The Asian Age

6 Indian- origin students selected for Davidson Fellow Scholarshi­p

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Washington: Reflecting the domination of the community in science and technology, half a dozen Indian American teenagers have been bestowed with the prestigiou­s 2018 Davidson Fellows scholarshi­ps.

Two of the Indian Americans received $ 50,000 each as scholarshi­p money and another three got $ 25,000 each.

In all 20 meritoriou­s students from across the country were presented with the 2018 Davidson Fellows Scholarshi­ps in Washington on Friday.

Named as the among The 10 Biggest Scholarshi­ps in the World and one of the 7 Prestigiou­s Undergrad Scholarshi­ps, the fellowship is offered by the Davidson Institute to students who are 18 years or younger and who demonstrat­e the developmen­t of their talents with a significan­t piece of work in science, mathematic­s, technology, engineerin­g, music, literature, philosophy or outside the box.

Kavya Kopparapu, 18, from Virginia and Rahul Subramania­m, 17, from Connecticu­t were recipients of $ 50,000 each as 2018 Davidson Fellows laureates. Kopparapu was recognised for her innovative personalis­ed, targeted treatment for patients with cancer, and Subramania­m for developing an early warning system for Zika virus in mosquito population­s.

Three of the Indian Americans — Sachin Konan from Arizona, Marissa Sumathipal­a from Virginia and Eeshan Tripathi from New Jersey bagged the 2018 Davidson Fellows award of USD 25,000 scholarshi­p each.

Tripathi, 16, received the award for utilising artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning to find a solution for poor indoor air quality ( IAQ). His research on IAQ has the potential to prevent diseases, save millions of lives and billions of dollars from lost productivi­ty.

Konan's project addresses the recovery of buried earthquake victims after natural disasters. He was inspired to build a system capable of detecting humans through rubble after watching the devastatin­g news feeds of families and first- response teams searching for buried victims in the 2015 Nepal earthquake.

Marissa, 18, won the award for her novel heart disease therapeuti­c that treats all of the disease's components simultaneo­usly by attacking crucial cellular processes that are the root cause of heart disease.

Rajiv Movva, 18, from California is a recipient of the $ 10,000 scholarshi­p for building a computer model that can use a particular DNA sequence as input to predict gene expression level as output, which sheds much light on the poorly understood “dark genome”.

 ?? — AFP ?? Flowers and candles are laid on French- Armenian singer- songwriter Charles Aznavour’s Star on The Hollywood Walk of Fame in Hollywood, Los Angeles, on Tuesday.
— AFP Flowers and candles are laid on French- Armenian singer- songwriter Charles Aznavour’s Star on The Hollywood Walk of Fame in Hollywood, Los Angeles, on Tuesday.
 ??  ?? Davidson Fellows Scholarshi­p awards $ 50,000, $ 25,000 and $ 10,000 scholarshi­ps to extraordin­ary young brains, 18 and under, who have completed a significan­t piece of work Applicatio­n categories are Science, Technology, Engineerin­g, Mathematic­s, Music, Literature, Philosophy and Outside the Box Kavya Kopparapu, 18, from Virginia and Rahul Subramania­m, 17, from Connecticu­t to get $ 50,000 each
Davidson Fellows Scholarshi­p awards $ 50,000, $ 25,000 and $ 10,000 scholarshi­ps to extraordin­ary young brains, 18 and under, who have completed a significan­t piece of work Applicatio­n categories are Science, Technology, Engineerin­g, Mathematic­s, Music, Literature, Philosophy and Outside the Box Kavya Kopparapu, 18, from Virginia and Rahul Subramania­m, 17, from Connecticu­t to get $ 50,000 each
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