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SUMS Conference Celebrates its Fifth Year
By Elaine Bussjaeger ('10), Public Affairs
The fifth annual SUMS conference attracted students from as far away as Michigan and invited speakers from New Jersay and Texas.
Fifty-one student presenters. Twenty-nine presentations. Twenty posters. Two keynote speakers. Add them together and you have the vital statistics for this year’s Shenandoah Undergraduate Mathematics and Statistics (SUMS) Conference hosted by JMU.
Students from as far as Michigan attended the October 3 conference, now in its fifth year.
“This year's student presentations were fantastic,” said Laura Taalman, co-director of SUMS and associate professor of mathematics and statistics at JMU. “Each year the undergraduate speakers at SUMS show an impressive level of mathematical sophistication and confidence in presenting their results, and this year was no exception.”
The one-day conference featured 15-minute talks and poster sessions, highlighting the world of collegiate undergraduate mathematical research. The projects covered a vast array of mathematical topics.
“Not only are students often surprised to find that undergraduate research in mathematics is possible, they are also interested to learn how varied this research can be,” said Elizabeth Theta Brown, associate professor of mathematics and statistics and co-director of SUMS. “For example, the mathematics of games and puzzles is a hot topic in undergraduate research, and our puzzle table at SUMS is always very well received.”
In addition to the student research, the conference brought keynote speakers from New Jersey and Texas. Dr. Doron Zeilberger of Rutgers University opened the conference with a talk about his work in the field of summation and the importance of engaging students in undergraduate research.
Dr. Michael Starbird of the University of Texas at Austin closed the conference, speaking about the abstract process of insightful thinking and creation of ideas, called the fourth dimension.
After running SUMS for five years, Taalman and Brown say they have a clear picture of how they want SUMS to turn out each year.
“This was in my opinion our best year,” said Taalman, “with record attendance, a record number of student speakers, and two fantastic invited addresses.”
The conference is supported by a National Science Foundation grant through the Mathematical Association of America (MAA) Regional Undergraduate Mathematics Conferences, the College of Science and Mathematics at JMU, the office of the special assistant to the president for diversity, the department of mathematics and statistics, and the national mathematics honor society, Pi Mu Epsilon.
This year’s student presenters were:
A student presenter discusses equations at this year's SUMS conference on October 3.
Sarah Kunkler, College of William and Mary The Protocol Paradox of Approval Voting
Barbara Brown, University of Mary Washington Generalized Dihedral Groups and Geometry
Avis Foster, George Mason University Numerical Modeling and Analysis of Fluid Structure Interaction in Biological Systems
Jamey Szalay, James Madison University Separating Signals With Independent Component Analysis
Olivia Walch, College of William and Mary The Commutant of the Tridiagonal Pattern
Robert Abramovic, Johns Hopkins University Harmonic Maps on Cayley Graphs and Compactification
Josh Snyder, George Mason University Analysis of 3D Potts Model Monte Carlo Simulation of Crystalline Grain Growth
Elizabeth Bernat, University of Mary Washington Numerical Estimates of Temperature Changes Using Finite Difference Methods
Reginald Ford, David Melendez, and Juan Ortega, James Madison University AYO/MANCALA
Hudson Harper, University of South Carolina An asymptotic for class numbers of positive fundamental discriminants
James O’Beirne, George Mason University Modeling Phase Separation in Ternary Alloys
Marlene Ouayoro, George Mason University Retrieving Economic Parameters of Asset-Flow Equations
Samantha Dahlberg, Grand Valley State University Prove that Sum: W-Z verses Counting
Beihua Yan, University of Virginia A Look at the ABC Conjecture via Elliptic Curves
Nina Bence and Glenn Young, James Madison University Mathematical modeling of the nociceptive withdrawal response of the tail in spinalized rats
Franz Hamilton, George Mason University Parameter Estimation in a System of Differential Equations
Dallas Joder, James Madison University Comparison of Priors for Estimation of Binomial Parameters
Lydia Garcia and Kylie Robillard, St. Mary's College of Maryland Unraveling Untangle
Cory Simon, University of Akron Compartmental model for the transmission of pandemic H1N1/09
James Manning, University of South Carolina Exchange Rate Behavior
Robert Bradford, Ohio State Multivariate Tutte polynomial of graphs and HOMFLYPT polynomial of links.
Andrea Faatz, The College of William and Mary Traveling Wave Dynamics of Dengue Fever
Michael Atkins, George Mason University Phase Field and Atomistic Modeling of Grain Boundaries
Theodore Dokos, Ohio State University The second order coefficient of the ascending or descending Conway Polynomial for virtual knots as a determinant.
Immanuel Williams, University of Maryland Baltimore County Allocation of Monetary Resources in HIV infected Community
Philip Naudus, George Mason University Computer Model of Gravitational Lensing Systems
Tarik Aougab, University of Pennsylvania Geometric Covering Spaces of Julia Sets
Yichen Zhou, University of Virginia The framework of solving an optimization problem
Satyasheel “Monty” Korpe, Virginia Tech Field-Induced Motion of a Ferrofluid Droplet through Immiscible Viscous Media
This year’s student poster presenters were:
A student talks about one of the 20 posters presented at the conference.
Cameron Atkins, James Madison University Pebbles in Graph Theory
Joseph Bae Ill posedness of the backward heat equation
Melissa Bechard and Victoria Stratton, James Madison University Microarray and Meta-analysis on Bordetella avium
Patricia Bellew, James Madison University Trigonometric Functions
Kathryn Christian, University of Mary Washington Solutions to Laplace's Equation in Modeling Heat Conduction
Samuel DuVal, James Madison University Topological Demons: Recycled IN 3-SPACE!
Kaira Ewald, James Madison University Math in Games
Leah Haling, James Madison University Signal Processing and Acoustic Data
Ryan Harter, James Madison University Vega Estimation
Rachel Kozlowski, James Madison University A Mathematical Solution to Sudoku
Jonathan Legendre, James Madison University Diffusion on a Grid
Kun (Justine) Leng, SUNY Buffalo Modular Dynamics in Plant Growth and Development
Juan Ortega, James Madison University AYO/MANCALA
Kristen Poland, James Madison University Where Are the Mathematicians in the Math Curriculum?
Jessica Remmes, James Madison University Writing Fractions the Egyptian Way
Cory Simon, University of Akron Compartmental model for the transmission of pandemic H1N1/09
Elizabeth Tuley, Univeristy of Maryland Analysis on Fractals - Orthogonal Polynomials on the Sierpinski Gasket
Jason Von Hoene, James Madison University Series and Sequences
Jesse Wagner, Indiana University of Pennsylvania Knots and Unknots
Immanuel Williams, University of Maryland Baltimore County Allocation of Monetary Resources in HIV infected Community