President's Report Masthead
December 31, 2014
Doctoral students named NSF fellows

Jonathan Cohen
Aliona Tsypes, a student in clinical psychology, is one of two Binghamton doctoral candidates to receive a National Science Foundation graduate research fellowship.

Doctoral students named NSF fellows

Two Binghamton doctoral candidates are recipients of the National Science Foundation’s graduate research fellowship. Though they’re both students in the Harpur College of Arts and Sciences, their work has taken them to very different places.

Claire Brown is spending the 2014-15 academic year in Ireland working to understand how the Connemara pony parallels Irish culture. She was traveling through Ireland in 2008 for an archaeological dig when she first saw the ponies dotting pastures all over western Ireland. The ponies were bred, ridden and shown by a broad swath of Irish society: girls, middle-aged professionals, retired men in their 60s and 70s. Brown switched her focus from archaeology to socio-cultural anthropology and began spending summers in Ireland.

Aliona Tsypes, a student in clinical psychology, has a different mission. She plans to explore how various aspects of suicidal thoughts and behaviors are related. What she learns could help to reduce some staggeringly large figures: More than 38,000 people in America will kill themselves this year. About 485,000 will be treated in hospitals for self-inflicted injuries. Another 2 million non-hospitalized cases of self-injury will be reported.

Learn more about these bold young scholars and other Binghamton student researchers in DISCOVER-e.