The Newsletter: Summer 2021

Page 4

Honors Bio Students Investigate Life Science Questions, With Help From the Pros Does sugar water have an effect on ants’ learning? Are the heart rates of Daphnia magna affected by alcohol exposure? How does isolation alter the dietary habits of cockroaches? How does sound affect plant growth? This year, the Honors Biology students in Dr. Peter Hyde’s class answered these ques­tions and more, with help from medical professionals and research scientists.

Special thanks to our generous mentors, who include: Sirisha Emani P’17, ’22, PhD, Department of Surgery, Boston Children’s Hospital

For the eighth year, Honors Bio students spent the winter term immersed in Inde­pendent Research Projects (IRP). Posing questions of their own scientific interest, the boys developed experiment proposals and turned to the professionals for realtime feedback, honing their approaches all the while. Even before the winter break, the students met with their IRP mentors—RL parents and alumni who are also research scientists, surgeons, hematologists, oncologists—virtually. With the feedback from those sessions, the boys refined their experimental plans, and in January and February they collected their data. The IRP mentors

Andrew Eyre ’02, MD, Department of

then met with their mentees again to discuss the data and findings, and worked with the students on developing compelling presentations. In a typical year the students’ work culminates in a science fair-style event, in which faculty, staff, and fellow students can walk around perusing project posters and asking questions of the budding scientists. Due to COVID-19 restrictions, the students instead submitted videos as the culminating presentation of their hard work.

Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital

Other research projects included the effects of dissolved oxygen on yeast respiration and CO2 production; the effects of changing soil pH on the growth of Wisconsin Fast Plants; whether hyperoxia improves learning in fruit flies; and how the concentration of potassium ions affect the heart rate of Daphnia magna. //

David Wilkinson P’21, ’23, ’25, MS,

Emergency Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital Ephraim Hochberg ’88 P’25, MD, Departments of Oncology and Hematology, Massachusetts General Hospital Matthew Hutter ’87 P’21, ’23, MD, Departments of General and Gastrointestinal

Julie Lin P’17, PhD, Clinical Development, Rare Diseases and Rare Blood Disorders, Sanofi-Genzyme Cynthia Morton P’10, PhD, Department of Cytogenetics, Brigham and Women’s Hospital

Department of Systems Engineering, Vicarious Surgica Scot Wolfe P’15, ’18, PhD, Department of Molecular, Cell and Cancer Biology, University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Summer 2021


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