On April 22, 2020, the Stander Symposium was held virtually in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. Students could share their work via live online presentation; recorded video presentation; making their work available for download; or a combination of these options.
This gallery contains projects from the 2020 Stander Symposium by students, faculty and staff in the College of Arts and Sciences.
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Production Chain Analysis Using Markov Chains
Nick Cagle
Many businesses maintain inventories of items, both virtual and material, to be sold directly to the end user or to be used in the production of manufactured items. Maintaining an inventory incurs cost to the business due to a variety of factors that include procurement of a storage facility, wages, and energy usage. In addition, the longer an item is idling in a storage facility, the more cost it incurs. Therefore, an effective inventory management scheme is essential to maintaining the profit margin of any business that runs an inventory. In this presentation, we discuss the steady-state analysis of a mathematical model of inventory originally developed by J. Artalejo (2006). Using matrix analytic queueing theory, the performance measures (average number of demands for inventory in system and the average time spend by demands in the system) are collected for systems undergoing the regimes of light, normal, and heavy traffic. The study will demonstrate that the average number of demands and the average time in system will increase in proportion to the severity of traffic experienced by the system.
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Project-Based Learning in the College Composition Classroom: A Case Study
Zoe Burke
Many college composition instructors are facing lower levels of student engagement in their classes, and it is not entirely clear why this disengagement is happening or what we can do to stop it. As a composition instructor here at UD, I see this disengagement firsthand and want to experiment with different way of teaching composition to help students better engage with the material while still meeting all the learning outcomes. For this project, I build and teach two sections of ENG 200 using the structure of Project-Based Learning (PBL), a student-focused teaching method in which students develop real-world solutions (“projects”) for real-world problems. I then perform a qualitative summative evaluation of each section, using interviews with students and personal notes on my experience. From these data, I find that students prefer the PBL classes to traditional English classes for a variety of reasons, including the wider range of choice and control afforded to them by projects and the real-world impact of their creations, but that PBL can make it more challenging for instructors to meet all learning outcomes. PBL may not be the perfect answer to college composition’s engagement problem, but it is worth considering as a possible model for composition instructors and an exciting new area of study for composition scholars. In this presentation, I will discuss my experience of building and teaching a PBL class, my findings regarding my students’ experiences of taking the class, and my suggestions for further research and experimentation with PBL in the college composition classroom.
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Properties of the Line Graph and Total Graph Operators
Preston Reed Boorsma
This is a MTH 480 capstone project. A graph is a mathematical object that consists of two sets, a set of vertices and a set of edges. An edge joins two vertices and depicts a relationship between those vertices. This project investigates properties preserved and generated by the line graph and total graph operators on graphs. We explore the effects of these operators on Hamiltonian, Eulerian, and pancyclic structures of graphs.
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Public Safety Advocates - Bridging the Gap Between Students and Police at the University of Dayton
Huthayfa Usman
The 21st century requires police departments to be a part of the community that they police. The Public Safety Advocate program started by UD Criminal Justice major Huthayfa Usman in Fall 2018 attempts to bridge the gap between students and police at the University of Dayton. Employing techniques of Community Oriented Policing (COP) based on President Obama's Task Force on 21st Century Policing, the Public Safety Advocate program works on community problem solving and engagement.
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Queer Borders and Belongings: Reparative Storytelling from El Paso
Mary McLoughlin
At its best, queer theory exposes the ways in which reproductive heteronormativity structures a social order around gendered and relational roles of dominance and submission, but often queer theorists respond to the oppressions they identify with arguments advocating for withdrawal and alienation from the relationships they deem to be damaging. This project takes a different approach by using storytelling to explore how queer theory can go beyond just identifying what is broken about our world, and—instead—offer an embodied queer ethic centered on mending wounds caused by social division and making queer lives livable. Guided by stories from interviews I conducted with community members living at the border in El Paso, I first investigate the role reproductive heteronormativity plays in shaping hierarchical and patriarchal notions of citizenship, immigration policy, community organization, and national belonging, and then I look to the ways queerness—and the love it makes possible—enables alternate and liberatory ways of forming relationships and being together.
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Race and Culture in American Factory: A Case Study
Emily A. Callam
This case study focuses on the 2019 documentary American Factory and examines the issues of race and culture through the ethical lens of social justice. The Academy Award-winning documentary directed by Julia Reichert and Steven Bognar introduces viewers to the transition of a large factory in Dayton, Ohio, from General Motors Company to Fuyao Glass America, a Chinese company. The film attempts to capture an all-encompassing view of this transition as it depicts the effects it has on everyone from the CEO of the company to both American and Chinese workers on the factory floor. Lifestyles and workplace cultures clash as the productivity levels of those in the United States does not nearly reach that of China.
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Racial Disenfranchisement and Its Impact on Political Participation in the United States
Cierra Dei Stewart
In the United States, the ability to participate in our political system, andspecifically the power to cast a vote, is the cornerstone of our nation and whatunites us as a democracy. When this power is lost, one loses the ability toshape policies and political agendas in their community. However, manygroups, particularly minority groups, have historically faced substantialobstacles to voting in the form of government-dictated racial discrimination,also known as voter suppression laws. Using the lens of history, this projectexplores how modern voting and electoral structures (e.g., voter ID laws,redistricting, felon disenfranchisement, etc.) may lead to voter suppression ofracial minorities, and how that suppression impacts the participation andrepresentation of these groups in politics and government.
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Reaching Out, Encountering Dayton, Acting with Others, Leading Together: Assessing College Student Experiences in a Community Engagement Program
Lily Hannibal
The inclusion of community engaged learning opportunities for students is becoming more prevalent among institutions of higher education. The purpose of this study is to assess the effectiveness of REAL Dayton, a community engagement program at a mid-sized Catholic and Marianist university. REAL Dayton encourages students to create sustained relationships and lasting connections with the broader community. I use a multi-method approach (pre/post surveys and semi-structured interviews) to assess how community engagement within the city of Dayton shapes University of Dayton students' attitudes towards and perceptions of Dayton. I explore participants’ previous levels of community engagement and interaction with Daytonians, how they understand connectivity between the University of Dayton and the city of Dayton, the perceptions that participants have of the city, their knowledge of the city, their likelihood of future engagement, and the effectiveness of the program. The findings demonstrate how students understand their community engagement experiences, what impact it has on them, and to what extent community engagement constructs students’ perceptions. This research will further enhance understandings of the effects and outcomes of community engagement programs on students.
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Real Time Hand Gesture Recognition for 3D World
Bhrugvish Timirbhai Vakil
Gestures are very important to convey our self to each other since the dawn of human civilization. Our proposal focuses on detecting human hand gestures so that virtual environment machine can interpret it easy. This will enable us to communicate in virtual reality world using hand gesture. Some other application of our proposal includes body language interpretation, sign language interpretation etc. We address the highly challenging problem of real-time 3D hand tracking based on a monocular RGB-only sequence. Our tracking method combines a convolutional neural network with a kinematic 3D hand model, such that it generalizes well to unseen data, is robust to occlusions and varying camera viewpoints, and leads to anatomically plausible as well as temporally smooth hand motions. This project will help us to interact with virtual world using our hand gestures with the help of predefined rules. This project can be use as method to communicate with virtual lenses and interact with them. It can also we used in virtual field like Education, medical. Imagine if you are doctor and imagine you need to perform intricate surgery you can develop the object of your surgery in a virtual world and interact with it in using your hand gesture.
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Redetermination of the Spectral Dependence of the Verdet Coefficients of Terbium Gallium Garnet and Potassium Terbium Fluoride
Michael Josef Mueller
Terbium Gallium Garnet and Potassium Terbium Fluorideare paramagnetic materials used as optical isolators which prevent feedback to the pump laser in high power laser systems via the Faraday effect. The Verdet constant is a measure of the strength of the Faraday effect and was measured by exposing samples of materials to a magnetic field as a linearly polarized diode laser beam passed through the samples. The change of direction of the linear polarization was measured as a function of the magnetic field at wavelengths between 0.405 microns and 1.55 microns and the Verdet coefficients of Terbium Gallium Garnet and Potassium Terbium Fluoride were determined.
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Refractive Index of Photo-thermo-refractive Glass
Zayne M. Parsons
Volume Bragg gratings (VBGs) are spectrally-selective elements used in spectral beam combining, which is used to combine multiple beams with slightly different wavelengths into a single output. VBGs are created by exposing photo-thermo-refractive (PTR) glass to interference patterns of UV laser radiation, and then annealing the glass, producing a modulated refractive index. The diffraction efficiency of these gratings is dependent on the refractive index modulation amplitude. We report the refractive indices of unprocessed and processed PTR glass at wavelengths from 0.4 to 4.6 microns and discuss their uses in specifying VBGs for laser beam combining.
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Refugee Family Mental Health: Interventions, Programs and Social Connection
Elizabeth Henninger
The purpose of this study is to assess refugee family mental health and programs that can be implemented to intercept the breakdown of social capital due to mental health disparities. I analyze the data from various peer reviewed sources to obtain critical information towards combating social disconnection due to mental health imbalances. This work emphasizes the importance of combating severe levels of mental illness among refugee populations by connecting refugees with community resources and services.
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Resolving the Molecular Mechanisms by Which DNA Mutations Alter the Function of a Genetic Switch
Sarah Marie Adams, Michael Weinstein
Animal genomes likely possesses anywhere from tens of thousands to more than a million mutations that are genetic baggage from DNA replication mistakes or “mutations” that occurred in the past. Each mutation can either improve, reduce, or have no effect on fitness. Moreover, the effects of such mutations can depend on the presence or absence of other mutations, so called epistatic interactions. A goal of evolutionary-developmental biology research is to identify the mutations responsible for the evolution of form and function, and to understand the molecular mechanisms of their effects. This goal remains out of reach, as the effects of mutations and epistatic interactions are difficult to predict without knowing the function of the DNA sequence they reside in. This difficulty is heightened for mutations occurring in cis-regulatory element sequences that act as switches to control gene transcription. We are using a fruit fly model to test hypotheses about the molecular mechanisms by which mutations alter a genetic switch’s activity, and whether these function-altering mutations are subjected to the tyranny of epistatic interactions. Specifically, we are investigating the Drosophila melanogaster dimorphic element that is a transcription-regulating switch for the bric-à-brac genes. Three mutations in the dimorphic element were identified that individually alter the level of bric-à-brac transcription. The presence or absence of epistatic interactions will be determined by measuring the activity of dimorphic elements from related species that have been engineered to possess the Drosophila melanogaster mutations. I will also test the hypothesis that these mutations impart their effects by creating or destroying binding sites for proteins known as transcription factors. The results will provide a sorely needed example where an understanding of molecular mechanisms bridges the gap between a cis-regulatory element’s DNA sequence and it’s in vivo function.
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Role of calcium signaling in Aβ42-mediated neurodegeneration in a Drosophila model of Alzheimer’s disease
Dena M. Schaeffer, Catherine Jean Yeates
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disease that affects more than five million individuals in the United States and is the sixth leading cause of death. While there is currently no cure for the disease, it is a highly investigated topic of research. Aberrant calcium signaling has also been implicated in cancer and other neurological diseases besides AD. The Drosophila melanogaster eye model is an excellent system to study AD due to the highly conserved genetic machinery shared between flies and humans. A transgenic fly model of AD was generated, where the GAL4/UAS system was developed to ectopically express high levels of human Aβ42 peptides in the differentiating photoreceptor neurons in the fly eye. This system is used to determine whether modulating the function of the calcium signaling pathway can modify Aβ42-mediated neurodegeneration. We used RNAi to knock down six components of the calcium signaling pathway (StimRNAi, SERCARNAi, ORAIRNAi, Inx2RNAi, IP3RRNAi, and Plc 21CRNAi) in an Aβ42 background in the eye and observed the effects in both eye antennal imaginal discs and adult eyes. Similarly, we overexpressed four UAS components of the calcium signaling pathway (Stim, ORAI, SERCA, IP3R). Our results showed evidence that knocking down these components of the pathway may ameliorate the neurodegeneration mediated by Aβ42. Likewise, overexpressing the components furthered our evidence that the calcium signaling pathway has a role in AD. Our research further implicates intracellular calcium signaling in neurodegenerative disorders. Further research will determine the molecular mechanisms linking calcium signaling with Aβ42-mediated neurodegeneration.
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Role of Hippo and Ecdysone Receptor Signaling in the Regulation of dronc
Karishma Sanjay Gangwani
The Hippo pathway is an evolutionarily conserved pathway that regulates organ size and tissue homeostasis in Drosophila and mammals. The pathway functions by regulating the nuclear availability of transcriptional cofactor Yorkie (Yki), mammalian YAP, which is regulated by the activity of a core kinase cascade comprising the serine threonine kinases Hippo (Hpo) and Warts (Wts) and their accessory proteins. Yki binds with transcription factors like Scalloped (Sd) or Homothorax (Hth) to regulate target genes involved in cell proliferation and survival. Downregulation of the Hpo pathway causes increased cell proliferation and overgrowth, whereas hyperactivation of this pathway leads to cell death due to activation of caspases. Caspase proteins are cysteine aspartic proteases which play essential roles in cellular signaling and development via apoptosis. We showed that the initiator caspase dronc (mammalian Caspase 9) is a transcriptional target of Yki. We found that loss of Hippo signaling leads to downregulation of dronc expression, whereas downregulation of Sd resulted in upregulation of dronc expression. We also found that known binding partner of Sd like E2F1 is also involved in regulating dronc expression. Earlier studies have shown that dronc expression is regulated by the Ecdysone receptor (EcR) signaling pathway and mapped a EcR regulatory element on dronc promoter. We found that depletion of EcR or its corepressors like Smrter caused upregulation of dronc expression. Overexpression of Taiman (Tai) a binding partner of EcR and Yki also upregulated dronc expression. We also show that Tai-Yki interaction may not be required for dronc regulation. We hypothesize that dronc expression is regulated by the Hippo and EcR signaling pathways. Here, we present our work on the regulation of dronc by the Hippo and EcR signaling pathways, and its implications on development.
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Saints and Sinners? The Catonsville Nine and Cultural Change Within U.S. Catholicism
Jens Mueller
“The crisis is of such enormous extent and depth, that all solutions based on the sanity and health and recoverability of current structures are quickly proven wrong, untimely, unmanageable, bureaucratically infected: the same old kettle of fish, stinking worse than ever in the boiling juices of change.” This is how the fugitive Daniel Berrigan described the state of American society in 1970. At a time when the United States, as he said, was “going downhill and pellmell, into a dark age, a progress led by neanderthals armed to teeth”, the Berrigans stood up “to open the eyes of more and more of our friends” to lead others into “the saving act of resistance.” He offered this statement only two years after the fateful actions of the Catonsville Nine. Yet, what caused such actions and statements? And how was it received throughout American society?I argue that the events of this group had deep cultural implications for the state of Catholicism. Specifically, it symbolized a divide in US Catholic identity, something which we call nowadays simply “left” and “right”. While some people ecstatically supported the cause for social justice and radical pacifism, others seemed to reject the social actions Catholics took part in. In addition, the Catonsville Nine exemplify a broader trend namely the rupture of the American Catholic subculture.
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Semantic Segmentation on Aerial Images for Building Damage Assessment
Sai Nikhil Reddy Mandhada
Extreme weather events impact large areas in a very short time, resulting in significant damages on many residential houses. After disasters, a recovery process should be promptly implemented to recover damaged local communities, but there are too many structures to be repaired with a limited number of resources. In the post disaster phase, detailed information—such as a degree of damage and house types—is required to automate disaster recovery planning and execution. However, previous studies have not investigated a method that can generate information with adequate details required to automate disaster recovery planning. To fill the knowledge gap, this study aims at recognizing building objects, detecting building damages, and measuring the extent of damage to individual building properties from aerial image data collected by drones. Semantic segmentation is employed to recognized buildings and their damages. The degree of damage will be assessed by a set of rules reflecting current manual assessment guidelines. This work is expected to help reduce a large portion of the current manual process in assessing the degree of damage for damaged buildings, thereby facilitating rapid disaster recovery.
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Sex Differences in Relation to Affect and Social versus Non-Social Stress on Olfactory Functioning
Sahar Kaouk, Madeline P. Scherer
Evolutionarily, olfaction, or the sense of smell, was a way to detect threats (Soudry et al., 2011) and is highly involved various psychological processes including emotion (Chen & Dalton, 2005) and stress (Hoenen et al., 2017). This project aims to assess the biological sex differences in affective response to social and non-social stress, and how this then affects odor detection sensitivity, identification, hedonic ratings, and intensity ratings. This project will further the understanding of sex differences in regard to olfactory functioning, emotional regulation, in various stress conditions. Equal numbers of male and female undergraduate participants recruited from University of Dayton SONA System (N = 90) will be randomly assigned to one of two conditions: social stress or non-social stress. The participant will wear a chest heart rate monitor for the duration of the experiment. Average heart rate will be collected throughout. Participants will first complete a pre-condition administration of questionnaires and olfactory testing. Participants assigned to the social stress condition will participate in a modified version of the arithmetic section of the Trier Social Stress Test (Allen et al., 2017). Participants will be given ten minutes sequentially subtract 13 from 1,022 aloud and in front of a confederate and a camera prop. If the participant makes a mistake, the confederate will bluntly stop the participant and instruct them to start from the beginning thus inducing feelings of social evaluation. Participants assigned to the non-social stress condition will also have ten minutes to subtract the number 13 from 1,022 however on a sheet of blank paper. They will be instructed to do the arithmetic as quickly as possible without making mistakes. Following either stress-task, participants will compete post-condition olfactory testing and questionnaires.
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Signs to Speech
Yashesh Dinesh Bharti
There are softwares which translate from any language to any language, however, the promise of the futuristic sign language decoders have always been far away from being a day to day reality,Proposing a Neural Network based Sign language to speech translator which purports to translate sign language in real-time to text or speech as the user gestures. For people in the Deaf community, this tool could come in handy as it will not demand any extra hardware and use a camera (Like the ones present on the phone) to detect the pose and gestures.
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Smelling How to Feel: The Role of Ambient Odor and Olfaction in Affective Experience and Evaluation
Michael Alex Lee, Juliana Mitchell, Wyatt Kaiser
Olfaction, or the sense of smell, and emotion have long been recognized as closely related. Previous research has found that odors are not only capable of influencing our mood, but can also affect the way we evaluate different types stimuli that are associated with them. However, no study to date has examined how odors can influence the way we evaluate visual stimuli, nor considered the relationship between odor’s ability to influence mood as well as affective evaluation. This study’s goal was to address this gap in the literature. For this study, we had participants complete questionnaires about their demographic information, current mood, and the affective impact of odor for them. Then, we had them view a series of images and rate them for positive valence, negative valence, and intensity. Once they viewed all the images, participants then relocated to another room that was prepared with a pleasant odor, unpleasant odor, or no odor. Participants then completed another questionnaire regarding their mood following odor exposure, and then viewed and rated another set of images, which contained both new images and the same images they viewed earlier. We hypothesized that participant’s reported mood state would change after being exposed to a pleasant or unpleasant odor, that their ratings of positive and negative valence for the images would change after being exposed to a pleasant or unpleasant odor, and that the change in image ratings is mediated by their change in mood due to the odor. While most hypotheses were not supported, we found unexpected changes in mood and ratings over time between odor exposure conditions. This study provides additional nuance to our understanding of the relationship between olfactory and affective processing, as well as creates opportunities for building our understanding of the relationship between the two domains in the future.
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“SMH White Gays”: A Netnographic Study of Hegemonic Masculinity and Internalized Homophobia among Queer Men of Color on Twitter
Ryan Scott
This study takes an in-depth look into the way that gay men of color create spaces for themselves on social media. Focusing on the social media platform Twitter, I explore the dialogue around identity among gay men and the obstacles to creating inclusive spaces (i.e. internalized homophobia, anti-effeminacy and racial preferences). To study these trends within Twitter posts, I preform a content analysis of 15 posts and their comments/replies, from October 2019 to February 2020, by self-identified gay men and look for themes of internalized homophobia, hegemonic masculinity or exclusion of people of color. The key idea of this study is that even within marginalized communities, there is still an emphasis on being able to conform to normative identities. I take a closer look at how queer men of color navigate Twitter to create their online personas and understand their intersecting identities. With the growing presence of social media in our lives, it is important to see social media as the new frontier for studying human interaction. While this study focuses on the creation of spaces for gay men, the sociological forces at play in this research could be applied to any group.
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Social Media Content Labelling Toolkit
Allen Mathew Madathil
The proposed project is a graphical user interface for annotating recorded data on the social media composing process. This data can be used to learn about human behavioral patterns. Although this application was built for Windows, but it can be easily scaled to other platforms like Android as it was developed using Java. The Graphical User Interface allows the user to load the video files and label the video segments according to the actions performed. Labels are divided into two categories like action label and verbal label which are further subdivided into many categories. There are around 90 labels to choose from. For each action, the start time and end time are recorded. The labels along with the start time and end time of the actions are saved in a text file. The name of this text file matches the video file so whenever the user reopens the same video, previously saved labels are retrieved from the file which helps the user to continue where he left off. Another feature is that the application has a time-label bar which helps to visualize the labels with its corresponding time frames. Apart from learning about human behavioral patterns this tool can be modified and used for many other research works that require video labeling.
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Stock Market Analysis
Kate Rustige
This project aimed to develop a program to predict the future prices given past prices of a stock. Using the properties of Brownian motion, we may derive its mean and variance. A stock price is modeled as a Geometric Brownian motion, with mean referring to the average return of the stock and the volatility referring to the risk of the stock. For each individual stock, the mean and volatility aid in predicting the future stock price.
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Stories of Moral Courage on Campus
Ana Teresa Aleman Belendez, Britney Agendia Amin, Mackenzie Elizabeth Baynes, Anna Elizabeth Beebe, Nicolette Marissa Bettuzzi, Dezanee M. Bluthenthal, Bailee K. Boland, Liliana Melissa Busic, Clark N. Campbell, Kaitlynne Elizabeth Chapman, Zac Alexander Collopy, Colleen Rose Conway, Margaret L. Deneen, Joshua James Digby, Grace Susan Elliott, Julia E. Gallenstein, Hannah Elizabeth Gibson, Bridget Therese Graham, Tongyu Guo, Kathryn Grace Hay, Aileen Marisa Hull, Elijah Nova Johnson, Kelsey Marie Kamil, Lydia Kimberley Kladitis, Kaitlyn Marie Leach, Maya Rose Leibold, Douglas Stuart Lennon, Justine Marie Liptak, Colleen Rose Liston, Arabella D. Loera, Mitch Edward Long, Brandy Megan Lynch, Nathan Thomas Marcus, Jared Dominic Marsh, Jai'Shawn Madelyn Lamar McClendon, Darby Rose McMonagle, Sarah Ellen Mcgonigle, Devan Connor Moses, Alex M. Mueller, Casey Marie Mullin, Jake Davidson Neff, Robert Botti Nolan, Cameron Cristina Nowlin, Jillian A. Parker, Tess L. Poe-Slade, Jasmine H. Riechmann, Meredith N. Robinson, Jonathon Caleb Nehemiah Sattler, Connor James Snodsmith, Claire Elaine Strobach, Claire C. Sullivan, Nicole Ann Vanvoorhis, Angela Kay Weiland, Elizabeth Anne Weiler, Maleah Aujenae Wells, Sophie Jane Wilson
Students enrolled in three courses (HRS200, VAH428, POL431) worked on a collaborative multimedia project, inspired by the UD Human Rights Center's program, the Moral Courage Project. Through an open nomination process, the UD campus community put forward names of people who exemplify "moral courage". What is Moral Courage? We describe it as a trait a person exhibits when they act to promote respect and dignity within a community, especially in a way that challenges social norms, even though they could expose themselves to risk or harm in the process and may never be recognized for their actions. Student teams interviewed these individuals and collected visual artifacts to produce concise storytelling pieces showcasing the actions of the ordinary people around us who work to positively contribute to our campus culture.
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Structure function analysis of defective proventriculus (dve) in Drosophila melanogaster eye growth and development
Anuradha Chimata Venkatakrishnan, Neha Gogia
During development, axial patterning is required to establish Antero-posterior (AP), Dorso-Ventral (DV), and Proximo-Distal (PD) axes, which is crucial for the generation of a 3-dimensional organ from a monolayer organ primordium. Of the three axes, DV axis is the first lineage restriction event during eye development and any deviation results in developmental birth defects. In our study, we have used Drosophila melanogaster (Fruit fly) eye as a model system to understand the role of different domains of a new dorsal eye fate selector gene, defective proventriculus (dve, an ortholog of SATB1) in growth and development. In humans, SATB1, functions as a transcriptional regulator and chromatin organizer and requires tetramerization by the ULD domain. In Drosophila eye, dve regulates expression of wingless (wg), a negative regulator of eye. In genetic hierarchy, dve acts downstream of GATA-1 transcription factor pannier (pnr) and upstream of wg. Loss-of-function of dve results in dorsal eye enlargement while gain-of-function results in eye suppression. We performed structure function analysis of Dve protein to elucidate the role of various domains in patterning, growth and differentiation. We have developed several transgenic lines, which will allow us to induce expression domains of the specific domains of Dve protein and assay their effect on Drosophila eye patterning and growth. Dve has a ULD domain for tetramerization, HOX domain for DNA binding and PPP4R2 domain for H2AFX dephosphorylation. Here we present our results on ectopic induction of these individual domains of Dve and their effect on eye phenotype and Wg expression in the developing eye.