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Math student takes her research to Capitol Hill

By Kim Lamb Gregory
Dana Cochran

CI Mathematics graduate student Dana Cochran rarely works with numbers. ā€œYou tell someone you’re a math major and they immediately want you to calculate the tip in your head,ā€ said Cochran, 24. ā€œThe more advanced you are in math, the more you realize there’s not a single number on our whiteboards.ā€

That’s because advanced level math students like Cochran are working with abstract concepts, which they can use to help solve real world problems. Cochran used her mathematical skills to help streamline a diagnostic procedure in the world of medicine. The research she conducted impressed the Council on Undergraduate Research enough to earn her a trip to Washington D.C. in April to participate in the Council’s ā€œPosters on the Hillā€ event.

Cochran was one of 60 participants chosen from more than 500 applicants from colleges and universities around the nation. ā€œI was really excited,ā€ said Cochran’s mentor, Associate Professor of Mathematics Kathryn Leonard, Ph.D. ā€œI don’t ask all of my students to apply to ā€˜Posters on the Hill’ but she’s a wonderful student with a great attitude and great work ethic.ā€

Held April 22 and 23, ā€œPosters on the Hillā€ was an opportunity for the chosen student researchers to set up posters detailing their research in a gallery setting. Members of U.S. Congress, staffers, journalists and other invited guests then had a chance to examine the posters and hear about each student’s research. ā€œIt’s exciting and also very nerve-wracking because I know I’ll have to talk in front of people,ā€ Cochran said before the event. ā€œI’m going to be very nervous. You never know who’s going to walk up to the poster. A mathematician? A journalist? A senator?ā€

Cochran presents research project in Washington D.C.Cochran’s research involved developing a database for physicians examining patient brain scans for the possibility of schizophrenia. Her goal was to build a database that would allow doctors to feed in the scans and find out whether the mathematical coordinates on the shape of the brain suggested the possibility of schizophrenia.

ā€œStudies have shown that the shape of a part of the brain called the ā€˜corpus callosum’ will vary according to whether you have the disease,ā€ Cochran said.

Leonard began the research project and invited Cochran to be a part of it in the fall of 2013, after watching Cochran sail through linear algebra classes during her sophomore year. ā€œThat’s when students transition from computation to abstract thought,ā€ Leonard said. ā€œIt’s something most students struggle with, so I asked her to join my research group the following year.ā€ Leonard mentored Cochran as Cochran created the poster for the event in Washington.

The trip, Cochran said, was an inspiration. A highlight for her was looking at posters from other high-achieving students from across the U.S., visiting the National Museum of American History and speaking to scientists and researchers at the Office of Science and Technology. ā€œThey were saying ā€˜Don’t be afraid to take risks. Do things that challenge you,ā€™ā€ Cochran said.

Cochran returned from Washington energized and enthusiastic about continuing her graduate school studies with plans to someday teach math at a college level.

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Ā© Spring 2015 / Volume 19 / Number 1 / Bi-annual

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