Computer Science Student Wins Second Annual 3MT庐 Competition
Posted on March 19, 2015
Lindsey Whitehurst, a computer science major, won the top prize Wednesday, March 18, in USA鈥檚 2nd Annual 3MT庐 Competition.
Whitehurst won with a three-minute presentation on 鈥淓nhanced Software Security through Programming Partitioning.鈥 Her mentor was Dr. Todd Andel, associate professor of computing. She was one of 10 graduate students to compete in the 22nd Annual Spring Research Forum. The competition is part of the annual USA Faculty Development Council鈥檚 Research Forum presentation and poster session.
Runner-up was Selena Jackson, a psychology major, who presented 鈥淓xamining Emotion Regulation, Perspective Taking, and Types of Aggression in the Context of Adolescent Dating Relationships.鈥 Her mentor was Dr. Jennifer Langhinrichsen-Rohling. The Peoples鈥 Choice Award went to mechanical engineering major Michael Hempowicz with 鈥淭he Impact of Hygrothermal Preconditioning on Mode II Interlaminar Fracture Toughness in Unidirectional Carbon Fiber Reinforced Epoxy Composites: An Experimental Investigation.鈥 His mentor was Dr. Gail Jefferson, assistant professor of mechanical engineering.
Whitehurst will receive $300 while Jackson and Hempowicz will receive $150 each.
Dr. B. Keith Harrison, dean of the Graduate School and associate vice president for academic affairs, said the 3MT庐 Competition is becoming more popular with students.
鈥淭his year we had more than 300 students and faculty members participate,鈥 Harrison said.
The 3MT庐, which stands for 鈥渢hree minute thesis,鈥 is growing in popularity at universities in the United States and internationally. Established in 2008 by the University of Queensland in Australia, the 3MT庐 is a research communication competition. The exercise challenges graduate students to present a compelling oration on their thesis topic and its significance in only three minutes. To be successful in the competition, the students must consolidate their ideas and research discoveries so they can be presented concisely to a non-specialist audience. At every level of the competition, each competitor is assessed on the audience鈥檚 comprehension of the material presented and engagement with the presenter.
Other presenters, thesis and mentors:
- Jodi Myers, sociology, 鈥淭he Seasonality of Adolescent Offending as a Function of Peer Network Composition,鈥 Dr. Doug Marshall, associate professor of sociology;
- James Cerkovnik, information systems, 鈥淢anaging Vulnerabilities and Risk in Network-Capable Medical Devices,鈥 Dr. J. Todd McDonald, associate professor of computing;
- Joseph Bynum, psychology, 鈥淓xplorations of Attention and the Flash Grab Effect,鈥 Dr. Timothy Slattery, assistant professor of psychology;
- Angel Huot, mechanical engineering, 鈥淔inite Element Analysis of Arterial Vessel Wall Stiffness,鈥 Dr. Saami Yazdani, assistant professor of mechanical engineering;
- Brian Klimek, marine sciences, 鈥淟inking Ciguatoxicity to Life History and Ecology of Red Lionfish (Pterois volitans) in the Western Atlantic,鈥 Dr. William Patterson III, associate professor of marine sciences, and Dr. Alison Robertson, assistant professor of marine sciences;
- Levi Shiverdecker, psychology, 鈥淒oes Narcissism Moderate the Influence of Sexual Activity on Pair-Bonding?鈥 Dr. Joshua Foster, associate professor of psychology;
For more information on the 3MT庐 Competition, visit .
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