Museum highlights UC’s student research opportunities

A video at the Cincinnati Museum Center showcases UC student work on sensory ecology

A local museum is highlighting a summer research program at the University of Cincinnati that invites students from across the country to the UC campus to work with faculty on sensory ecology projects.

The Cincinnati Museum Center created a new video exhibit showcasing students working on UC’s sensory ecology projects in the Research Experience for Undergraduates program.

UC biology professor Stephanie Rollmann said the project highlights opportunities that visiting students get to conduct original research in UC’s labs.

“It brings in 10 students nationally from across the United States to do research in faculty labs in sensory ecology,” Rollmann said.

Three people stand in front of a video screen at the Cincinnati Museum Center.

The Cincinnati Museum Center is showcasing UC student research in a video across from its popular Cave exhibit. Pictured are UC biologists Stephanie Rollmann and John Layne, left, and Brian Pollock, manager of STEM resources at the Cincinnati Museum Center. Photo/Michael Miller

Apply Today

Students from across the nation are invited to apply to UC’s Research Experience for Undergraduates program on sensory ecology that runs from May 30 to Aug. 4, 2023. Application review begins Feb. 1, with a final application deadline on Feb 17.

UC students wishing to explore summer research opportunities can check out the National Science Foundation’s Research Experience for Undergraduate page, which offers a global search by subject of interest.

Students work with faculty mentors in their labs to gain research experience in the program, sponsored by the National Science Foundation. The varied projects include topics like echolocation in bats, the migration of monarch butterflies or the taste buds of blind Mexican cavefish like those the museum has on display in an aquarium across from the UC exhibit.

Each video was produced by a collaborative trio, with one visiting student joining a student in UC’s Department of Communication, and a student in UC’s Digital Media Collaborative, which is a degree program in which students take classes in three colleges to learn the skills needed to become digital storytellers.

closeup of crab eyes

Visiting students conducted research in sensory ecology using models such as fiddler crabs and blind cavefish.

The visiting students shared the scientific knowledge they acquired doing research in Biology with Communication students mentored by Autumn Miller, and with Digital Media Collaborative students under the direction of Mike Gasaway; together they crafted a story and designed the visuals to create the educational videos featured by the museum.

Brian Pollock, manager of STEM resources for the museum, said the videos show how fun and accessible research is compared to many depictions in pop culture.

“Videos like these help children to see themselves as scientists,” Pollock said. “The students in these videos are doing real science and having fun doing it. That authentic energy excites our visitors and shows them how scientists are normal people and not just stuffy old men in lab coats like they might see on TV.”

Students in the program study sensory perception and how it guides behavior using model animals such as bobwhite quail, snakes, spiders, fruit flies, and fiddler crabs.

The exhibit on UC’s student research fits in with other museum exhibits which are designed to be interactive to engage visitors, particularly children, Pollock said.

“Our interest in sharing this collaboration is to show that the Cincinnati Museum Center is a research organization. We do our own scientific research here, from paleontology to zoology to genetic research,” Pollock said. “And we partner with institutions like the University of Cincinnati.”

Featured image at top: Visiting student Zaria Griffith works with bobwhite quail in UC assistant professor Elizabeth Hobson's lab as part of UC's Research Experience for Undergraduates program sponsored by the National Science Foundation. Photo/UC Digital Media Collaborative

Two people pose in the enormous atrium of the Cincinnati Museum Center.

UC College of Arts and Sciences biologists Stephanie Rollmann and John Layne worked with visiting students in UC's Research Experience for Undergraduates program. The students' work is being highlighted at the Cincinnati Museum Center. Photo/Michael Miller

Impact Lives Here

The University of Cincinnati is leading public urban universities into a new era of innovation and impact. Our faculty, staff and students are saving lives, changing outcomes and bending the future in our city's direction. Next Lives Here.

Related Stories

7289 Results
1

How to give a hippo an ultrasound

May 26, 2022

University of Cincinnati master's student Julie Barnes works as a veterinarian at the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden where she recently performed an ultrasound on a hippo.

3

When push comes to shove, what is a fight?

January 25, 2021

University of Cincinnati biologists come up with novel way for deciding how to categorize similar animal behaviors. The results could help streamline animal behavior research.

5

UC sequences genome of common farm pest

March 10, 2021

Researchers at the University of Cincinnati hope to use the stable fly's genetic code against it to prevent billions of dollars in annual losses in the United States.

6

UC expands popular STEM program across Ohio

March 28, 2024

UC's popular Biology Meets Engineering program introduces high school students to STEM. Now, the National Science Foundation is paying UC to bring the program to three other Ohio universities.

9

How to make the faculty job search less discouraging

May 5, 2023

Postdoctoral researchers often get little useful feedback about ways to improve their job applications for faculty positions. So a University of Cincinnati anthropologist set up a pilot program that invited postdoctoral researchers to review each others’ application documents.

10

Light pollution can disorient monarch butterflies

May 23, 2022

Biologists at the University of Cincinnati say nighttime light pollution can interfere with the remarkable navigational abilities of monarchs, which travel as far as Canada to Mexico and back during their multigenerational migration.