Hispanic Caucasian infants. Why do infant mortality rates among African Americans remain more than twice as high as White Americans? My goal is to explore this question and look further into this disparity. Infant mortality is defined as the death of an infant before his or her first birthday. The infant mortality rate is an important measure of the well-being of infants, children, and pregnant women because it is at times indicative of factors such as maternal health, quality, and access to medical care, socioeconomic conditions, and public health practices. I will be evaluating different strategies used to approach this issue that examine the different causes, and also I will create my own educational programming that aims to develop a prevention strategy that would help combat the inequality in the rates between these groups. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 276 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 541 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 68C Sonal Desai, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Bhopal and the Union Carbide Disaster Public health is a broad field with many disciplines. One of the main goals of the public health community is prevention. Exposure to dangerous chemicals and pollutants is large concern that affects the lives of many people all around the world, and an issue that remains at the forefront of prevention efforts. The Bhopal gas tragedy that occurred on the night of December 2-3, 1984 was a gas leak in Bhopal, India that rapidly killed 15,000 people and continues to affect people in that area today, even 28 years later. Although many outreach efforts went out at the time of the disaster, not much is being done currently to ensure that people in that area are safe from the dangerous chemical exposures that killed thousands. Currently, hundreds of Bhopal residents are still becoming ill and/or dying due to the lingering effects of the union carbide disaster. The capstone project, done with the help of the International Campaign for Justice in Bhopal (ICJB), will be completed via literature review as well as a series of interviews with an ICJB volunteer herself. This project will show people the dangers that are still posed by the now forgotten union carbide disaster and the effects that the lingering exposures are having on the population. Furthermore, the details of the disaster will be explored in order to investigate how events like this can be prevented and how this event and the consequences are related to our everyday lives. Disasters such as this one should not occur in the future. People need to be aware not only of how this event occurred, but how many lives are still being affected by this disaster today in order to prevent this from happening again in the future. 542 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 83A Elaina Dominesey, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Asthma Education in Holyoke, MA Approximately 25 million Americans have asthma and the numbers are increasing every year. A significant public health problem, asthma affects approximately 1 in 10 people in Massachusetts - 9.9% of adults and 10.3% of children. Asthma development has been linked to a variety of environmental factors including tobacco smoke, dust, mold, mildew, cockroaches, and air pollution. In Massachusetts, 75.7% of adults and 65.2% of children with asthma are classified as having not well controlled or very poorly controlled asthma. Although asthma cannot be cured, it can be controlled through management plans and avoidance of environmental triggers. Emergency department visits, hospitalizations, and deaths due to asthma are preventable with appropriate treatment and education. According to the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, the prevalence of asthma among Holyoke elementary and middle school children, at 17.9%, is significantly higher than the statewide prevalence. Through my internship at the Holyoke Health Center, I will be helping to develop workshops that will educate community members about asthma and how it can be controlled. This report will detail these workshops and other steps that are being taken to raise awareness about asthma in the Holyoke community. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 277 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 543 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 69C Amanda Doolin, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Row Springfield It is known that youth today struggle with weight, in part due to diet and in part due to physical activity. Lack of physical activity for many young people in low socioeconomic areas is due to lack of access to a gym or inability to pay for a membership/ pay to be a part of an athletic team. My initiative is to create a non-profit rowing program for high school age girls and boys in the Springfield area which will help young people stay active, learn important skills like cooperation, time management, mental toughness, loyalty, and trust. Along with the rowing aspect of this program I will design an academic portion to ensure a brighter future the youth in low-income areas. This academic portion will include programs such as SAT prep, tutors, and application process/ recruiting process for college. My program will be modeled after similar rowing programs in Holyoke, MA and New York, NY by using their best practices and tailoring them more to my targeted group. 544 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 56C Mitchell Doucette, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Review of North American Health Care Cost-Effectiveness Analyses Introduction: Cost effectiveness analyses are necessary for determining the benefits and costs of new healthcare processes of North American healthcare. As overall healthcare costs continue to rise, it is imperative for the role of cost efficiency to be considered an important indicator for health care planning, policy, financing, and delivery. When effective treatments or technologies are initially introduced, typically, the benefits exceed the costs. These technologies and treatments can become inefficient over time either through becoming obsolete or growing potential medical risks. That is why cost effectiveness is vital for healthcare practices, private, public, and non-profit alike. By determining the optimal cost effective point of utilization, healthcare practices can eliminate financial waste and risky medical treatments, allowing for increased efficacy and safety. Methods: To examine cost effectiveness analyses a literature review was preformed through the US National Library of Medicine National Institutes of Health (PubMed) database and the American Economic Association’s electronic bibliography (EconLit). The included search terms for PubMed were “cost-effectiveness analysis”[All Fields] AND ((“publishing”[MeSH Terms] OR “publishing”[All Fields] OR “published”[All Fields]) AND (“north america”[MeSH Terms] OR (“north”[All Fields] AND “america”[All Fields]) OR “north america”[All Fields])). These search terms yielded 119 results. The included search terms for EconLit were “health care AND costeffectiveness analysis” and included a geographic region limit of North America and the published date limit of year 2000. These search terms yielded 19 results. To better examine the impact cost-effectiveness analyses can have in North America, the search was further refined manually to exclude results not published within the borders of North America. Additionally, results that dealt with the cost-effectiveness or cost-effectiveness analysis of a singular drug or drug treatment were excluded as well. The manual filter produced a total of 19 results (11 results from Pubmed and 8 results from Econlit). Preliminary results indicate there is considerable room to raise efficiency by moving from inefficient health interventions to efficient health interventions. Additionally, the concern from the private, public, and government sectors of health care about the management of rising healthcare costs has increased the growth of cost-effectiveness analyses in the medical sector. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 278 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 545 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 33A Amy Elcock, Teresa Fitts (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Kinesiology, Westfield State University Gender Differences in Exercise Motivations and Life Goals among Low Active College Students Title: An Examination of Differences between Exercise Motivations and Life Aspirations in Low Active Males and Females. Purpose: The lack of physical activity is a crisis that has swept through our nation and affects every age, race, and gender. The Center for Disease Control and Prevention states that in 2008 only 50% of America’s male population between the ages of 18-24 was engaged in regular physical activity, and only 30% of females between the ages of 1824 exercised regularly (CDC). This study examines the exercise motivations and life aspirations within the context of the Self-Determination Theory (Deci & Ryan, 1985). It was hypothesized that males and females who reported low physical activity levels would be more extrinsically motivated to exercise, and less likely to express life goals relating to personal meaning and health. Methods: Undergraduate male and female students were administered three questionnaires relating to Physical Activity Level, Exercise Motivations and Life Goals following the approval of the institutional review board. Physical Activity Levels were calculated utilizing the methods outlined in the International Physical Activity Questionnaire with categorical values of Low, Moderate and Vigorous Activity. Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation was determined based on the results of the Exercise Motivations Scale (Pelletier et al., 1995) and the Aspirations Index (Kasser & Ryan, 1996). A comparison of mean differences between males and females reporting low physical activity will be conducted using t-tests. The results of this study will provide important information relating to the differences in exercise motivations between males and females who are not very active, and also focus on the relationship between exercise motivation and life aspirations. This study was completed as part of a larger study examining the physical activity levels and motivation of college students. 546 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 61C Kristjan Endriko, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Alzheimer’s and the effectiveness of caregiver support Alzheimer’s is a neurological degenerative disease that disrupts the function of the human brain and is associated with the gradual decline in the ability to perform cognitive, physical, and social tasks. Victims of Alzheimer’s show impairment in memory functions along with communication problems and personality changes. There are no known causes or cures for the disease. Currently, improvements in patients are defined as those that prolong the rate of decline in brain function. Two underlying issues are to be focused on throughout this capstone. First, the significance of research in Alzheimer’s will be outlined including reasons as to how and why interventions are necessary. Then, proper methods of care for victims of the disease will be discussed; including day to day challenges. In addition, obstacles and burdens associated with the care of Alzheimer’s victims will be underlined. Three primary interventions recommended to ease the stress on caregivers are to be examined. The influence of primary methods of care and caregiver interventions will be assessed and related to the significance of research surrounding Alzheimer’s disease. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 279 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 547 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 89A Andrea Garon, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Emergency Preparedness in the Comunity Hospital Setting Disasters can range from natural disasters, to epidemics, chemical spills, and large scale traumatic accidents. Because disaster can hit at any moment, and the type of disaster and severity can vary, it is important to train individuals on disaster and emergency preparedness in various situations, in order to achieve the most positive outcomes. The project that I will be doing involves emergency room employees at Holyoke Medical Center, a local community hospital, to help prepare these employees to react appropriately to disaster situations. Because of the recent hiring of many new employees, only approximately 50% of the staff is trained in emergency preparedness. I will be collaborating with the emergency preparedness coordinator of the hospital, to reach the two following goals: the first goal is to get 100% of ER employees to take a two day course that focuses on hazardous materials (HAZMAT) and appropriate personal protective equipment during disasters. The second goal is to create a committee of approximately ten people who could be leaders during a disaster. The emergency preparedness coordinator and I will have monthly meetings with the committee to update committee members on recent information and hold disaster drills. Outcome measures will include successful learning of disaster preparedness, and appropriate staff responses during the drills. I will research various government agencies- Massachusetts Department of Public Health, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, and the World Health Organization to identify their recommendations for training, and implement these recommendations in the community hospital setting. 548 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 62C Kathleen Geoghegan, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Kitchen Boot Camp: Teaching College Students How to Take Charge in their First Kitchen The modern college student gets an intensive education linked to their career of choice, but little realistic education on everyday skills. In a fast paced college life- especially for those students who live off-campus- making food seems like a time-consuming chore that will wield unappetizing results for those who do not have experience in the kitchen. Some of them also seem to think that buying ingredients to make a good meal will cost more money than buying it prepared. Another problem is that more young people are not taught how to cook at home, so when they move into their own apartments in college they do not know how to start preparing their own food. To evaluate newly independent college students’ eating habits and teach them some kitchen basics, a team consisting of the nutritionist at University Health Services, the Dean of Off-Campus Students, the director of Health Promotion at University Health Services, and myself are creating a cooking course to introduce these students to the difference between fresh food and prepared food, and how to make a healthy meal in their own kitchens. The course covers kitchen essentials in cookware and basic food supplies, making a shopping list, budgeting weekly groceries, and making a meal from scratch. To assess the initial attitudes and knowledge of the students enrolled in this class there will be both a pre-test and a post-test onemonth after the class is completed. The pre-test will assess trends in grocery shopping, cooking, dining out, budgeting, and reasons for which students make the meal choices that they do. The one-month post test uses many of the same questions as the pre-test to monitor changes in attitudes and behavior towards cooking and grocery shopping. The goal of this class is to discover what the major challenges are for students in learning to cook healthy meals, and to teach students learn to find the time, money, or ability to make their own healthy food. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 280 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 549 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 96A Christine Fitzgerald, Kimberly Gomes, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Factors of Late Stage Breast Cancer Diagnosis and Our Solution Breast cancer in the U.S. poses a serious threat to the female population. One in eight women in the U.S. will develop breast cancer in their lifetime. Our project takes a closer look into what specific factors affect the stage at which breast cancer is diagnosed in women. Specifically, the U.S. Scientific databases and journals revealed that African American women are more likely than White women to have received inconsistent mammograms for breast cancer. African American women also run the greatest chance of being diagnosed with a late stage of breast cancer when compared to all other races. When looking at insurance status, uninsured patients were more likely to be diagnosed with Stage II breast cancer when compared to a privately insured patient. A variety of factors contribute to these alarming facts. After taking a look at the statistics, we would like to make recommendations for an outreach program. It would educate women, specifically African American women and women of low socioeconomic status on preventive measures to take that will increase the chance of diagnosing breast cancer at an early stage. This educational program will make women aware of the precautions, like self-examinations to prevent breast cancer from going unnoticed and progress into a later stage before it is diagnosed. This program would also stress the importance of getting mammograms regularly and provide ways for uninsured women to receive mammograms that they may have not been able to get before. This program aims to reduce the number of late stage breast cancer diagnoses by eliminated the barriers that exist today. 550 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 57C Kate Grannemann, Sanjiv Gupta (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Sociology, UMass Amherst Prevention by Access: An Evaluation of the WIC program among American Indian Tribes Healthy diet and lifestyle are necessities for human development, yet are not accessible to everyone in the United States and the rest of the world. Policies, economics, and geography play a role in dietary behaviors and environment. This Capstone project examines the differences in rates of adverse health outcomes among different American Indian tribes as related to health-related behaviors and nutrition. I propose that varying levels of efficiency of the WIC (Women, Infants, and Children) welfare program cause differences in the rates of health outcomes such as diabetes and obesity in those populations. I use breastfeeding rates, education initiatives, and publications as indicators of a program’s influence. I analyze aggregate data of the cost and size of the programs, in addition to participation rates and regional differences to evaluate the WIC programs among various American Indian tribes. The results of my research will reveal the weaknesses and strengths of different programs, and the variations in their effectiveness. My conclusion will lead me to understand the successes and failures among different programs and to propose changes to the programs as they exist now. In my conclusion, I will also address issues of food access, food environment, and cultural matters that influence dietary patterns in American Indian households. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 281 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 551 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 88C Jessica Gray, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Social Determinants of Health Care: Educating the Public The US ranks 30th when it comes to life expectancy, but with its resources, it should be ranked in the top five. This unexpectedly low life expectancy is based upon a growing healthcare problem within the US economy: the rise of healthcare disparities.These disparities can be linked to education level, job rank, and place of residence. This idea of “wealth=health” needs to be addressed in order to eliminate these disparities. This Capstone project will be about informing the community about health disparities through an educational approach, pamphlets. The goal of my project is to outline the health disparities that exist so that one day they may cease to exist in the healthcare field. The audiences of my educational pamphlet are young adults through the age of 35 years old. These pamphlets will be in health care centers and in them I would outline four social determinants of health such as college education level, high school education level, urban vs. rural areas of residence and the importance of health insurance. I want to educate them on these four things, which will help shape them for their future and let them be aware of what their health care status could be. The community needs to be aware in order to advocate for better healthcare for all and/or inform others who still do not know these health disparities exist and limits them. 552 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 43A Haley E Marshall, Wendy Bonsu, Shanzay Haider, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Violence Prevention Education Program Among Middle School Aged Students This community health project looks to focus and educate individuals on the issue of violence, specifically child abuse and domestic violence. We have found that the most effective avenue to combat this issue is through highly effective education geared towards middle school aged children. From the ChildHelp website they stated, “Middle school is an important developmental time in the lives of young teens, when learning to identify what’s healthy and unhealthy in relationships is crucial. Advances in the science of brain development indicate that this is a period of social emotional learning and empathy maturity thus offering a key opportunity for education and prevention.” Proper education on violence and how it should be dealt with are important points to bring to this age group. The focus on violence education comes from the alarming increasing rates of child abuse and domestic violence in the past 10 years. In 2001, an average of 3.56 deaths occurred each day due to child abuse as compared to the more than 5 deaths a day attributed to child abuse in 2011 (Childhelp, 2011). Furthermore, children who survive child abuse are more likely to be perpetrators of spousal abuse, violence and crimes in the future (Childhelp, 2011). This capstone project will research and deliver an effective and innovative educational experience that targets the core issues in preventing future violence in our communities. In conjunction with the Commonwealth’s Department of Child and Family and Safe Passage Domestic Violence Shelter, we are developing a campaign geared towards the Springfield middle school aged population through education. Ultimately, we hope to inspire both the Springfield school systems and other Commonwealth education facilities to implement this educational program into their curriculum. ChildHelp. (2011). National child abuse statistics. Retrieved from http://www.childhelp.org/pages/statistics 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 282 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 553 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 66C Di Yi (Jessica) He, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Gendered Representations of Feminine Hygiene Products in Printed Media. PURPOSE: This project will examine the methods by which advertisements through the years have represented feminine hygiene products in American magazines. Two main target hygiene products that will be focused are sanitary napkins and tampons. There will also be a portion dedicated to other lesser used feminine hygiene products: the Diva cup and Glad Rags. Tampons and sanitary napkins will be compared to the Diva cup and Glad Rags in their relationship to ideas about menstruation and health. The public health implication of this project is directly related to women’s health and their relationship to their bodies. It is connected to gendered representations of menstruation in the media which affects a woman’s view of their body. METHOD: This paper will explore how women and menstruation is represented in marketing by analyzing advertisements of tampons and sanitary napkins in two magazines targeting women and teens - Cosmopolitan and Seventeen. These magazines will date back five to ten years. Additional data of how women’s biological health is viewed will be gathered using scholarly literature accessed through the University of Massachusetts Amherst library database and Five College Catalog. Other sources of information will be through the website of the feminine hygiene products. 554 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 65C Christopher Ingraham, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Embryonic Stem Cell Research: The Real Truth Human embryonic stem cell research (hESC) is a topic that stirs both approval and criticism. Research shows that stem cell research will help further our understanding of human development and differentiation. The research on embryonic stem cells, also known as pluripotent stem cells, shows that these cells can perpetuate themselves and can differentiate into all types of specialized cells. These cells have the potential to generate into all cell types within the body, due to their ability to differentiate into all derivatives of the three primary germ layers of a cell: ectoderm, endoderm, and mesoderm. The regenerative advantage that stem cells possess means that they have the potential to treat disease and replace damaged tissue. However, embryonic stem cell research provokes much debate on both morality and ethics. Pluripotent stem cells originate from oocytes and embryos, and because of this, the argument of whom or what is considered “human” is the focal point of controversy. I will illustrate the viewpoints of those for and against hESC, and how each perspective defines a living human being. I will also present the pros and cons the research produces, and will compare the United States view on hESC research to the views of other countries around the world. Advancements in stem cell research are continuously expanding and developing. I will describe these new techniques and the benefits they possess and create a benefit analysis to assist in advancing recruitment for donors. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 283 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 555 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 73C Alyssa Johnson, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst The Effectiveness of The Prevention Program “The Montana Meth Project” on Methamphetamine Abuse in Rural United States. Methamphetamine abuse is a growing problem inordinately affecting rural areas of the United States; According to the National Association of Counties, forty-seven percent of county sheriffs report methamphetamine as their number one drug problem. Sixty-two percent of counties with populations less than 25,000 reported an increase in methamphetamine abuse by women and forty-five states show a ninety percent increase in meth-related crime in the past three years. Methamphetamine, a central nervous system stimulant, is white, odorless, and can be taken orally, through the nose (snorting), injection through a syringe, or smoked. Treatment options currently available for methamphetamine addicts include therapy, family counseling, and behavior modification, but because methamphetamine is a highly addictive drug many addicts often fail to complete treatment programs or relapse. Within recent years the public health community has attempted to address the problem of methamphetamine abuse through primary prevention programs aimed at discouraging non-users from trying methamphetamine. This project explores the effectiveness of prevention programs on methamphetamine abuse rates in rural communities. 556 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 64C Christine Kelly, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Sexually Transmitted Infection Rates Compared to Rates of Barrier Usage Among College Students College students are part of the largest population of people currently contracting sexually transmitted infections (STIs). This being the case we examined the usage rates of various barrier methods compared to the rates of STIs in the college age population, specifically pertaining to HPV, HIV and Chlamydia. We collected data from a sample population of students on the usage of barriers and STI contraction knowledge through a survey of questions. Once this data was collected we used the Peer Health Model to provide an educational intervention for this population, in the form of an interactive workshop. The topics addressed in this workshop explained the different barrier methods for sexual practices and the prevention levels they have on the contraction of these specific STIs. We used educational activities such as barrier demonstrations and informational posters highlighting local resources for testing and information, and statistical information among others. We finally evaluated how much the participants learned concerning the effectiveness of barriers by administering a survey upon completion of the workshop and compared these to the results of the survey administered prior to the workshop. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 284 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 557 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 85A Emily B DeChambeau, Caroline Kelly, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst A Peer Education Approach to the Detrimental Consequences of Indoor Tanning Skin cancer is the most common form of cancer in the United States. Every year there are more new cases of skin cancer than breast, prostate, lung and colon cancers combined. Exposure to ultraviolet radiation from artificial light is a major risk factor for skin cancer. On average nearly 1 million people tan in indoor salons and about 70 percent of these tanners are Caucasian females aged from 16 to 29 years old. Indoor tanning increases a persons’ chance of getting melanoma by 74%. College students are among the majority of indoor tanning users and seem to look past the deadly effects of indoor tanning. After examining multiple research and scientific studies on the effects of UVA and UVB rays emitted in tanning beds, we realize the college student population is not knowledgeable enough on the consequences of tanning. Educating college students about the detrimental effects of indoor tanning could effectively decrease the amount of indoor tanners. This would in turn decrease skin cancer rates. This capstone project will develop and implement a peer education class on the effects of indoor tanning. This educational class is informative while also being fun and interactive. At the close of this study we will implement a peer education class to inform the University of Massachusetts Amherst population on the dangers of artificial sunlight. 558 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 45A Eden Ketema, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Assessing the Needs of Springfield Communities in the Context of Square One Programs and Services Square One is a non-profit organization that provides various services such as early childhood care and education, resources such as the “BOOK IT” program, inviting children to take and keep one book every day, and “FRESH START”, a peer recovery program for those parents who are substance abusers or recovering from substance abuse. The organization, based in Springfield, MA, has existed since 1883. Square One has been dedicated to the provision of quality early childhood education since it’s inception. Their most popular service is daytime childcare, provided at four children’s centers throughout the year. Square One serves over 1,100 children and 1,200 families. With only 46% of Springfield’s children reading proficiently by the conclusion of the third grade and 28% of the city’s population living below the poverty level, the needs of Springfield’s residents are vast. This project will provide a plan for evaluating the programs provided by Square One, which has not been done comprehensively since 2001. This project will also help assess Square One’s impact on the community and lead to empirical evidence for their program’s successes and failures in order to increase their programs’ effectiveness and improve their ability to obtain funding and support from other organizations. In addition to this, the project will provide a thorough examination of the community’s population, the various demographics of Springfield neighborhoods, and the social services available to the public with a focus on the communities surrounding Square One’s four Springfield children’s centers. This project will be conducted by a group of students from the Public Health Department at the University of Massachusetts School of Public Health and Health Sciences. The findings and evaluation plan will then be presented to the executive board at Square One. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 285 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 559 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 54C Jaclyn Kozak, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst A Look at the Major Sources of Stress in Freshmen at UMass The first year of college is an exciting time for young students. Poor coping skills, and major changes in social and academic settings can lead to high stress levels among freshman. Living away from home, and finally being on your own for the first time in life can be an overwhelming experience. Increased stress in college students has been positively correlated with several negative consequences, including weight gain, poor academic performance, and depression. The objective of our study is to find the major sources of stress among college freshman here at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Data from a survey handed out to freshman on campus will be used to further evaluate what stressors effect freshman the most. We will be developing our questionnaire based on specific research as well as feedback from professors UMass Amherst. In addition, we will examine the consequences related to increased stress levels on college campuses. We seek to create a proposal for campus administrator’s that promotes effective and efficient programs intended to minimize stress for future and current students here at UMass. 560 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 51C Katherine Kritikos, Wilmore Webley (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Microbiology, UMass Amherst HIV/AIDS Knowledge, Sexual Behavior, and Risk Perceptions Among Students at UMass Amherst PURPOSE: College students are particularly at risk for contracting HIV because of their high rates of sexual activity, multiple sexual partners, inconsistent condom use, and use of alcohol and other drugs during sexual activity. The objective of the current study was to assess HIV/AIDS knowledge and how it influences behavior and risk perception among students at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. METHODS: 477 UMass students were surveyed via SurveyMonkey™, with participants consisting of 144 males and 333 females; the average age was 19.7 years. 12 questions were administered throughout the survey. RESULTS: A total of 24.3% of respondents reported being previously tested for HIV. In general, respondents were aware of the three main routes of HIV transmission: body fluids (99.4%), blood (98.9%), and breast milk (65.2%). However, 20.1% incorrectly thought that mosquitoes transmitted HIV; another 4.2% believed that transmission could occur through kissing, and 0.8% believed that it could occur through casual contact. 80.9% reported being sexually active within their lifetime, averaging 4.8 partners; 76.9% reported being sexually active within the past year, averaging 2.4 partners. Of those who have been sexually active, 36.8% reported always using condoms and 57.5% reported using condoms during their last sexual intercourse. However, 49.2% reported that they had failed to use a condom while under the influence of alcohol and/or marijuana. Although 63.2% of respondents reported inconsistent condom use, only 9.1% of sexually active respondents believed that they were at risk for contracting HIV. Males who engage in homosexual behavior, a high-risk group for HIV transmission, represented 3.6% of sexually active respondents. CONCLUSION: We conclude that while students at UMass Amherst are generally knowledgeable about HIV transmission and associated risk factors, their knowledge does not necessarily translate into perceived personal risk of contracting the disease, or safer sex practices. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 286 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 561 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 67C Jenna Lavallee, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Square One Needs Assessment Square One is an organization committed to ensuring that every child has the opportunity to succeed at school, at work, and in life by providing educational programs, family support services, and health and fitness resources. A needs assessment has been requested by Square One for our team to analyze the services and resources allocated to its populations through conducting a literature review of demographics and similar services available in the Springfield community, administering interviews to the staff and families, and conducting focus groups. We will then evaluate aspects of Square One that need improvement and better awareness among families, staff, and surrounding community. 562 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 53C Kristy Lessard, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Efficacy of Needle Exchange Programs in Comparable Cities Infection by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) leading to acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) is an epidemic on the national level. Locally, 22% of citizens living with the HIV/AIDS in Massachusetts were exposed to the virus via injection drug use (IDU). Because IDU exposure is preventable, programs have been established in an attempt to educate, prevent, and control exposure through this route of infection. These programs include needle exchange programs (NEP) and safe injection facilities (SIF). The current study examines two urban Massachusetts cities, Lowell and Cambridge, with comparable populations but differing HIV/AIDS prevention practices. The city of Cambridge hosts a NEP program run by the AIDS Action Committee of Massachusetts while Lowell does not have any existing NEP programs. This study analyzes a potential correlation between prevention programs and disease prevalence compared to areas with no HIV/AIDS action plans. Cambridge reports 9% diagnosis via IDU while Lowell reports 11% of cases via IDU. Preliminary data analysis shows no significant difference between cities with active IDU prevention programs and diagnosis via this route. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 287 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 563 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 64C Kelsey Lyons, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Social Implications of Intersex Genital Reconstructive Surgery at Infancy An intersex person is someone with atypical sex chromosomes, gonads, or genitalia. Recent case studies have shown 1 out of every 1,500 children are born with different variations of intersex in the US. There are nine different dimensions that make someone a typical male or female: chromosomes, genetics, gonads, hormones, internal genitalia, external genitalia, brain differentiation, gender identity, and gendered behavior. Because there are so many variables, there is a high chance of genetic mutation during sex determination and differentiation. When a child is born with a Y chromosome and ambiguous genitalia, the doctor makes the decision on how to reconstruct the patient’s genitalia based completely on cultural and social value judgments. After administering many of these surgeries, doctors are discovering that people who had early sexual reassignment suffer psychologically, physically, and socially. The model of dealing with genital ambiguity must be addressed to prevent large numbers of people faced with psychological damage later in life. The Princeton Review ranks Smith, Hampshire and Mount Holyoke as part of the Top 20 LGBT-Friendly campuses in the United States. Since these schools are in close proximity and members of Five College Consortium along with UMass Amherst, why does our campus not share this same characteristic of our sister schools? By presenting my poster in the Undergraduate Research Fair, my goal would be to disseminate comprehensive information to the community about the biology behind gender to remove the “a-typicality” from the definition of intersex. If a larger network of people contemplate the social implications of gender and sex for someone born intersex, UMass would be one step closer toward a more accepting campus. In the long run, our informed generation will have the capacity to change the medical model for children born intersex and assist in creating positive health outcomes for those undergoing this experience. 564 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 62C Laura Malicia, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Factors Affecting the Rates and Incidence of Pre-eclampsia Among Latin American Women Ensuring that women are healthy and able to reproduce healthy infants is crucial to starting and maintaining a healthy population, which is a major goal of public health. One of the most common pregnancy related conditions affecting women everywhere is hypertension induced by pregnancy, or pre-eclampsia. It is the most common medical problem encountered during pregnancy and occurs in 6-8% of all pregnancies in the United States. This project aims to examine the different reasons for such high rates of pre-eclampsia and the risk factors associated with these rates. It is believed that socio-economic status has a large effect on the rate of hypertensive disorders and deaths due to hypertension in pregnancy. These factors, as well as the other factors that are affected by socioeconomic status such as lifestyle factors, age, and access to prenatal care are the variables that will be examined. Along with examining the source of the problem, this project will look at the different programs and initiatives in place to reduce these complications, as well as propose some new ideas and strategies to counteract the problem. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 288 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 565 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 59C Silvana Melo, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Educating Kids About Local Foods The rates of childhood obesity are increasing in the United States. According to the CDC, childhood obesity now affects 17% of children within the United States. Therefore, it is increasingly important to teach children about healthy nutrition and food production. In this project, I would like to design a curriculum to educate children about local food and food justice. The objective would be incorporate local food into the current nutrition curriculum as well as teach kids about food in a way that is relevant to them. In addition, students will understand where their food comes from and how they can choose to make healthier choices and encourage their families to do so as well. Through a set of discussions and activities, students will be encouraged to think about the origin of their food. Students will learn about the health benefits of incorporating more local fruits and vegetable into their diets. In addition, they will be able to identify community resources, which provide access to local, healthy food options. 566 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 65C Tessa Merrick, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Student Action in Eating Disorder Education Eating disorders, including anorexia, bulimia, eating disorder not otherwise specified (EDNOS) and Binge-Eating, are psychological disorders that involve extreme disturbances in eating behavior. Eating disorders run rampant in our society, especially among college students. Although an increasing number of people are being diagnosed, getting people help and then treating this illness continues to be an arduous process. Far too often eating disorders are not diagnosed until they have had detrimental health effects on the individual. Many college students do not receive treatment until their illness has reached an advanced stage. Because eating disorders are often thought of as primarily having an impact on young teens, college students may not even realize they have a serious illness until after the eating disorder has worsened. The more a college student knows about eating disorders, the better they will be able to determine whether they, other college students, family members or friends have eating disorders. Understanding and educating the public about this illness is a key step in treating an eating disorder before it is too late. As a Resident Adviser on campus, I have the opportunity to develop and then present both a fun and informative educational program that teaches students the facts and dangers of eating disorders. This can help in raising awareness and counteracting this serious illness among college-age students, and could also be replicated by future Resident Advisers to continue educating students in the future. 567 Concourse 3:30-4:15 Board 46A Elizabeth Metrano, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Prescription Drug Crisis in America Too often the people of America are deprived of the medication that they need to survive. Certain types of medications are becoming increasingly scarce across the country, especially over the past decade. With prescription drug shortages many are facing increasing struggles coping with illnesses. This growing problem is affecting millions of Americans each year with shortages ranging from cancer treatment drugs to anesthetics. There is not one sole cause creating drug shortages. Issues that are generating prescription drug shortages include manufacturing and production issues, contamination, and wasteful uses. With revisions in policy regarding prescription drug shortages, there could be a dramatic decrease in amount of prescription drug shortages. To explore the current prescription drug shortage in the United States, I will be researching published literature. With the results I will propose policy changes that could possibly help to improve the current crisis before it becomes completely out of control. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 289 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 568 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 74C Amal Mohiuddin, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Amherst’s Take on Tobacco: A Pre and Post Comparison of Knowledge Tobacco is the leading preventable cause of death due to cancer, heart disease, stroke, and lung diseases. According to statistics of the Center of Disease Control (CDC), 16.1% of Massachusetts’s adult population who are 18 and over are current cigarette smokers. Also, 20.9% of college students are smokers. This data shows that there is a need for intervention in college campuses. The University of Massachusetts Amherst, among 400 other colleges around the United States, is taking an initiative called “A Tobacco-Free UMass Amherst” starting July 1st 2013. It is important for the surrounding community to understand the effects of tobacco intake. Our aim is to raise awareness of the issues surrounding smoking. The target population of this capstone will be the general public of the town of Amherst.We will evaluate their knowledge of health implications of cigarette smoking. This will be done by presenting a presentation to the Amherst population at the Hampshire Mosque and the Tapestry Health Center. We will conduct a survey before and after the presentation to compare the knowledge of the participants. The presentation will be informative and health related and will highlight both positive and negative aspects of cigarette smoking. We also want to evaluate the stand that the people of Amherst have on the initiative that UMass is taking. Through this project we hope that the town of Amherst has a better understanding of the effects of smoking and they are able to take part in this initiative as well as to be able to make better choices for themselves. 569 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 51C Rhode Moise, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Rectify Your Life:After School Dance Program helping to implement the Importance of education among teens In the past couple of years we have seen an increase in dropout rates among high school students. Many programs have been created to help improve this problem. With the issue of drop outs still increasing, more has to be done. About half of dropouts are from households who receive welfare assistance. The children living in these low-income communities lack the motivation to continue school, do not have the means to live a healthy life-style, and are involved in risky behaviors. United States high school dropouts commit about 75% of crimes. This capstone Project will create a theoretical after school program called Rectify . Rectify will focus on the children living in areas in the US that are low- income communities. Rectify will focus on children ages nine to eighteen. Rectify goal is to help implement the importance of education, responsibility, and life skills. This program will be able to provide a place where children can come after school to do their homework, talk to counselors, and be involved with dance. Dance is used as the foundation of the program to set an outlet for the children. Through dance they learn the importance of hard work, working as a team, and responsibility. The children will be able to be part of the Rectify Program for years allowing them to have a chance to improve and change with the help of the counselors and teachers. The creation of Rectify will help set a goal for the children who partake in the program. Rectify will allow the children who will be in their last year of the program to be able to take all the skills they learned and continue on the right path to success. The success will be determined based on a yearly evaluation of the program based high school graduation rates in the community. After the creation of this program rectify hopes to help reduce the rates of dropouts among teens in high school. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 290 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 570 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 72C Debra Moreta, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Immigration and Access to Healthcare The United States is a diverse country, with many of its residents emigrating here from many other countries. Over the years the rates of immigration, legal and illegal, have risen and the influx of new individuals in our communities has changed the way the United States functions in many ways. Immigrants, many coming for educational and work opportunities, have entered our communities and become active contributors as much U.S. citizens do. While in the United States they have set up families, borne children, and perhaps even sought out citizenship in order to remain in the US permanently but are illegal immigrants and exempt from many policies and benefits that are available to most. When looking at healthcare, the U.S. census reports many unauthorized and foreign borne adults are among the highest users of Medicaid (2007), but this federally funded program does not always have enough funding for these individuals to receive quality health care. If these immigrants become sick and are denied access to affordable health care their well being, as well as that of their children, will suffer. Due to this I would like to pick a population in MA that is heavily populated with immigrant families, interview them on the quality of their life in the United States on the basis of education, health, and access to healthcare while in the United States. By specifically looking at the resources available through Medicaid I want to identify if this program lacks funding for its healthcare program that could provide additional healthcare, medical interpreters, and a better overall access to healthcare for these immigrants. Through the resource of my internship at the Women of Color Leadership Network in Amherst, MA and any partnering organizations in the community I would like to formulate a proposal to the government detailing why this population is at need for funding and access to Medicaid as much as legal citizens are. It is my hope to spread awareness on a specific population of immigrants and create a plan to advocate for them governmentally in order to improve their health care. 571 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 34A Viktoria Nakhabenko, Jennifer Hanselman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, Westfield State University Dental Communication This study was performed to examine: (1) The level of comprehension of people with English as a first and second language (ESL) after reading two pamphlets about the dental air abrasion technique; and (2) if images were useful for both groups in comprehension. Assessment of the comprehension of dental literature for the two groups was conducted through reading two pamphlets and taking a survey questionnaire afterwards. Pamphlet 1 had simple terminology with simple images, and Pamphlet 2 had complicated terminology with detailed images. Percentiles were used to assess differences from the survey. The survey was given to 134 participants (73 English as a first language people and 61 ESL). ESL people had more difficulty comprehending both pamphlets (36% Pamphlet 1 and 59% Pamphlet 2) and had no differences in comprehension of the pamphlets when compared to each other. In both pamphlets, images were not useful to ESL people, but were useful to people with English as a first language. The greatest issue in comprehension for people with English as a first language was the understanding of how the technology works, and terminology was the main issue for the ESL participants. A gap between the two groups exists in comprehension of dental literature. Images were not found to be useful for most of the ESL people. The results may have occurred because both pamphlets were not designed for ESL people. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 291 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 572 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 93A Michelle O’Brien, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Lack of Preventative Care in Haiti: Access to Immunizations Haiti has undergone major disaster and devastation in recent years that threatens the health and quality of lives of those in both rural and urban settings. The country’s enormous level of poverty and lack of affordable health care and preventative care is the main reason why so many people suffer from otherwise preventable diseases. This literature review looks at Partners in Health, an organization founded by Paul Farmer and others that provides preventative care in developing countries. Paul Farmer began Partners in Health with the goal of providing better global health, especially to disadvantaged populations in great need. Particular attention will be given to the distribution of clinics that provide vaccinations and immunizations, and what populations are most targeted to receive them. It will examine whether vaccination interventions are more common in rural or urban settings and what specific diseases are aimed at being prevented. This project will also look at the main strategies used by Partners in Health to address the health of the population of Haiti and will be presented to help others gain knowledge of the importance of preventative care and the effects it has on populations’ health as a whole. 573 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 42A Catherine Piccolo, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst How Culture Affects Health The United States has one of the highest obesity rates in the world at 22.5 percent and it is growing at a fast rate. Obesity is a serious condition that can lead to life threatening consequences. Risks of obesity include heart disease, diabetes and cancer. This capstone will compare the United States culture with Amsterdam’s to see how lifestyle, culture and government policies influence the built environment and can make it more or less difficult to stay healthy. This capstone will document and compare the amount of activity and types of food that are regularly consumed in both societies. I would hypothesize that the culture a person is influenced by is a huge factor in their overall health. This project will document steps the local, state and federal government could take to provide healthier built environments for its citizens. 574 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 40A Deanna Bunch, Naja Sobers, Carolyn Reed, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Alcohol Abuse at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst Alcohol abuse in the form of binge drinking is of high prevalence among college-aged students. There is a strong need for evidence-based, effective programming to reduce this risk. The University of Massachusetts Amherst’s University Health Services has established a number of health initiatives to combat alcohol abuse on its campus. In this project, three of these health initiatives will be observed aiming to understand the different methods used in combatting this serious health issue. The three initiatives are the Social Norms Campaign, Brief Alcohol Screening and Intervention for College Students (BASICS), and Fresh and Sober. Each one of these initiatives intervenes on a different level of healthcare- primary, secondary and tertiary. Overall the goal of this project is to evaluate and compare these initiatives on campus as well as promote them to UMASS students. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 292 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 575 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 86A Ellyn Robare, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Treatment Methods for Children and Adolescents Living With Chronic Pain Pediatric chronic pain, as defined by the American Pain Society, is pain that is persistent, recurrent and can vary in severity and frequency. Chronic pain in pediatrics may affect one organ or several and can also affect multiple parts of the body. According to the American Pain Society (2001), chronic pain affects about 15% to 20% of the pediatric population. With such a large portion of the pediatric population affected it is crucial that assessment and treatment is done correctly and thoroughly. Chronic pain needs to be managed effectively and efficiently so children are able to have a better quality of life. It is important to examine how chronic pain affects a child’s social life, family and home life, emotions, school, sleep, diet, physical activity level and overall well-being. Coping with chronic pain can also be very demanding and difficult for parents and siblings. Providing support for other family members is critical so they can better understand and manage the situation. Treating children who suffer from chronic pain is a critical component to managing the pain and improving one’s health. Using a multimodal approach to treatment is usually more effective than a single approach. Incorporating different treatments such as, massage, biofeedback, physical therapy, medications, occupational therapy, and different behavior techniques such as reinforcement, can make a dramatic difference. It is extremely important that both the child and caretakers are educated on both the condition and the treatment the child is receiving. In order for children suffering from chronic pain to be emotionally, mentally, spiritually and physically well, the management and treatment of chronic pain is a key component. For this project I will review current literature on a broad range of treatment methods used for treating children and adolescents who suffer from chronic pain. The ultimate goal is to see which treatment methods work best and which do not based on the underlying cause of chronic pain and the past medical history. 576 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 59C Marissa Rodrigues, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Cape Verdean Women: Breaking the Cycle of Abuse Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) is an alarming issue in Cape Verde. A reported 16.1% of Cape Verdean Women have experienced IPV within their lifetime, which includes both sexual and physical violence. The victims who are most affected by this matter are women. These underrepresented women deal with inequality and many health disparities within the nation. Cultural ideologies such as the belief that it is a woman’s duty to maintain and do what is beneficial for the family as well as fear of the unknown (effect of rising against traditional gender roles) prove to be a prominent issue. The proposed program is an outreach prevention group that will provide information to women on the warning signs of domestic violence and information on what they can do if they have become victims of IPV. Also, the program will provide a support group for those families who have been affected by IPV. These outreach and prevention groups will be implemented by a staff of psychologists, counselors, women’s rights advocates, inspirational speakers and legal counsel in hospitals as well as clinics in high risks communities. The four objectives of this program are to decrease the cases of unreported IPV, increase self-esteem in young women, increase awareness of IPV, and support the families that are affected (within 5 years of program implementation). Evaluations of these programs will be conducted to insure efficiency, such as monitoring and assessments prior and while in the program. The ultimate goal is to bring awareness, provide support, and decrease the abuse women are receiving in the country of Cape Verde. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 293 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 577 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 52C Samantha Rogers, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Local Health Resources in the Springfield Area The Springfield Department of Human and Health Services is an expansive health department serving a large community in many different ways. Springfield has a population of over 150,000 residents and has three times the national rate of hospital beds by population, yet there remains a question of whether needs are being met. It is important to identify health and social services in Springfield and the surrounding area and to make this information available to the public. This capstone project will focus on what resources and local community service efforts are available to those in the area. The Springfield Department of Health and Human Services will construct a resource guide to services available in the Springfield area. This project will examine any accessibility issues for community members trying to access health resources. 578 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 60C Massa Sammah, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst ”A Diamond in the Rough”: The Rise and Decline of Healthcare in Sierra Leone According to the United Nations (UN) Development Report Human Development Index (HDI), Sierra Leone, in West Africa, is ranked 180 out of 187. Sierra Leone is wealthy in natural resources, being one of only 15 diamond producing countries in the world, but yet continues to be ranked amongst the poorest countries in the Sub-Saharan of Africa. In Sierra Leone diamonds are not referenced to economic wealth, but are more commonly referred to as “blood diamonds.” Diamonds were the root of conflict during the vicious civil war in Sierra Leone that lasted 10 years from 1991 to 2001, which left Sierra Leone’s health care crisis in the most devastating state the country has ever experienced. Sierra Leone is known to have one of the highest infant mortality rates in West Africa and even the world. The mortality rates in Sierra Leone are constantly on the rise and 1 in every 4 children under the age of 5 are losing their lives to preventable illnesses. This project examines and compares the quality of health care in Freetown, Sierra Leone and surrounding rural towns within the country, among children and adolescents between the ages of 5 and 15 prior to the civil war and after the civil war. After the war, many children were left amputated, orphaned, traumatized, or dead as a result of the violence. This thesis will question the role violence has played in the inconsistency of Sierra Leone’s health care progress, along with the underprivileged health services, inadequate nutritional status, and the familiar childhood diseases it still suffers from. In addition to these finding, this project will seek to find changes in the pattern of violence throughout the country before and after the war and create new ways or programs to further reduce the violence in the country. Though Sierra Leone is still a developing country, examining the causes and effects of the war on its failing health care system will help in creating new ways to deal with their health care crisis, the country’s long history of violence, and the prevalence of preventable and curable diseases that continues to kill the country’s youth. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 294 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 579 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 52C Melissa Sanon, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Type II Diabetes in Women Of Color In women of color one of the most prevalent health issues is diabetes. Research has shown that the prevalence of diabetes is higher in women of color than among white women. For my capstone project I will assist in putting together a panel discussion that focuses on Type II Diabetes in Women of color populations with my internship at the Women of Color Leadership Network. This panel will consist of individuals that will speak to our core audience about different aspects of Type II Diabetes such as, the socioeconomic status, treatment, prevention, etc. The panel will consist of four speakers; a doctor that specializes in treatment and prevention, a dietitian, a professor and a support group leader. The panel discussion will be take place in April. Having experts discuss diabetes to the audience will be beneficial to the community because it not only will it inform people about prevention efforts it will be applicable to their own lives in terms of lifestyle changes. What we hope to achieve is a large audience, predominantly women of color that are willing to be educated about the health issue. Outcomes include a workshop evaluation to assess the usefulness of workshop. A secondary outcome is to see if the workshop can be made a permanent offering. 580 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 66C Tracey Schnittman, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Psychological Intervention for Youth Victims of Child Maltreatment Child maltreatment is a major ongoing problem that impacts the lives of many adolescents in the United States. Adolescents who are victims of child neglect and abandonment tend to experience a whole array of negative psychological health outcomes, physical health outcomes, and even death. Problems continue to persist through adulthood if the child does not receive proper mental health care. In order for there to be improvement in the lives of these young people there needs to be psychological intervention to positively influence healthy development into adolescence and young adulthood. This capstone project is a program plan to address child maltreatment. The purpose of this program is to create a safe haven for children, an environment where they can express themselves openly and freely while under the supervision of proper care. The major goal of this program is to allow for the youth who experienced child neglect to build a healthy and stable relationships with a mentor and learn how to develop trust in others. The mentors will help to improve social skills and overall emotional well-being, increase cognitive ability through conversing, and also be role models for these youth. Children will receive help in academics in a stable environment, where they can get the extra attention they need to succeed in a larger academic setting. The program will be designed as an afterschool program and will take place in the school or the community. If it is not located nearby, reliable transportation from the school would be provided. The way the program will be facilitated will be a one-on-one mentoring program with young adults or with social workers. The caregivers of the program will need to be knowledgeable about child maltreatment and the effects it can have on a child. Besides just talking to a mentor, youth would be allowed to be in a safe place where they can just be kids and connect with other youth who have experienced similar problems. Besides psychological care, the program can include education about drug use and comprehensive sexual education because children who have been maltreated tend to turn to alcohol and other drugs to deal with their problems. If children with psychological issues have a place they can go where they can talk and play in a safe environment they will have a better outlook on the future and can actually learn how to live a stable life. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 295 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 581 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 69C Rachel Schwartz, Paula Stamps (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Smallpox: The Childhood Disease Since the attack on September 11th 2001, there has been an increase in the awareness of terrorism by the general population and media. With an increased threat level, researchers have conducted studies analyzing the possible implications of a bioterrorism attack. However, little has been done to analyze the effects a smallpox attack would have on the pediatric population. The purpose of this paper is to explore this underrepresented population. The paper will analyze differences in immune response of children compared with adults, and how this impacts their ability to recover from smallpox. I will focus on the lack of preparedness to treat this population, issues regarding vaccination, and mental health implications an attack would have. Results will be drawn through a critical analysis of academic journal articles, technical resources and case studies of past patients with a diagnosed case of smallpox. Limitations of this paper include case studies being classified as old data due to the eradication of smallpox in 1980, and the lack of research conducted on the mental health impact bioterrorism events have on children. This paper will demonstrate the differences in immune response to Variola major between adults and children, the need for in-depth public health response plans to protect children, the need for an improved vaccine, and the necessity for education on bioterrorism for aspiring pediatricians. More research must be done to adequately reduce the high risk of mortality for the pediatric population in the event of an intentional release of smallpox into the global population. 582 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 91A Nicole Sforza, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Control: A Case Study of Two Initiatives In 2006 approximately 56,000 people in the United States contracted HIV. HIV weakens a person’s body by destroying CD4+ T blood cells, which are necessary for the body to fight off disease. Currently, there is no cure for HIV, but great strides have been made to prevent the spread of the disease which includes HIV testing programs. In early January a HIV Social Networks program was implemented at Tapestry Health’s Needle Exchange Program in Northampton, Massachusetts. The program aims to recruit injecting drug users (IDUs) who are at risk of HIV contraction due to their social groups. The recruited participants will be motivated by monetary incentive to bring in others within their social groups and communities for HIV testing. By implementing such programs more people at high risk for HIV are tested and therefore decrease the risk of possible exposure to the community overall. My project aims to assess, analyze, and evaluate the growth of the Social Networks program at Tapestry Health’s Needle Exchange Program and compare it to the Social Networks program set forth by the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). By comparing the advantages and disadvantages of such programs, my aim is to identify how to improve programs in terms of their effectiveness. Having efficient HIV testing programs that reaches a large percentage of the target population is important because it reduces the risk of HIV and educates people on disease and preventative measures. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 296 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 583 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 56C Sofia Shaikh, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Barriers Towards Treatment of Mental Illness in the United States Mental illness is a serious problem throughout the United States. Mental illness, sometimes referred to as mental disorders, is a broad term which encompasses irregular thoughts, feelings, and behaviors in an individual, resulting in distress and impairment of functioning, and is inconsistent with cultural normal and normal development. Mental disorders have a high prevalence in the U.S.; according to the National Institute of Mental Health, one in four Americans (approximately 57.7 million people), experience a mental illness within any given year. Common mental illnesses in the U.S. include but are not limited to mood disorders such as depression and mania, eating disorders, anxiety disorders, personality disorders, schizophrenia, and substance abuse. This capstone project researches the barriers to treatment of mental disorders. These barriers can be broken down into three main categories: stigma, access to care, and budget cuts. Stigma is internal, affecting an individual’s self-esteem. Individual perceptions and negative connotations of mental illnesses are reinforced and spread throughout the media. Access to care is also a huge barrier affecting treatment. Without insurance, it is often unfeasible to pay for mental health services. Language, cultural, and geographic barriers also prevent many from receiving adequate treatment. Lastly, recent budget cuts have become a huge barrier to treatment of mental illness. There have been many cuts in governmental funding, which consequently, have led to bed cuts. This has also created an increase in emergency room visits which increases U.S. health care expenditures significantly. Despite the fact that some of the economic barriers which prevent treatment may be hard to overcome, many of the barriers can be addressed in order promote a better quality of life for individuals living with mental illnesses. Unfortunately, until the current barriers are addressed, the United States will continue to struggle to provide treatment for mental illnesses. 584 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 58C Lauren Shewey, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Health Nutrition Many Americans struggle with a variety of illnesses and health conditions amidst other uncomfortable symptoms. Often people are unaware of the importance of quality nutrition and the impact of food intake on the human body and overall holistic wellness. In part, this struggle stems from the perception of health as a lack of disease. In other cultures, well-being encompasses all of the mental, emotional, physical and spiritual components affecting one’s life. Thus, a large majority of people in the United States are detached from their intuitive experiences with food. Food is the lifeblood of one’s being. Though, the aforementioned disconnect has resulted in a cultural mindset regarding obesity, sleep deprivation, fatigue, gas, acne, sexual dysfunction, rage, and so forth, as normal life functioning. College students in particular are at a heightened risk for exposures to such unpleasant symptoms due to hectic, fast-paced lifestyles that typically neglect proper nutrition. For my project, I have researched various nutrition related health topics through documented studies and reports, including psychology, sexuality, sleep, relationships and so forth that feature how diet works to either support or hinder one’s quality of wellness. Based upon my findings, I’ve compiled written article summaries emphasizing pertinent information on nutrition presented to the student body through both the University Health Services StudentHealth101 e-magazine and The Daily Collegian. My research demonstrates the vital role of nutrition as it impacts health, a truth that is often disregarded. A diet full of processed foods, high in sugar and fat can lead to a multitude of ills and risks, including inflammation, high blood sugar, high cholesterol, and certain cancers, as well as a host of other distressing symptoms. Students benefit from the knowledge regarding nutrition and how it affects their health, encouraging them to make wiser, more informed choices about what they feed their bodies, so they can live fuller, more productive lives as they thrive off of nutritionally whole meals. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 297 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 585 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 55C Kelvin Xu, Devesh Shrestha, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Arsenic Contamination in Drinking Water Access to clean water is a human right. However, lack of access to clean water and poor sanitation has threatened the health status of millions of people. Arsenic poisoning affects over 137 million people in more than 70 countries, including the country of Nepal. Nepal is a landlocked country in South Asia, internationally bordered by China and India. Currently, nearly 10 percent of the population, 2.7 million people in Nepal are drinking water with arsenic levels above the World Health Organization guidelines (10 parts per billion). Arsenic contamination is a major threat to human life since arsenic contaminated water can cause several diseases including bladder cancer, Blackfoot disease and skin cancer. We will look at the different types of testing methods and existing data sets that have been used to measure arsenic concentrations in order to compare and analyze the effectiveness of the interventions. This capstone will show that combining multiple interventions to combat arsenic contamination will improve the ability of the world to provide safe drinking water, identify risk areas, educate people about good sanitation practices and the importance of hygiene will help develop awareness and reduce arsenic exposure through drinking water. 586 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 39A Tynesia Smith, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Teen Pregnancy Prevention and Intervention in Underserved Communities Teen pregnancies are a huge epidemic in the United States averaging about 750,000 teenage pregnancies annually. In the Holyoke and Springfield areas of Massachusetts the teen pregnancy rate is exceptionally high. In a 2010 report from the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, Holyoke, MA had a teen birth rate more than five times the state average. It is important to address this problem because there are many physical health complications, such as, higher rates of infant death compared to women who have children at a later age. In addition, there is a correlation between low socioeconomic status, racial disparity and teen pregnancy. Therefore, to help educate teenagers in Holyoke and Springfield’s underserved communities understand these complications, we will conduct workshops focused on both prevention and intervention approaches. The methods used to prevent teen pregnancy will focus on teens that are at risk and intervention methods will be for those that have children and need assistance with finding proper resources. The program will include condom demonstrations, methods of contraceptives, and media and interactive skits. In order to make this efficacious we will model successful programs that have already been implemented by health officials. The purpose of this capstone project is to educate young women and men on ways to prevent pregnancy and create awareness around options that are available if they have already become pregnant. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 298 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 587 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 71C Claire Sommers, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Group Homes Promotion of Independent Living This capstone is an empirical research project to determine if group homes promote independent living for people with disabilities. Independent living for people with disabilities does not mean living completely by oneself. It means the opportunity to have options in one’s life. A person’s physical or mental disability does not mean that the person should be excluded from participation in society. In the past, segregation had been a major part of the lives of people with disabilities, which has since been recognized as a serious societal problem. People with disabilities living in group homes should be given financial and supporting the aid for independent living. There have been many biases against people with disabilities. There have been many struggles on stopping stereotypes about people with disabilities. Many people also believe that people with disabilities should not be a part of communities. There was a major change in thought in the 1960s where many parents fought for their children living in their homes rather than institutions. This was a push to encourage people with disabilities to interact with communities, learn in schools and have jobs like any other person. The purpose of this study is to investigate independent facilities to see if their residents are given adequate financial aid and time to promote better independent living practices for people with disabilities. This can only be done in a supportive environment. It is difficult to have individual based plans because it is both expensive and takes a lot of time, but as a Group living much can be to involve their residents into the community. This not only enriches the lives of many people with disabilities but the community in whole. 588 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 84A Anastasia Sumner, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Teen Pregnancy in Holyoke, MA: An Analysis of Effective Prevention Methods and Factors Teen birth rates in Massachusetts have declined 11% since 2007, making it the lowest teen birth rate the state has seen in decades. Despite the decline of teen birth rates in the state, Holyoke continues to have one of the highest rates of teen pregnancy in Massachusetts especially among Latinas. The teen birth rate is over five times the state’s rate and nearly three times the national. The purpose of this presentation is to develop a better understanding of the issues that influence teen pregnancy in Holyoke, MA, create effective prevention programming, and compare them to Holyoke’s current teen pregnancy prevention efforts to combat this issue. Within the Latino community there are some cultural and social norms that may influence teens’ decisions. The lack of sexual and reproductive health education is also a risk factor for teen pregnancy. Culture also is a factor in the lack of understanding of current pregnancy prevention campaigns within the Latino community. Part of the culture in the Latino community is to have a family unit. Campaign messages such as “don’t have children” may be interpreted as anti-familial messages to Latinos. If their culture was taken into consideration when creating these public health campaigns, the campaigns may become increasingly effective and better received. The goal of this public health initiative is to create a prevention program that will address all of the possible issues pregnant Latina teenagers face. This will result in helping them navigate how to prevent teen pregnancy while still holding on to their traditional values. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 299 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 589 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 44A Cassandra L Nordstrom, Janey W Scuzzarella, Colleen Taylor, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Efficacy of Teen Pregnancy Prevention Programs: A Comparison of Lawrence and Holyoke, Massachusetts Currently, the United States’ teen pregnancy rate is the highest of all developed countries. The effects of teen pregnancy for the teen parents and the community are a widely felt concern. According to the CDC, teen pregnancy costs taxpayers more than $9 billion per year for increased health care and foster care, increased incarceration rates among children of teen parents, and lost tax revenue because of lower educational attainment and income among teen mothers. Additionally, children born to teenage mothers are on average, more likely to have lower school achievement and to drop out of high school, have more health problems, and as adults be incarcerated and encounter unemployment. For this public health issue, high school sexual education curricula have been a popular mode of intervention. These evidence-based, comprehensive approaches are often successful in lowering teen pregnancy rates. In recent years, the Massachusetts teen pregnancy rate has declined, however certain communities like Holyoke and Lawrence remain high above the state average. This project will focus on these two municipalities and compare teen pregnancy prevention initiatives within their respective public high schools. By creating evidence-based evaluation criteria and interviewing educators and students at the schools, the project will compare and contrast different aspects of the programs such as focusing on specific health goals, addressing multiple sexual risk and protective factors, and incorporating cultural and community values. Through this comparison we will identify implementable improvements within their sexual health curricula. 590 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 55C Kayla Tegeler, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst UMass Night Out: An attempt to reduce alcohol and other drug use at the University of Massachusetts UMass Night Out is a program on the University of Massachusetts Amherst campus that consists of various alcohol free activities from 7 p.m. to 2 a.m. The purpose of the program is to provide students with the opportunity to engage in safe nighttime activities while promoting healthy behaviors and choices. UMass Night Out is a great opportunity for UMass students to recognize their abilities to enjoy the weekend without the use of alcohol or other drugs. At the same time, this program also offers a preferred type of nightlife to those students who typically do not engage in the illegal or unhealthy behaviors of using alcohol and other drugs. The goal of the UMass Night Out program is to reduce alcohol and other drug use by UMass students, as well as to reduce the rate of high-risk behaviors involving alcohol and other drugs. The aim of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of the UMass Night Out program at changing alcohol and other drug related behaviors of students. In order to evaluate this program, surveys will be taken by students after they have attended a UMass Night Out event. These surveys will be used to draw statistics on the effectiveness of the program. This program evaluation will also include a comparison to similar programs at other college campuses. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 300 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 591 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 63C Adam St. Jean, Luckar Thach, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst A Policy Review and Recommendations Concerning Rates of Childhood Obesity in Developed Countries Childhood obesity is a growing problem and becoming rapidly more visible as the number of children affected by this disease continues to rise. Major studies suggest that low socio-economic status and poverty is associated with higher rates of childhood obesity in Canada, as well as developed countries such as the U.S. and Norway. This disparity is attributed to the lack of preventive education in low-income communities, as well as accessibility to a healthy lifestyle. Family intervention may positively influence children’s dietary quality and lower risk of childhood obesity. Concern surrounding obesity also includes additional problems such as increased risk for cardiovascular diseases, higher risk for diabetes, and even psychological issues, all of which may result from the disease. This capstone project will explore prevention techniques and policies related to treatment of obesity in hope of ending the growth of this epidemic in developed countries such as the United States and Canada. We aim to review a variation of studies and policies, particularly focusing on physical inactivity, low-SES, and family intervention to analyze possible ways to preventing childhood obesity and integrate healthier lifestyles. By doing so, future policy and regulations may be made to better the outlook for poor nutritional and lifestyle. This research is important so that better policy recommendations can be made, and so health professionals can take further initiative toward decreasing the rate of childhood obesity. 592 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 67C Devon Thibodeau, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst The Prevalence and Side Effects of Obstetric Interventions During Labor and Delivery Obstetric interventions are widely utilized during childbirth, creating numerous adverse health outcomes related to care during labor and delivery. This literature review will highlight the prevalence and side effects of obstetric interventions and offer methods to reduce their use. Patients should be well informed of the possible medical interventions physicians and midwives may utilize during childbirth. They should understand the risks and potential harm certain pain medications, labor inducing drugs, emergency cesarean surgery, and other medical interventions can have on the mother and newborn. These types of interventions are used all too often in the United States, creating adverse side effects along with a variety of short and long term health problems for women and infants. Perhaps alternatives that would reduce their use and prevent adverse health outcomes could include homebirths with midwives and doulas, meditation, hypnobirthing, massage, and other forms of relaxation techniques to calm the mother and take her focus off of the pain. Because hospitals are businesses, making money is one of their top priorities. Therefore, speeding up the labor and delivery process allows hospitals to make the most of their facilities in the shortest time possible. Patient care should always come first, but sometimes this simple philosophy adopted by medical professionals gets overlooked. Public health officials should intervene when necessary to make labor and delivery as safe and stress-free as possible for those involved in order to prevent morbidity and mortality and to improve the childbirth experience. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 301 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 593 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 50C Avae Thomas, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Can’t Help But to Be Sick For years African-Americans have been the victims of public policies that have led to some of the worst health outcomes in the United States. There is an overwhelming gap in health outcomes between Whites and African-Americans that can be attributed to a variety of social determinants such as occupation, residence, origin, or financial status. Cultural differences do provide some answer to the question as to why African-Americans tend to have worse health outcomes than Whites, but there is more to the story. There have been strategic policies implemented over the course of America’s history that have not only prevented African-Americans from advancing in the realms of finance, education and social mobility but also in terms of health. Specific labor laws, discriminatory measures, and matters of access to healthcare have all attributed to the health inequalities among African-Americans. This project seeks to examine various policies that have been enacted in America that have played an instrumental role in causing negative health outcomes among African-Americans. Evaluating measures of the past that have exploited minorities as test subjects and current legislature that limits access and affordability share a role on what is now a significant disparity in health. Policy constructed in combination with the influence of racism has developed a unique dynamic in American healthcare that has not been completely eradicated, but rather dimly faded into less overt inequality. 594 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 58C Daniel Unkel, Risa Silverman (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Risky Behavior of Colleges and Universities and How it Effect Surrounding Communitie Relationships exist between every college and university and the town or city in which they reside. Town resources are sometimes exhausted by having to help college students who partake in risky behavior. For example on any given weekend town resources can be tied up dealing with issues ranging from fire, medical, and police emergencies on or off campus, thereby making them unavailable for similar emergencies off campus, and in town. Many of these issues could be prevented if the students were given more alcohol free activities and learned how their actions affect others. The University of Massachusetts at Amherst does not offer many activities on weekend nights leaving students on their own to find something to do. This often turns into consuming too much alcohol and results in town resources having to be tied up dealing with something that could have been prevented. This capstone will examine the relationship between University of Massachusetts at Amherst and the town of Amherst, describing the current agreements and whether the University drains the town resources, which are already functioning at the bare minimum. Also this capstone will look at current agreements, and suggest models from other town-gown communities that have the best practices. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 302 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 595 Concourse 9:00-11:00 Board 61C Nakia Weaver, Christie Barcelos (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Public Health, UMass Amherst Mothers and Girls Dancing Together Trial- MAGNET Trial Very low levels of physical activity are common among adolescent African-American girls and are the leading cause of obesity and diabetes that may develop later in life. Therefore, it is important that we find good ways to increase their physical activity levels. A way to increase the activity level of children is to increase their parents (especially their moms’) physical activity level. Dancing is one type of program that both African-American girls and women will enjoy, however very little is known about the type of dance styles that they may like. This project will create a health promotion program that will focus on key parts of an African style dance class and a health education program that will appeal to 7-10 year old Africa-American girls and their mothers. For this project “mother” is defined as the main female figure that lives with the girl. The research team will measure the daughters’ height, weight, and waist size, and the daughter will also be asked to complete surveys about her physical activity levels. The goal is to implement the dance and health education program proposal and see if it creates changes in health behaviors. Findings from this research may provide a viable option for increasing physical activity for African-American girls and their mothers, and thereby help to identify a strategy for reducing obesity and type 2 diabetes mellitus in African-American girls. RADIO-TELEVISION-FILM 596 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 44A Edward Lipchus, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College The Price of Development as Portrayed in Japanese and Western Film Cinema is a great vehicle for cultural ideas and values. Japanese and Western films display very different results when humans pursue progress at the expense of nature. This project explores some recent films that depict the future of the Human vs Nature conflict; and extrapolates what each culture believes the actual end result will be. Through viewings of movies from each culture - Origin: Spirits of the Past, Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind, and Godzilla from Japan; and Metropolis, Blade Runner, and Avatar from America/Europe - this project shows that the Japanese see a need to live in harmony with nature less mankind is destroyed, whereas Americans/Europeans see a dystopian future of absolute urbanization - of a world where nature has been consumed in the name of progress. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 303 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 597 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 35A Beth Teague, Jennifer DiGrazia (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University Will Bringing Pandora on the Road Mean Leaving Radio in the Dust? Most people will say that when they drive they do so while listening to FM radio, known as terrestrial radio, in their cars. Many additionally will say that Pandora radio, a free internet radio service geared toward a user’s personal style of music, often plays on their computers while they are at home or work. Hyundai has made changes to their new line of vehicles that allow Pandora to be streamed into the cars using iPhones, which could potentially damage the terrestrial radio industry. Contrary to fears articulated by terrestrial radio owners and documented by those like Erik Sass in “Hyundai Offers Drivers Pandora on the Go” that streaming Pandora into cars will decrease the use of terrestrial radio, I, along with Ralph Hanson, author of Mass Communications: Living in a Media World, argue that because radio has historically survived significant shifts in entertainment and communication, use of terrestrial radio will not diminish. I suggest that, much like people’s fears about radio becoming obsolete when television was developed, such concerns are motivated not by evidence, but by tropophobia (fear of change). Recognizing tropophobia in this instance and examining options like HD radio, which provides a CD-like quality to one’s listening experience, may enable people to understand that change and/or new developments in communications and entertainment don’t necessarily end our dependence on or use of previous ones, but they do encourage us to re-evaluate our relationship to older technologies. RELIGIOUS STUDIES 598 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 06A Hakeem Eguntola, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College Attitudes towards nature in the world’s major religions Religious institutions have influenced social attitudes towards the environment. This project compares four prominent religions (Christianity, Judaism, Buddhism and Islam), with respect to ideas on how each shapes our attitudes to nature. Using primary religious texts, credible online sources and religions/scientific journals, this project analyzes scriptural quotations for beneficial and non-beneficial environmental implications. The project also discusses the similarities in these religions’s attitudes with contemporary psychology. A discussion of the pros and cons of religious ideas concludes that all four major faiths have consequential impact on our atttitudes about the environment. 599 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 05A Alejandra Marin, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College Christ vs Kukulcán: Clash of Cultures Many religious practices can both emphasize the importance of protecting the environment and provide foundations for the destruction of the environment. The objective of the project is to find ways in which the beliefs of a precolumbian religion, and its contemporary Christian conqueror promoted or undermined the sustainable use of natural resources. Using primary resources such as the Bible, and secondary research such as articles, interviews and religious texts; a comparison of the two religions is made. Research showed that there is a clear difference between the Mayans, a biocentric religion, and the Christians, an anthropocentric religion, in terms of how man uses and abuses natural resources. This research suggests, it is important to address religious attitudes to understand how different cultures treat nature. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 304 Abstracts • Poster Sessions SOCIAL THOUGHT AND POLITICAL ECONOMY 600 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 36A Elizabeth Abate, Stephanie Kelly (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Geography, Westfield State University Emergency Preparedness Housing Plans for Special Needs Adults: Worcester County PURPOSE: Considering the vulnerability of special needs adults and recent natural disasters, the goal of this study is to develop best practices for an emergency response plan for group homes for adults with special needs. A needs assessment of safety conditions and evacuation plans for group homes will be conducted, and a model emergency preparedness housing plan for adults with special needs in Worcester County will be developed. METHODS: Case studies of homes for special needs adults will be compiled from across the nation and regionally to compare design aspects as they relate to emergency preparedness plans. The most effective circulatory attributes for adult homes will be identified. Current housing stock and zoning classifications for the targeted population of group homes will be examined and analyzed. Housing stock will be mapped using Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to graphically display location of units to coordinate evacuation under various scenarios. Current FEMA regulations for the targeted population will be evaluated. RESULTS: A risk assessment/ vulnerability matrix for the targeted population will be developed. Best practices and action plans for an emergency preparedness plan model will be related specifically to scenarios such as weather events including flooding, severe wind and storms, and biological and terrorist events. The action plans will be based on the risk assessment matrix. CONCLUSION: A regional map depicting optimal emergency staging areas for selected homes, and coordinated emergency centers will be generated. Proposed educational materials including pamphlets with exit maps and procedures to exit buildings will be presented. SOCIOLOGY 601 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 12A Ryan Baker, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College Polygamy in the United States – a perspective of the Mormon Women This project discusess what life for woman in Mormon Polygamist relationships. The modern day Church of Latter Day Saints (LDS), as the Mormon Church refers to itself, has come to the agreement that Polygamy is not a legal practice and anyone found practicing Polygamy will be excommunicated. Currently people who consider themselves both Mormon and Polygamist are considered rogue. Generally, those who are Mormon Polygamists are part of various sects of Mormonism, not related to the LDS church. This project addresses issues modern day Polygamists face in American Society , from the perspective of what women in the Polygamist culture are facing. This project examines sources and interviews of Mormon Polygamists and analyzes how they livetheir daily lives in America. Recent media has focused on attention on Mormon sects that have been abusing human rights and practicing under-age marriage and sex within Polygamist relationships. This project distinguishes between sects that have given modern day Mormon Polygamist relationships a bad reputation, and addresses issues Mormon Polygamist adults are facing due to media attention. Through addressing the history of Mormonism, Polygamy and spotlighting how some Mormon Polygamists are currently living in the United States; the project raises awareness on the hot topic of Polygamy in the United States. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 305 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 602 Auditorium 9:00-11:00 Board 37A Jessica Coons, Jennifer DiGrazia (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Westfield State University Factory Farmed Food: Moralized? Recognizing that Jonathan Haidt and Craig Joseph’s concept of “purity”, as articulated in their essay The Moral Mind, differs from culture to culture; I argue that some Americans’ resistance to change their dietary habits comes from inherited values and experiences. The reasoning for resistance to change parallels evidence found in Paul Rozin and Leher Singh found in their study on the moralization of cigarettes. They found that there was a correlation between people who did not smoke and people who found smoking disgusting. Whereas there was no correlation between nonsmokers and those who were fully aware of the negative health affects of smoking. For those who are resistant to the moralization argument, focusing on the disgust aspects of factory farming may be a more persuasive argument. After explaining Haidt and Joseph’s claims about our moral mind and five moral foundations, I suggest that despite attempts by activist groups and the government to endorse healthier eating habits, some people will continue their eating habits because everyone’s moral foundations are different. 603 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 11A Haley Cote, Michele Wolfson (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Psychology, Cape Cod Community College Domestic Violence: Social Construction and the Psychological Consequences for Women Domestic violence, particularly in regard to women, is an epidemic. This form of oppression toward women is a problem worldwide in many societies and cultures, and is known to have serious psychological repercussions on victims. This paper will look at the correlation between domestic violence and mental health among women. It will examine the prevalence ratings of abused women who suffer from mental illness and look at specifically what types of mental disorders emerge. In order to fully understand domestic abuse toward women and its psychological repercussions, sociocultural factors must be considered, since they are undoubtedly at play. Thus, sociocultural factors contributing to abuse will also be examined and the impact these factors have on the onset of mental dysfunction. Recognizing that domestic violence is in part a result of sociocultural factors and can lead to the development of mental illness is critical in order to help treat patients and provide better social environments for the women facing this kind of oppression within societies. 604 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 11A Jillian S Waters, Megan O’Connor, Sarah Donovan, Marian Cohen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Sociology, Framingham State University Does Just an Apple a Day Keep the Doctor Away? The purpose of the research is to determine which lifestyle behaviors, in terms of actions taken in a daily routine, make for strong health status, defined as the general, mental, and physical health, of an individual. The research will contribute to the Health Belief Model developed by Irwin M. Rosenstock (Rosenstock 1966) that discusses ways to maintain good health, by predicting both general behaviors and key demographic characteristics of individuals as they affect health. The researchers conducted secondary analysis of the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Study data. These data were collected by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention through various state health departments in 2009 and 2010. The sample size for the study was 432,607. Data obtained from this research will allow individuals to better understand and sustain healthier lifestyles. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 306 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 605 Auditorium 2:30-3:15 Board 48A Chelsea J Mitchell, MacKenzie Fluckiger, Naomi Lansing, Mary Dulong, Marian Cohen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Sociology, Framingham State University Breaking the Mold: Attitudes Towards Nontraditional Families in American Society This study explores Americans’ attitudes toward nontraditional families. The research focuses on how aspects of socialization and family history, as well as attitudes toward traditional sex roles, affect attitudes towards nontraditional families. Demographic variables, such as age, sex, marital status, and education, along with patterns of family relationships while growing up, such as working mothers or stay-at-home fathers and marital status of parents, will be examined relative to the target attitudes. The research will contribute to sociological knowledge of the family by examining attitudes toward various types of nontraditional family forms. The data for this study were collected in a cross-sectional Social Trend Survey by Princeton Survey Research International. Telephone interviews were conducted with 2,020 American adults in early 2007. The researchers expect to find that socialization in a nontraditional setting leads to greater acceptance of nontraditional family structures and sex roles. As the notion of “family” changes in our society, it is important to both understand factors that affect our current perceptions and those that could help predict developing attitudes over time. 606 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 07A Aaron L Arata, Christopher E Hickman, Janelle Engerman, Marian Cohen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Sociology, Framingham State University “I Can’t Get No Sa-tis-fac-tion”: Factors That Contribute to American Job Satisfaction How often do you say, “I hate my job“, or hear that phrase uttered by your co-workers and your friends? This study aims to identify factors that contribute to American employee satisfaction and dissatisfaction. The researchers studied the effect of ethnicity, gender and education level as well as specific aspects of one’s job, such as income, chance of promotion, and relationships with co-workers, on overall job satisfaction. It was anticipated that employees who see their jobs as part of their identity, rather than just a means to gaining an income, will rate higher in quality of life and job satisfaction. The research tested sociological theories of alienation proposed by Marx and Durkheim. Data from the Pew Social Trends Survey, collected in June and July of 2006, were used for analysis. The survey included 2,003 adults living in the continental United States with household telephones. The findings in this study could help the management staff of businesses better understand their employees by identifying what contributes to happier employees. This could encourage the development of methods to increase employee satisfaction, which may result in an increase in productivity. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 307 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 607 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 14A Tologon Eshimkanov, Luke Sallisbury (Faculty Sponsor) Department of English, Bunker Hill Community College City Dwellers Attitudes About Nature In An Urban Environment A large portion of the population spends most of their working and leisure time in an urban environment. This project investigates the effects of living in an urban environment on people’s attitudes about natural places, and their feelings about parks and plantings in cities. Using individual interviews; behavioral observations of people in parks; along with primary and secondary written and internet sources, this project shows that living in an urban environment like Boston has clear impact on people’s desire to connect with nature. The results suggest urbanites would benefit from an increase in the amount of natural spaces within cities. 608 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 47A Amanda Bellone, Chelsea Langelier, Kerri A McCarthy, Pamela S Swanson, Melanie Figueroa, Susan Dargan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Sociology, Framingham State University How Many Ways Can You Spell Family? An Exploration of Varying Attitudes about Gender Roles within Families Today’s definitions of American families differ from those in the past. The notion of the traditional family has previously consisted of two heterosexual parents living in a household with children where fathers were the major breadwinners, and mothers stayed home and cared for children. In the 21st century there are many forms of families, some traditional and some non-traditional, and with these changing family forms, people’s notions of the typical family have changed. Along with changing family forms, the roles each member takes on within families are changing. This study hypothesizes that social factors may influence Americans’ attitudes toward non-traditional gender roles in families. The researchers examined data from the PEW Marriage Dataset (2007) to examine the role that social factors play in attitudes towards gender roles in families. This study consisted of a nationally representative sample of 2,020 adults residing in the continental United States. The researchers hypothesize that younger people, women, those with democratic political ideologies, and those who have experienced non-traditional family socialization or family status will be more likely than will older people, men, conservatives, and those who have only experienced traditional family socialization and status to accept non-traditional gender roles in families. They also hypothesize that Caucasians, those living in the South or rural communities, those who are more religious, and those with lower education will be less likely than African Americans, those not living in the South or rural communities, those who are not religious, and those with higher education levels to be tolerant of non-traditional gender roles in families. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 308 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 609 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 04A Jessie Czekalski, Rachael Love, Matthew Fortier, Candace Shivers (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Sociology, Mount Wachusett Community College Social Computing and Commerce Social computing plays an indispensable role in the world of commerce. The purpose of this research is to highlight how social computing has affected commerce as a whole. The Internet increasingly prevails in twenty-first century society and as a result capital, assets, and investments are becoming ever more virtual. People are turning to computers and cell phones for online banking, investments and loans. Physical interaction is becoming outdated in the financial world, and the global economy is faster and larger than ever. Banking and money management have changed, which carries both positive and negative effects. Shopping has also been transformed dramatically due to advancements in social computing. Businesses are forced to seek sales outside their domain and enter the cyber world to reach customers at their homes. Surveys show ease of purchasing online encourages the consumer to spend more money. Policing and securing social computing is evolving because of the lucrative and dangerous pandemic of cybercrime. The research explains why social computing has made it easier for criminals to access the weakest link in social computing, the consumer. These results were obtained through various surveys conducted on campus and well as the use of scholarly references. Increased commerce through social computing impacts businesses, financing, and the security of consumers. 610 Auditorium 11:35-12:20 Board 07A Emma E Brady, Pamela S Roper, Phillip Smith, Cassandra Hulecki, Candace Shivers (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Sociology, Mount Wachusett Community College Relationships and Social Computing: An Electronic Friend or Foe? Relationships we make with each other are said to be one of the most important aspects of our lives. We begin forming bonds the moment we are conceived, from the first time we hear our mother’s soothing voice from inside the womb, to the friends we create when we go off to college and beyond. The use of social computing has broadened our lives, introduced us to new friends and lovers, and provided us with a tool to connect with people from all across the world. Thanks to the technology of today, social interaction has never been easier. Social gaming has allowed individuals to connect and play games with people from virtually anywhere. Employers use social media for a variety of reasons. For example, midwives are now using the diverse tools available to find new clients, maintain a close relationship with their current ones, and even to hire new employees. With this ease of communication there have been both positive and negative impacts on relationships. Online relationships account for one of every eight marriages in the U.S and have been found to bring families together and keep loved ones in contact over long distances. However, this new technology is also to blame for many divorces, partly due to the instant and private communication it provides. Additionally, bullys have used this as a tool to take their torment to a new level, causing devastaing effects like never before. Social computing has brought about changes to our society and through our research we have explored the effects of social computing on all types of relationships. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 309 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 611 Concourse 1:30-2:15 Board 50C Caitlin McAlister, Jessica L Turnbull, Nicollette Ianniciello, Marian Cohen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Sociology, Framingham State University Aging: Positive Attitude Can Lead to a Positive Lifestyle The purpose of this research was to examine factors that affect planning for old age and retirement. Aging is a natural progression that occurs in everyone’s lifetime; therefore, the research is an extremely important topic to investigate. Data from the Attitudes Toward Aging dataset were used in this research. The data were collected from December 29, 1999 to March 5, 2000 by the National Council on Aging using telephone interviews. The sample size was 3,048, and included 1,340 males and 1,708 females. Disengagement Theory suggests that as people age, they gradually withdraw from the roles they occupied during their middle years and become preoccupied with, and focused on, their own lives. It was hypothesized that the more engaged the respondent considers him/herself, the less likely he/she is to think about retirement and old age and the less likely he/she is to plan for old age and retirement. The researchers expect to find that people will plan for old age and retirement as they disengage themselves from their busy lives. 612 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 39A James J McCarthy, Kurt H Leone, Nicholas B Clark, Aleigh Jerome, Vincent Ferraro (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Crime and Justice Studies, Framingham State University For Better or for Worse: Marital Happiness in America The institution of marriage has changed dramatically throughout the years. In today’s society, divorce has become more socially acceptable than in the past. What constitutes happiness in a marriage today is far different from what it used to be; existing research shows that people do not need to be married to feel as though their life is complete. This study measures and examines the factors which contribute to happiness in a marriage and in particular if one’s past negative experience with divorce alters their perception of the importance of marriage. The research design is secondary survey analysis using cross- sectional data collected by the Princeton Survey Research International. These data were collected from February 16, 2007 to March 14, 2007 from a nationally representative sample of over 2,020 individuals throughout the United States. The literature suggests that people who have endured a divorce or parental conflict as children are less likely to view marriage as a necessity in life. This study will test whether exposure to divorce reduces the likelihood of marriage in the individuals’ futures. This study seeks to demonstrate whether age, gender, past negative experience and income are associated with marital happiness and personal fulfillment. The results of this study might suggest earlier adjustments to the institution of marriage are having strong consequences on current and future generations. 18th Annual Massachusetts Statewide Undergraduate Research Conference 310 Abstracts • Poster Sessions 613 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 04A Caileen Norris, Emily Josselyn, Marian Cohen (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Sociology, Framingham State University Marriage and Parenting The research focuses on social forces that affect attitudes towards social trends in marriage and parenting. An understanding of marriage and parenting trends can provide insight on traditional and non-traditional lifestyles and whether society views current trends as a good thing or bad thing for society. The Pew 2007 Marriage study, with a national sample of 2,020 individuals in the United States, was used for secondary analysis. This dataset asks questions about attitudes towards non-traditional social trends with regard to marriage and parenting. It was hypothesized that young, educated, non-religious, white, females of higher income, who are single with no children are more likely to view non-traditional social trends as a good thing for society. It was found that individuals with these demographics are more accepting and flexible with regard to changes within marriage and parenting. It was found that the strongest predictors of attitudes toward non-traditional social trends are religion, political ideology, and education. The other factors studied were weakly related to attitudes or were found not to be predictive of attitudes. This means that only a few social forces appear to influence the respondents’ attitudes towards social trends. 614 Auditorium 1:30-2:15 Board 44A Bethany Senechal, Patrick E Galligan, Jonathan Julian, Greg Long, Susan Dargan (Faculty Sponsor) Department of Sociology, Framingham State University Waking up From the American Dream: Has the American Dream Become the American Fantasy? Over the last 30 years, many Americans have come to find that the possibility of achieving the American Dream is shrinking. This dream includes owning a home, being employed at a job with prospects for career growth, and having access to quality affordable health care. In the last four years of economic turmo