Three Minute Thesis Finalists Compete

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student presenting
Jonathan Hall, of the UK Classics Department, presents his talk, titled "Back to the Future: A Past and Present Without Free Will"
Three Minute Thesis presenting finalists 2016

LEXINGTON, Ky. (Nov. 11, 2016) Nine graduate student finalists will compete for cash prizes at the University of Kentucky Three Minute Thesis (3MT®) competition from 5:30-7 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 15, in Gatton College pf Business and Economics' Kincaid Auditorium.

The competitors are each given three minutes to describe their research to the audience. The winner will receive $1,000 and an all-expense-paid trip to the Southern Council of Graduate Schools Regional Competition to be held March 2-5, in Annapolis, Maryland. The second-place finisher will receive $500 and third place $250. A People’s Choice winner selected by the audience in attendance will receive $125.

Sponsored by the Graduate Student Congress and the Student Government Association, 3MT is a research communication initiative requiring graduate students to speak succinctly and engagingly about their current research to a nonspecialist audience.

The finalists, their major and the title of their research include:

  • Cynthia Dickerson, pharmaceutical sciences, "Multivariate Analysis: Making Medicine Safe for You!"; 
  • Carleigh Fedorka, veterinary sciences, "The dirty broodmare ... cleaned up";
  • Karen Guettler-James, educational psychology, "Resiliency: A Necessity for Black Male College Students";
  • Michael Halcomb, linguistics, "Amen to that!: Using Linguistics to Analyze the History of a Word";
  • Jaclyn Johnson, political science, "Squeaky Wheels and Troop Loyalty: How Domestic Protests Influence Coups d’état, 1951–2005";
  • Jessica Richard, agricultural economics, "Dairy Margin Protection Program";
  • Hannah Ruehl, English, "Fighting the Grey: Aging and Victorian Women";
  • Andrew Welleford, anatomy and neurobiology, "Nerve Support Cells: The Key to Stopping Parkinson's Disease?"; and
  • Kai Zhang, pharmacology,"Blocking MCP-1, a Potential Preventative Therapy for Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD)."