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Kings Park's Intel Science Search Finalist Mentored at Stony Brook

Mayuri Sridhar participated in the university's Simons Summer Research Program.

Of the 40 finalists in the Intel Science Talent Search, four have been mentored by the Stony Brook University faculty, including Kings Park High School's Mayuri Sridhar. 

“Stony Brook University consistently mentors and develops some of the top high school research talent in the nation,” Samuel L. Stanley Jr., MD, President of Stony Brook University said in a statement Friday. “This continued success is a testament to the vast opportunities provided by Stony Brook and the quality of research, education and discovery that happens here every day.”

Sridhar was one of the four students who participated in the Simons Summer Research Program at the university, where they worked in labs with faculty and graduate students.

Sridhar, 17, worked with Dr. Carlos Simmerling in the university's chemistry department on her project, Computational Analysis of the DNA-Binding Mechanism of the p53 Tumor Suppressor and its Inactivation through the R249S Mutation.

“Mayuri joined my lab about a year ago, after having applied the previous year but having to wait until space was available. After working with her, it was our loss that we didn’t get her started earlier," Simmerling said. "Mayuri is extremely intelligent. She’s also very easy going, except when it came to the challenges that always come up when trying to solve hard problems – then she was relentless."

Since 1997, 47 of the Intel finalists have been mentored at Stony Brook.

“I am especially proud that, year after year, Stony Brook University continues to be an incubator for developing young scientists, especially in the nationally critical STEM disciplines,” Dennis N. Assanis, Provost and Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs said in a statement Friday. “I would also like to thank the faculty mentors in our Simons Summer Research Program who worked with four out of 40, or 10 percent, of this year’s Intel finalists."

Sridhar is one of the 40 finalists selected out of the 300 semifinalists throughout the country that now has the opportunity to go to Washington, DC in March for a final round of judging on her work, meet some of today's top scientists, and compete for $630,000 in awards. The top award of the competition is $100,000.

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