Author: Christine Bassem

Allison Turner (Class of 2021) presents work at NCRC and NCUR in Spring 2020

Congratulations to Allison for the acceptance of her extended abstracts in both conferences! She has spent the Fall 2019 semester studying how various entities can control and monetize the Internet, and the effect of that control on Internet traffic and user experience.

Allison will be presenting her work at the Harvard National Collegiate Research Conference (NCRC) 2020, which is the nation’s largest student-run research conference, in January 2020. Then, she’ll travel to Montana to give a talk, titled “Fair Control of the Internet: Understanding Methods, Effects and How to Know What’s Being Done to Your Traffic”, at the National Conferences on Undergraduate Research (NCUR) 2020.

According to the NCUR 2020 review committee,

“Chosen from more than 4,000 submissions, your abstract demonstrates a unique contribution to your field of study, and we are glad to offer you the opportunity to present your work to your peers, faculty, and staff from all over the nation.

Hannah Murphy won “Outstanding Student Poster” at the Stanford Research Conference 2018

According to the SRC website:

“Held every spring, SURA’s annual conference serves as a forum where undergraduates from all over the country can present their work, connect with other researchers, and hear from distinguished leaders in the research community. Students who share their findings accordingly will receive valuable feedback from the students, alumni, and faculty members in attendance—feedback that will help them develop their interests further or redirect their efforts altogether. Students currently not participating in research may find a project that inspires them to explore an idea of their own. In this fashion, the conference will facilitate the exchange of information that is necessary for intellectual advancement in today’s highly interconnected society.”

This year about 10% of the posters at the conference won that award. We are very pleased to have Hannah’s poster picked out of about 100 posters this year!

The Coordinated Crowdsensing research group to present their work in HCOMP’17

Congratulations to Christine Bassem, Hannah Murphy’19, Megan Shum’19, and Amy Qui’17 on having their Work-In-Progress paper accepted in the AAAI Conference for Human Computation and Crowdsourcing (HCOMP’17)!

Hannah and Christine will be presenting their work at HCOMP this October.

Hannah Murphy’19 and Chloe Blazey’19 receive CRA-CREU funding for their research on Coordinated Mobile Crowdsensing

Congratulations for Hannah and Chloe!

“CREU is an undergraduate research program that provides research stipends to teams of students working on research projects under the guidance of a mentor at their home institutions. Students supported by CREU collaborate with each other and with their mentors during the academic year and, in some cases, the following summer.”

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