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About
the Biology Major
Student
Handbook
Faculty
Educational
philosophy
Study
abroad for Biology majors
Internships
and Research
Service
to Society
After graduation
- Graduate school
- Health professions
- Jobs
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STUDENT
RESEARCH
An important
activity for Biology majors is an independent research. Under the direction
of a member of the Biology Department faculty, students design and implement
their own research, gather and analyze their own data, and present their
results.
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Some
examples of these student research projects are:
an experimental study of antipredator communication between
free-living male and female red-winged blackbirds (see Burton, N.,
Yasukawa, K. 2001. The predator early warning system
of Red-winged Blackbirds. Journal of Field Ornithology 72, 106112.)
a series of experimental studies of the endocrine control
of estrus termination in guinea pigs (see Roy, M. M., Goldstein,
K. L., Williams, C. 1993. Estrus termination following copulation
in female guinea pigs. Hormones and Behavior 27, 397-402.)
an analysis of food webs using graph theory
a study of nodule formation in Turtle Creek
a study of an invasive plant species
a study of public perceptions of bioterrorism |
A second way that Beloit Biology majors do independent research is to
work in a lab at another college or university. Many of our majors do
research away from Beloit College during the summer or during the school
year. Some recent examples are:
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a study of the
factors affecting seed production in a rare prairie milkweed (Kansas
University)
a study of neurogenesis and cell migration in fetal and adult
mouse brains (Northwestern University)
a study of courtship latency and reproductive isolation in
a stickleback species complex (University of WisconsinWhitewater)
[add picture of Sindy Shell]
a study of recombinant mannan-binding lectins (rMBL) and
their interactions with various molecules (Rush University)
a study of the use of directly observed therapy (DOT) in
promoting patient adherence of highly active antiretroviral therapy
(HAART) among HIV-positive drug users (Johns Hopkins School of Public
Hygiene and Public Health)
a study of the feeding interference task (FIT) as a measure
of pain in lab rats (Vanderbilt University Medical Center)
a study of viral-induced
obesity using multi-adenovirus infection of 3T3-L1 preadipocytes
(University of WisconsinMadison)
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a comparison of acetylcholine
receptor specific IL-10 and IFN-g production in experimental Myasthenia
Gravis (University of Texas Medical Branch as Galveston).
a study of habitat use by jaguar in the Area of Conservation Guanacaste,
Costa Rica (ACM Costa Rica Program)
a study of the effectiveness of a wildlife corridor in the Engare
Nanyuki region of Tanzania (ACM Tanzania Program)
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A group of Beloit College
Biology students have the opportunity to start research even before
their first year through the Howard Hughes Medical Institute Young
Scholars Program. These students spend 6 weeks in the summer working
with a professor on a project of their choice. Recent student projects
include a study of the communication behavior of redwing blackbirds
when threatened, a GIS analysis of the occurrence low birth weight
babies in Wisconsin, and the changing ecology of Chamberlin Springs,
the Beloit College prairie. For more information on the Young Scholars
Program, contact Professor Ken Yasukawa at yasukawa@beloit.edu
See 2002 students
and their mentors at left.
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Beloit College Department of Biology, last updated 2/25/03.
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