This page contains brief reports and photos of special events
the REU Site hosted or participated in.
For more photos,
please view the
Photo Album.
Sunday, 06/19/2011, 05:00pm-07:00pm
We welcomed all participants in the REU Site with a pizza dinner.
Dr. Gobbert and Dr. Neerchal explained the idea of the program
as applying scientific, parallel, and statistical computing tools
to application problems. The work is done in teams and with
support of graduate assistants and faculty, who all introduced themselves.
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Wednesday, 06/23/2011, 09:00am-09:30am
The REU participants met in the morning before classes to talk with
Dr. Neerchal. As the Department Chair of the Mathematics and
Statistics at UMBC, Dr. Neerchal was able to teach us about the
university structure and advise us about the process of applying for
graduate school. A central goal of the REU program at UMBC is to
prepare undergraduates for success in graduate school.
--
Jeremy Bejarano
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Thursday, 06/23/2011, 02:00pm-04:30pm
Four speakers gave presentations.
The first speaker Michael Curtis is our peer mentor. Besides explaining
the science of this project, he gave the participants some insights on
how the mechanics of project and team work can go.
The following three speakers presented their potential research projects.
- Michael Curtis, UMBC, REU Site Peer Mentor
Parallelization of Matrix Factorization for Recommender Systems
- Dr. Matthew Baker,
UMBC Department of Geography and Environmental Systems
Consequences of Discontinuous Geologic Strata for Groundwater Travel
Times and Pollutant Transport in Maryland's Coastal Plain
- Dr. Charles Eggleton and Alex Szatmary ,
UMBC Department of Mechanical Engineering
Parallelization of Cell Simulation Software
- Dr. Ivan Erill and Patrick O'Neill,
UMBC Department of Biological Sciences
Molecular Information Theory in Transcription Factor Analysis
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Thursday, 06/23/2011, 05:30pm-07:30pm
We concluded the afternoon of client presentations with a
dinner at Hunan Manor in Columbia. It was a chance to talk more informally.
The students had already many questions about graduate school and
used the graduate student in attendance to good effect.
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Friday, 06/24/2011, 09:00am-09:30am
We met with the Dean of the College of Natural and
Mathematical Sciences, Dr. Philip Rous.
We discussed his career and shared some details about ourselves.
He showed us UMBC's CASTLE, the
CNMS Active Science Teaching and Learning Environment.
Dean Rous informed us of both goals and purposes of CASTLE and how
those were kept in mind when designing CASTLE to optimize each
student's learning experience.
--
Tyler Brannan
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Wednesday, 06/29/2011, 09:00am-09:30am
UMBC President Dr. Freeman Hrabowski met with the HPCREU
participants to discuss why programs like the HPCREU program are such
an important part of undergraduate learning, especially for those
considering further education. He urged each of us to develop a
"hunger for knowledge", and emphasized creative thinking and teamwork
as essential parts of a productive learning environment. He shared
with us his passion for speaking with students face to face and
motivating them to consider careers in the math and science fields.
--
Derek Wade
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Wednesday, 06/29/2011, 01:00pm-01:30pm
One potential client could not make the Thursday slot and
therefore presented at this special time slot:
- Dr. Elsa Schaefer, Department of Mathematics, Marymount University
Model Assumptions and Corresponding Implications for Behavior
of a Cholera Outbreak
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Thursday, 06/30/2011, 02:00pm-04:00pm
Today, the final three research clients presented their potential projects.
- Dr. Loring Craymer, NSA
Harnessing Parallelism
- Dr. Martin Klein, U.S. Census Bureau
Ranking Procedures for Several Normal Populations:
An Empirical Investigation
- Dr. George Ostrouchov, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Tools for Sampling Large Distributed Data


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Thursday, 06/30/2011, 05:30pm-07:30pm
We had dinner with the clients at Paradise Club in Catonsville.
The students got insight into career choices inside and ouside
academia, when all faculty, clients, and graduate students
discussed their choices and experiences briefly.


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Friday, 07/01/2011, 09:30am-10:00am
David Trott presented the state-of-the-art software package
COMSOL Multiphysics that is
used in the project proposed by Dr. Matthew Baker last week.
This gives an impression what it might mean to pick that project.
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Thursday, 07/07/2011, 04:30pm-07:00pm
The REU participants met with Dr. Janet Rutledge, the Dean of the
Graduate School at UMBC. She gave a presentation entitled
Creating Effective Graduate School and Fellowship Applications.
She talked about how graduate schools work, and how a master's or a doctorate
degree is different form an undergraduate one. She elaborated on the
process of applying to graduate school, how to choose which schools
to apply to, and the types of funding available. She gave us advice
on putting together strong and effective applications. The evening
concluded with dinner at the dining hall, where the students had a
chance to talk to Dean Rutledge more informally and ask more specific questions
regarding graduate school and career paths.
--
Koushiki Bose
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Friday, 07/08/2011, 09:30am-09:50am
The system administrator Aaron Knister from the
Division of Information Technology gave a tour
of the tara system that we
utilize for parallel computing research. He outlined the
specifications of the system, future plans for expansion, and the
total cost of the system. It is estimated that the power required
to cool the system is equivalent to the amount needed to cool three
average size homes.
--
Neil Obetz
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Thursday, 07/14/2011, 04:00pm-05:00pm
Kathy L. Sutphin, Assistant Dean for Academic Affairs
in the College of Natural and Mathematical Sciences, spoke about
preparing posters for the upcoming Summer Undergraduate Research Fest
(SURF). In addition to relaying conference specifics such as order
of events, appropriate dress, and poster submission requirements,
she also communicated effective poster design, content, and
presentation techniques. This talk was especially helpful, as many
participants of this REU site will present research for the first
time at SURF.
--
Anita Thomas
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Tuesday, 07/19/2011, 09:00am-09:30am
The REU students met with Dr. Don Engel, Assistant Vice President for
Research at UMBC. He shared his extensive professional background
including his time spent in politics. Dr. Engel also discussed his
role here at the university and stressed the
importance of interdisciplinary research. He advised students who
are planning to attend graduate school to aim on finding the best
fit, not the highest ranked, graduate school.
--
Samantha Allen
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Wednesday, 07/20/2011, 09:00am-09:30am
Yvette Mozie-Ross, Assistant Provost for Enrollment Management, spoke
about paying it forward. Her dissertation concerns the relation
between certain demographics of high school students and if parents
or teachers had a higher influence on students. She encouraged us to
motivate and inspire students of all ages to continue their
education, as we had been influenced ourselves. This was a very
important reminder of the opportunities in our lives and that we
should pay it forward to pass these opportunities on to others.
--
Dorothy Kirlew
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Thursday, 07/21/2011, 11:45am-05:00pm
Today we took a UMBC bus down to
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, MD
(coincidentally, on the day of the final Space Shuttle landing). The
tour started in the Earth Science Gallery where the research
participants explored various attractions such as a life size model
of a Command Capsule and a computer demonstration of global warming.
Then the participants were shown Alpha Centauri of the Milky Way,
Solar Storms, and the Solar System (in particular, Jupiter, Mars, and
the Earth) as stereo-projections on a 6-foot sphere.
Next stop was the NASA Center for Climate Simulation (NCCS) which is
facilitated by a Discover super-computer of nearly 15,000
processors (8,000 of which use the Nehalem architecture and were
added in 2009). The center director explained that their computer
uses Infiniband (as does Tara), an optical fiber structure, for
communication between nodes. These weather and climate simulations
then were demonstrated on the 17 by 6 foot Hyperwall, which is a
composition of multiple screens used for high-definition data
visualization.
The tour went forward to observe the world's largest clean room
where the James Webb Space Telescope is being constructed. The clean
room is 1.3 million cubic feet of space where any cubic foot of air
has no more than 10,000 particles larger than half a micron. With a
mirror six times the size of Hubble's, the James Webb Telescope will
explore the light from the time of the first galaxies to the
formation of our own Solar System in the infrared spectrum, allowing the
observation of dimmer and cooler objects.
--
Alexey Ilchenko


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Wednesday, 07/27/2011, 09:30am-05:00pm
Before visiting the NSA building itself, the students visited NSA's
publicly available National Cryptologic Museum, which documents the
history of cryptology in the US as well as the rest of the world.
Following that, the REU students visited the National Security Agency
itself to experience four talks from various NSA employees:
First, Dr. Mel Currie gave a talk about DNA inheritance and how it
relates to mathematics using the example of the Fibonacci sequence.
Next, David Mountain gave us an overview of NSA's ACS program.
After that, Mark McLean described his methods for developing
machine learning based off how the human brain is constructed.
Finally, co-op student Walt Ratcliff showed a demo illustrating
his new facial recognition system
that can, amongst other things, determine whether or not people are
wearing sunglasses.
--
Richard Adjogah
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Thursday, 07/28/2011, 04:00pm-07:00pm
The REU participants met with Dr. Ken Baron, the Director of the
Office for Academic and Pre-Professional Advising, who talked
about preparing for Graduate School. His presentation discusses
important topics needed when applying for graduate school including
how to write essays based on experience within the field (not
just classwork), fostering strong relationships with mentors and faculty,
having a back-up plan, and choosing a research supervisor who has a
record of helping students complete their task. Dr. Baron recommended
the book
Graduate Admissions Essays by Donald Asher as a good
reference for questions regarding graduate school. After the
presentation, the students had dinner with Dr. Baron to end the night.
--
Ekene Sibeubu
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Wednesday, 08/03/2011, 09:00am-09:30am
We met with Dr. Kathleen Hoffman,
Graduate Program Director for the Applied Mathematics graduate program at UMBC.
She gave her insight on what graduate program directors might look
for in applicants to their program.
She expressed the importance of getting letters of recommendation
from upper level instructors in the same major as the one being applied to.
Also, she explained that grades in one's major, undergraduate research,
and standardized tests play a heavy factor into the
graduate admission decision.
Finally, she discussed specifics about the
UMBC MS and PhD math programs such as
comprehensive and oral exams, orientations, and dissertations.
--
Randal Mckissack
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Friday, 08/05/2011, 09:00am-09:30am
Esther Gross and Melanie Dell, editors of the UMBC Review, spoke about
the process of getting a paper published in a journal. Esther Gross
is the editor of mathematics and science submissions to the UMBC
Review. She talked to us about her role in the publication process and
gave us insight into what to expect if we submitted our papers to
journals. Melanie Dell is the editor of the humanities and literary
submissions to the UMBC Review. Her comments allowed us to see the
contrasts between science and humanities submission processes. We
learned about the technical specifications of the UMBC Review as well
as the acceptance rate. Lastly, we discussed the importance of having
work published in journals, and how to determine which journal is
right for a paper.
--
Matthew Brewster
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Wednesday, 08/10/2011, 09:00am-12:30pm
We are very happy that our REU Site kicked off the
14th Annual Summer Undergraduate Research Fest (SURF) at UMBC
with an oral presentation, jointly presented by
Samantha Allen and Neil Obetz of Team 1.
All teams presented their results during the poster session.
Team 1 of Samantha Allen, Dorothy Kirlew, Neil Obetz, and Derek Wade is shown
with graduate assistant April Albertine and faculty mentor Nagaraj Neerchal.
Team 2 of Jeremy Bejarano, Koushiki Bose, Tyler Brannan, and Anita Thomas
is shown with faculty mentors Kofi Adragni and Nagaraj Neerchal.
The clients Martin Klein and George Ostrouchov, respectively,
received the results of the work on the following day.
Team 3 of Andrew Coates and Alexey Ilchenko presented their poster
to the clients Patrick O'Neill and Ivan Erill (clients not in photo).
Team 4 of Richard Adjogah, Randal Mckissack, and Ekene Sibeudu
is shown with client Loring Craymer and faculty mentor Matthias Gobbert.
Also undergraduate assistant Matthew Brewster presented his research,
shown here explaining it to an audience member.
In the closing session, the program directors Matthias Gobbert
and Nagaraj Neerchal (at microphone) present the SURF certificates
to all participants. Finally, all members of the REU Site with
their posters pose with undergraduate and graduate assistants,
faculty mentors, and the clients present.






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