SHARE

Four Long Island Students Named Regeneron Finalists

Four Long Island high school students were among 40 nationally that were chosen as finalists in the prestigious 2020 Regeneron Science Talent Search.

Area residents have been named as finalists in the prestigious Regeneron Science Talent Search.

Area residents have been named as finalists in the prestigious Regeneron Science Talent Search.

Photo Credit: Society for Science
The 40 Regeneron finalists.

The 40 Regeneron finalists.

Photo Credit: Regeneron Pharmaceutical Inc

This year, approximately 2,000 students entered the Regeneron STS, where they “submit original research in critically important scientific fields of study.” 

The organization said that the search is “unique among high school competitions in the U.S. and globally, Regeneron STS focuses on identifying, inspiring, and engaging the nation's most promising young scientists.”

Judges narrowed the field to just 300, based on their research skills, commitment to education, innovate thinking and prospects as a scientist. Now they are down to 40 finalists, more than half of whom are female.

This year's local Regeneron scholar finalists and their research projects include:

Bellmore:

  • Andrew Brinton, John F. Kennedy High School: “Marsh Restoration: Ribbed Mussels (Geukensia demissa) as a Revival Mechanism to Rebuild the Coastal Salt Marshes of Long Island, New York.”
  • Katherine St. George, John F. Kennedy High School: “The Ketogenic Diet Ameliorates The Effects of Caffeine in Seizure Susceptible Drosophila melanogaster.”

North Shore:

  • Kyra McCreery, North Shore High School: “Associations between the Slowdown in North Atlantic Tropical-Cyclone Translation Speed and Intensifying Storm Precipitation.”

Manhasset:

  • Ella Wesson, Manhasset High School: “Engineering One Layer of a Two-Dimensional Acoustic Band Gap Material and Reconstructing the Sound Pressure Field Using Acoustic Holography.”

The finalists already received $2,000 for their schools by being named semifinalists. The finalists will head to Washington, D.C. in March for their final judgment. The finalists will be awarded at least $25,000 and the top 10 will earn between $40,000 and $250,000.

According to the judges, in 2017, Regeneron became only the third sponsor of the Science Talent Search, increasing the overall awards distribution to better reward the best and brightest young minds.

Students typically spend weeks or months working closely with adult faculty members independently.

Finalists' projects span a diversity of STEM-related topics including targeting cancer via signaling pathways, developing a mobile application for stroke diagnosis using deep learning and computer vision and identifying an improved method for trace level arsenic quantification in water.

“Through its 10-year, $100 million commitment, Regeneron nearly doubled the overall award distribution to $3.1 million annually, increasing the top award to $250,000 and doubling the awards for the top 300 scholars and their schools to $2,000 each to inspire more young people to engage in science.

“We are inspired by the incredible energy and passion of every scholar who is using research to make the world a better place,” Maya Ajmera, President and CEO of Society for Science & the Public, Publisher of Science News and 1985 Science Talent Search alum, said. “These young students will be the key to unlocking solutions to many of our world’s most pressing challenges.”

"The Regeneron Science Talent Search finalists are the stewards of our future," Maya Ajmera, President and CEO of Society for Science & the Public, Publisher of Science News and 1985 Science Talent Search alum, said. "These finalists are the top young scientists of our country today and they give me great hope for what lies ahead."

to follow Daily Voice Nassau and receive free news updates.

SCROLL TO NEXT ARTICLE