Alexandra Courtis, 17Davis, CAScience: “Bright Luminescent Silicon Nanoparticles for Biological Applications”
Yale Fan, 15Beaverton, ORTechnology: “Applications of Multi-Valued Quantum Algorithms”
Todd Kramer, 17Port Jefferson, NYMusic: “Finding My Voice Through Music”
Katherine Orazem, 17Ames, IALiterature: “After-Elegies”
Madhavi Gavini, 17Starkville, MSScience: “Engineering a Novel Inhibitor of Biofilm-Encapsulated Pathogens”
Nate Bottman, 16Seattle, WA Mathematics: “Analytically Determining the Spectra of Solutions of the NLS”
Danielle Lent, 17Cedarhurst, NYScience: “Optimizing Recycled Polymer Blends Using Supercritical Carbon Dioxide”
Damon Meng, 16Madison, NJMusic: “Reviving Classical Music Through Individualism”
Michael Harwick, 17Bridgewater, NJLiterature: “Highways: The Road as Existence”
Celeste Lipkes, 17Wesley Chapel, FL Literature: “Room to Pace”
Janet Song, 15Norristown, PAScience: “Development of a Urine Test for the Early Detection of Cancer”
Richard Alt, II, 17Fredericksburg, PA Science: “A Comparison of Three Seasonal Snowfall Forecasting Methods for Winter 2004-05”
Billy Dorminy, 15McDonough, GATechnology: “Improper Fractional Base Encryption”
Graham Van Schaik, 16Columbia, SC Science: “Pyrethroid Pesticides and Their Potential to Promote Breast Cancer and Neurodegeneration”
Christina Beasley, 17Vienna, VA Literature: “An Experiment in Free Speech”
Shannon Lee, 14Plano, TX Music: “Creating a Musical Bond”
Nora Xu, 17Naperville, ILScience: “Modeling of X-Ray Scattering for Nanocrystal Superlattice Multilayer Thin Films”
Miss Carrie AndersonCimarron, New MexicoScience: A Process to Remove Silica from Inland Brackish Water
Mr. Arkajit DeyPalo Alto, California Mathematics: Tree-Realizability of a Distance Matrix
Miss Eloise KimPortland, OregonMusic: A Momentous Beginning Through Music
Video - 2007 Davidson Fellows Reception (YouTube)For more information, visit the Fellows Press Room.
The following disclosure is provided pursuant to Nevada Revised Statutes (NRS) 598.1305:The Davidson Institute for Talent Development is a Nevada non-profit corporation which is recognized by the Internal Revenue Service as a 501(c)3 tax-exempt private operating foundation. We are dedicated to supporting the intellectual and social development of profoundly gifted students age 18 and under through a variety of programs. Contributions are tax deductible. Profoundly gifted students are those who score in the 99.9th percentile on IQ and achievement tests. Read more about this population in this article.