Honors Projects

Showing 601 - 650 of 662 Items

Miniature of Localizing Potential Messenger RNA Transport Protein Ips1 in <i>Candida albicans</i>
Localizing Potential Messenger RNA Transport Protein Ips1 in Candida albicans
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  • Restriction End Date: 2027-06-01

    Date: 2022-01-01

    Creator: Yi Peng Wang

    Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



      Surfing the Kali Yuga: Tracking the Alt-Right on Twitter

      Date: 2023-01-01

      Creator: Jaida Hodge-Adams

      Access: Open access

      The alt-right is a hyper-extreme, decentralized network of far-right pundits and their doggish supporters that exists almost entirely online. Consumed by conspiracy and identity, the myths of bigoted ideologies like racism, antisemitism, and transphobia are taken for granted, and their ideology calls for violent ends by violent means. In the physical world, members of the alt-right often keep their rhetoric to themselves; Online, however, they find solace in a vast, international network of websites and forums that together form one giant echo chamber into which they can dump their darkest thoughts. Though any individual member of the alt-right may operate uniquely within the context of their home country, together they form a collective, international voice whose strongest claims often transcend borders and resist state-level analysis. Unspeakable acts of violence like mass shootings, senseless killings, and acts of terrorism are unpredictable but become significantly more likely when the rhetorical atmosphere breeds hostility. By demonizing minority groups and spreading ideologies of hate, the alt-right makes these acts of violence more likely. On massive platforms like Twitter, the alt-right’s rhetoric can seep into mainstream conversations; their framing of concepts like race, gender, sexuality, and national identity are forced into relevance. Their rhetoric is euphemistic, but their message is clear, and their hate poses a real threat to people’s lives. This honors project explores the ideological and geographic features of the alt-right and their international implications, concluding that the alt-right is a globally interconnected group of actors whose conspiracies motivate lone-wolf terrorists worldwide.


      Miniature of Effects of Origin Environment and Temperature Acclimation on the Temperate Coral <i>Astrangia poculata</i>
      Effects of Origin Environment and Temperature Acclimation on the Temperate Coral Astrangia poculata
      This record is embargoed.
        • Embargo End Date: 2026-05-18

        Date: 2023-01-01

        Creator: Deva K Holliman

        Access: Embargoed



          Peace Be Dammed? Water Power and Water Politics in the Tigris-Euphrates Basin

          Date: 2015-05-01

          Creator: Camille E. Wasinger

          Access: Open access



          Examining the Ability of Remote Sensing to Characterize Turfgrass Stress Physiology

          Date: 2022-01-01

          Creator: Benjamin Ross

          Access: Open access

          Remote sensing of solar induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF) is a valuable tool in understanding the global carbon cycle. While SIF is highly correlated with photosynthesis at the ecosystem scale, the role that remote sensing of SIF can play at smaller scales is still unclear. The goal of my research was to investigate the ability of SIF to detect changes in pigmentation, photosynthesis, and energy partitioning at the grass canopy and leaf level in response to water stress and abscisic acid (ABA) hormone treatments. Both treatments immediately inhibited photosynthesis by limiting gas exchange through stomatal closure, but SIF declined gradually. Recovery of photosynthesis after alleviation of water stress was not reflected in remote measurements of SIF. I found that senescence in the tips of grasses had been driving changes in remote measurements, which affected remote measurements even when measured leaf-level gas exchange in the lower living tissue recovered. This heterogeneous senescence pattern contextualizes the disconnect between SIF and photosynthesis in stressed turfgrass.


          Miniature of Impact of SR-Like RNA-Binding Protein (Slr1) Structure on Splicing in <i>Candida albicans</i>
          Impact of SR-Like RNA-Binding Protein (Slr1) Structure on Splicing in Candida albicans
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          • Restriction End Date: 2027-06-01

            Date: 2022-01-01

            Creator: Michael Christopher Dean

            Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



              Miniature of Infant and Maternal Health Outcomes Following Improved Substance Use Disorder Treatment for Pregnant Women
              Infant and Maternal Health Outcomes Following Improved Substance Use Disorder Treatment for Pregnant Women
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                • Embargo End Date: 2026-05-18

                Date: 2023-01-01

                Creator: Emma A. Bomfim

                Access: Embargoed



                  Miniature of An Exploration of the Room Temperature Growth and Tuning of Cobalt Hydroxide Carbonate Morphologies and Assemblies
                  An Exploration of the Room Temperature Growth and Tuning of Cobalt Hydroxide Carbonate Morphologies and Assemblies
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                  • Restriction End Date: 2026-06-01

                    Date: 2023-01-01

                    Creator: Zubin Jay Kenkare

                    Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                      Do Voters Reward Incumbents for Service Provision? Electoral Accountability in South African Elections

                      Date: 2023-01-01

                      Creator: Rory Mayne Devlin

                      Access: Open access

                      Democratic theory suggests that voters reward or punish incumbent political parties in elections by evaluating parties’ ability to provide services. But do voters reward incumbent parties for service provision in practice? This project explores the relationship between municipal-level service provision and voting in the South African context. I test whether the local provision of services, such as electricity, piped water, internet, trash collection, and flush toilets, impact the performance of South Africa’s two major political parties, the African National Congress (ANC) and the Democratic Alliance (DA) in municipal and national elections between 2009 and 2021. I observe this relationship in ANC- and DA-controlled municipalities using municipal-level data on public service provision, election results, and nighttime brightness levels. The municipal-level results show that DA-controlled municipalities with higher levels of service provision in 2016 offered more support for the DA in the 2021 and 2019 elections. However, ANC-controlled municipalities with higher levels of 2016 service provision did not support the ANC at higher rates. Additionally, ANC-controlled municipalities that improved service provision between 2011 and 2016 supported the ANC at higher rates in the 2021 and 2019 elections than they did in previous elections. DA vote share did not increase in DA-controlled municipalities where services improved over time.


                      Miniature of Dispersive Shock Waves in Granular Chains
                      Dispersive Shock Waves in Granular Chains
                      This record is embargoed.
                        • Embargo End Date: 2026-05-18

                        Date: 2023-01-01

                        Creator: Ari Geisler

                        Access: Embargoed



                          Miniature of Comparing natural variation in enhancer usage within and among <i>Drosophila</i> species
                          Comparing natural variation in enhancer usage within and among Drosophila species
                          This record is embargoed.
                            • Embargo End Date: 2027-05-19

                            Date: 2022-01-01

                            Creator: Justin K. Yang

                            Access: Embargoed



                              Mutual benefits of inducible defenses to crab predators in the blue mussel Mytilus edulis in a multi-predator environment

                              Date: 2021-01-01

                              Creator: Sophia Walton

                              Access: Open access

                              The blue mussel Mytilus edulis alters its phenotype in species-specific ways in response to either green crab (Carcinus maenus) or sea star (Asterias sp.) predation. Previous studies have shown that only sea stars induce changes in abductor muscle morphology, while green crabs generally alter the shape and thickness of shells. In the Western Gulf of Maine, Blue mussels collected from wave protected sites with abundant green crab predators were shown to have significantly thicker shells and larger adductor muscles than mussels collected from wave exposed sites with few green crab predators. The phenotypes of mussels originating from wave-protected and high green crab abundance sites increased the handling time by A. forbesi compared to sites with low wave exposure and high green crab abundance. These results contradict the paradigm that shell thickness trades off with abductor morphology, and I propose that a likely candidate for increased energy allocation to these traits is a decrease in reproductive allocation. My results further suggest that the escalating “arms race” between invasive green crabs and blue mussels in the Western Gulf of Maine is leading to changes in the phenotypic response of mussel populations in ways that are likely impacting sea star foraging dynamics.


                              Miniature of The Role of the Nitric Oxide Negative Feedback Loop in the Stability of the Lobster Cardiac Ganglion <i>Homarus americanus</i>
                              The Role of the Nitric Oxide Negative Feedback Loop in the Stability of the Lobster Cardiac Ganglion Homarus americanus
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                                  Date: 2020-01-01

                                  Creator: Marie Marjorie Bergsund

                                  Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                                    Miniature of Radiation-induced changes in gene expression in <i>Sciara coprophila</i>
                                    Radiation-induced changes in gene expression in Sciara coprophila
                                    Access to this record is restricted to members of the Bowdoin community. Log in here to view.
                                    • Restriction End Date: 2026-06-01

                                      Date: 2021-01-01

                                      Creator: Kodie R Garza

                                      Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                                        Miniature of Counter-Futurisms: Collaborative Survival and Communal Healing in a Climate-Changed World
                                        Counter-Futurisms: Collaborative Survival and Communal Healing in a Climate-Changed World
                                        This record is embargoed.
                                          • Embargo End Date: 2026-05-20

                                          Date: 2021-01-01

                                          Creator: Lianna Harrington

                                          Access: Embargoed



                                            Miniature of Rebellion as an Approach to Life in the Work of Albert Camus
                                            Rebellion as an Approach to Life in the Work of Albert Camus
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                                            • Restriction End Date: 2027-06-01

                                              Date: 2022-01-01

                                              Creator: Emily Ruth Staten

                                              Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                                                Minor, Ugly, and Meta: Feelings in Contemporary Korean American Literature

                                                Date: 2022-01-01

                                                Creator: Kyubin Kim

                                                Access: Open access

                                                In 2019, Korean American writer Cathy Park Hong published her memoir Minor Feelings: An Asian American Reckoning in the midst of a turning point in Asian American politics. Hong describes minor feelings as “emotions that are negative, dysphoric, and therefore untelegenic, built from the sediments of everyday racial experience and the irritant of having one’s perception of reality constantly questioned or dismissed.” Used as a concept to summate the Asian American experience in white America as living in a country where one’s reality is constantly questioned and made invisible, minor feelings forges an affective framework to study minoritized, diasporic literature. My project enriches Hong’s “minor feelings” by studying Korean American literature through a transnational and multimedia lens, considering how Korea’s colonial history and nation-building play roles in emoting Korean American self-realities. I structurally model my project after Sianne Ngai’s Ugly Feelings, split into four chapters, each focusing on one affect: shame, anger, han, and love. My project follows and documents the contemporary shifts occurring in Korean Americana, in how they perceive collective racial and diasporic identity, the intersectionality of layered identities, and the younger generations’ call for coalition. Since Korean American affects often are studied as an afterthought to Korean affects, my project retains a focus on the Korean American experience, recentering members of a diaspora whose globalizing homeland’s triumphs may eclipse their minor, invisible realities in America.


                                                Nuevas posibilidades para la subjetividad feminista en la literatura del Cono Sur

                                                Date: 2022-01-01

                                                Creator: Kate Elizabeth Tapscott

                                                Access: Open access

                                                ¿Cómo es que se puede escapar verdaderamente de la opresión patriarcal? Esta investigación aborda a través de un análisis de la literatura de escritoras del Cono Sur el asunto complicado de la liberación bajo un sistema en constante mutación. En el primer capítulo, a partir de aportes teóricos de Freud, Josefina Ludmer y Homi Bhabha entre otros, analizo cuentos de Jorge Luis Borges, Silvina Ocampo, y Clarice Lispector cuyas protagonistas intentan resistir su condición de víctima con diversos grados de éxito. En el capítulo que sigue, exploro una tendencia reciente en la literatura de escritoras del Cono Sur que incorpora elementos del horror y lo gótico para desestabilizar una cosmovisión humanista y patriarcal. Incorporando la teoría de Gabriel Giorgi, Rosi Braidotti, y Julieta Yelin, investigo los efectos que los animales, los cuerpos, y la materia tienen en la expansión de la agencia feminista y discuto si ofrecen o no nuevas e inesperadas posibilidades para resistir el sistema.


                                                Miniature of LE VAL ET LE CADRE : ESPACES MORTIVITAUX DE RIMBAUD ET DE MOUAWAD
                                                LE VAL ET LE CADRE : ESPACES MORTIVITAUX DE RIMBAUD ET DE MOUAWAD
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                                                    Date: 2021-01-01

                                                    Creator: Dylan J. Bess

                                                    Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                                                      A Comprehensive Survey on Functional Approximation

                                                      Date: 2022-01-01

                                                      Creator: Yucheng Hua

                                                      Access: Open access

                                                      The theory of functional approximation has numerous applications in sciences and industry. This thesis focuses on the possible approaches to approximate a continuous function on a compact subset of R2 using a variety of constructions. The results are presented from the following four general topics: polynomials, Fourier series, wavelets, and neural networks. Approximation with polynomials on subsets of R leads to the discussion of the Stone-Weierstrass theorem. Convergence of Fourier series is characterized on the unit circle. Wavelets are introduced following the Fourier transform, and their construction as well as ability to approximate functions in L2(R) is discussed. At the end, the universal approximation theorem for artificial neural networks is presented, and the function representation and approximation with single- and multilayer neural networks on R2 is constructed.


                                                      The Price of Carbon: Politics and Equity of Carbon Taxes in the Middle Income Countries of South Africa and Mexico

                                                      Date: 2015-05-01

                                                      Creator: Bridgett C McCoy

                                                      Access: Open access

                                                      This study provides the first analysis of the politics and ethics behind carbon taxation in South Africa and Mexico. Using the preexisting scholarly frameworks of climate change policy, tax policy, and Robert Putnam’s two level games, I determine that in both cases, international pressures from multilateral negotiations and international development funding sources initiated the carbon tax policymaking process within the environment and treasury ministries of both countries. Once environment ministry bureaucrats initiated the carbon tax a lack of politicization of climate change (both countries) and an additional gain of raising revenue (Mexico) allowed the taxes to become law. I then turn to the laws themselves, analyzing their implications for climate justice. In both cases, the government did not adopt any proposals made interest groups representing environmental concerns and poverty groups, and instead shaped the bills so as to tailor to the interests of heavy manufacturing. This policy decision had the main effect of weakening the climate change mitigation impact of the carbon tax, and exacerbating issues of regressivity by not recycling revenues towards projects aimed at poverty reductions. I conclude this paper with an analysis of the ethics of such a carbon tax in developing countries. The carbon taxes, as they currently exist, sacrifice the rights and needs of the present poor for those of the future generation while an ideal policy that addresses poverty betters the condition of both groups. In order to ensure climate justice and for all groups and prevent political backlash, policy makers in middle-income countries must make carbon reduction policies with the unique challenges of poverty and climate change mitigation in mind.


                                                      Building Home in Diaspora: New York’s Jewish Left and the History of the Bronx Housing Cooperatives

                                                      Date: 2022-01-01

                                                      Creator: Micah Benjamin Wilson

                                                      Access: Open access

                                                      This thesis investigates three predominantly Jewish housing cooperatives that emerged in the Bronx in the late 1920s. The Amalgamated Housing Cooperative, the United Workers Cooperative Colony (the “Coops”), and the Sholem Aleichem Houses offered garment workers utopian retreats from the drudgery of Lower East Side tenements where Jewish immigrants arrived in droves between 1890-1920. With each cooperative housing a distinct faction of the Jewish Left––from socialists to communists to Yiddish nationalists––the Bronx housing cooperatives, more than experiments in communal living, were the site of a highly contested battle over competing Jewish cultural and political worldviews across the 1930s and 1940s. Transcending the era that is typically considered the movement’s “peak” in the 1910s, this thesis demonstrates that the era of the Bronx cooperatives must be central to any study of the Jewish labor movement by revealing the ways radical Jews attempted to maintain and negotiate their various worldviews against the backdrop of the threats posed by the capitalist housing market, assimilation, and sectarian struggles. I reconsider the disproportionate attention the “success story” of the Amalgamated Cooperative has received, situating its politics as but one of many responses to the contradictions embedded in the housing cooperative model. Finally, I analyze the role of nostalgia present across resident recollections of the cooperatives and situate it in the contexts of 1970s neoliberal urban reform and suburbanization, while considering the discursive power of this emotion to obscure the persistent legacy of anti-black racism entangled in the cooperative housing movement despite its progressive reputation.


                                                      Miniature of Identification of genes involved in <i>Helicobacter pylori</i> glycolipid and glycoprotein biosynthesis
                                                      Identification of genes involved in Helicobacter pylori glycolipid and glycoprotein biosynthesis
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                                                          Date: 2022-01-01

                                                          Creator: Adedunmola Praise Adewale

                                                          Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                                                            Miniature of Bacterial Coat of Armor: Probing how Glycan Biosynthesis in <i>Helicobacter pylori</i> Modulates Host Immune Recognition
                                                            Bacterial Coat of Armor: Probing how Glycan Biosynthesis in Helicobacter pylori Modulates Host Immune Recognition
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                                                                Date: 2022-01-01

                                                                Creator: Francis Jacob Kassama

                                                                Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                                                                  Growing Pains: Toward a Coalition-Based Theory of State Land Use Policy

                                                                  Date: 2023-01-01

                                                                  Creator: Patrick Rochford

                                                                  Access: Open access

                                                                  In the decades following World War II, mass suburbanization remade the American landscape. While suburbs accounted for 83% of the nation’s growth between 1950 and 1970, cities bled their populations and natural resources dwindled. Treating the postwar era as a critical juncture, this thesis examines the political history of twentieth-century state land use policy to illuminate how competing interests have shaped policy outcomes across the United States. Specifically, the paper seeks to explain the passage of statewide growth management and smart growth programs. After providing a history of American suburbanization, the paper considers an emergent challenge to the postwar growth paradigm as manifested through resistance to urban renewal, open space loss, and diverse anti-freeway coalitions that combined actors from each movement. Thereafter, I detail the development of statewide growth management and smart growth programs before employing a set of case studies to discern causal factors associated with the success or failure of such legislation. Testing the theory that broad-based coalitions were essential to the passage of state growth management legislation, I perform a controlled comparison of two pairs of states, Maryland and Virginia and Oregon and Washington, employing additional within-case analysis for Washington. In so doing, I find evidence that diverse coalitions—from environmentalists and housing advocates to farmers and historic preservationists—were essential to the passage of state growth management programs. I conclude by considering the implications of these findings and the relevance of state land use policy to contemporary issues such as affordable housing and climate change.


                                                                  Miniature of The effect of early life adversity on basolateral amygdala projections to the prefrontal cortex in male and female rats during development
                                                                  The effect of early life adversity on basolateral amygdala projections to the prefrontal cortex in male and female rats during development
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                                                                      Date: 2023-01-01

                                                                      Creator: Khushali N Patel

                                                                      Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                                                                        Miniature of Pathways: Montana Stories and Poems
                                                                        Pathways: Montana Stories and Poems
                                                                        This record is embargoed.
                                                                          • Embargo End Date: 2027-05-16

                                                                          Date: 2024-01-01

                                                                          Creator: Tess Davis

                                                                          Access: Embargoed



                                                                            Miniature of Characterizing Proteins of the Wall-Associated Kinase Signaling Pathway in Arabidopsis
                                                                            Characterizing Proteins of the Wall-Associated Kinase Signaling Pathway in Arabidopsis
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                                                                                Date: 2016-01-01

                                                                                Creator: Emily M King

                                                                                Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                                                                                  The Current Support Theorem in Context

                                                                                  Date: 2023-01-01

                                                                                  Creator: Ethan Winters

                                                                                  Access: Open access

                                                                                  This work builds up the theory surrounding a recent result of Erlandsson, Leininger, and Sadanand: the Current Support Theorem. This theorem states precisely when a hyperbolic cone metric on a surface is determined by the support of its Liouville current. To provide background for this theorem, we will cover hyperbolic geometry and hyperbolic surfaces more generally, cone surfaces, covering spaces of surfaces, the notion of an orbifold, and geodesic currents. A corollary to this theorem found in the original paper is discussed which asserts that a surface with more than $32(g-1)$ cone points must be rigid. We extend this result to the case that there are more than $3(g-1)$ cone points. An infinite family of cone surfaces which are not rigid and which have precisely $3(g-1)$ cone points is also provided, hence demonstrating tightness.


                                                                                  Miniature of The ELMO Family of Pectin Biosynthesis Scaffold Proteins
                                                                                  The ELMO Family of Pectin Biosynthesis Scaffold Proteins
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                                                                                      Date: 2023-01-01

                                                                                      Creator: Margaret Elizabeth Weinstock

                                                                                      Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                                                                                        Miniature of Investigating the effects of a glutamine-rich protein on the localization of a mutant RNA-binding protein and stress response in <i>Candida albicans</i>
                                                                                        Investigating the effects of a glutamine-rich protein on the localization of a mutant RNA-binding protein and stress response in Candida albicans
                                                                                        Access to this record is restricted to members of the Bowdoin community. Log in here to view.
                                                                                        • Restriction End Date: 2028-06-01

                                                                                          Date: 2023-01-01

                                                                                          Creator: Christoph Anders Tatgenhorst

                                                                                          Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                                                                                            "One Never Knew": David Foster Wallace and the Aesthetics of Consumption

                                                                                            Date: 2016-05-01

                                                                                            Creator: Jesse Ortiz

                                                                                            Access: Open access

                                                                                            Increasingly, David Foster Wallace is becoming a cult figure among literary enthusiasts. His novels, essays, and short stories are all known for their poignant critiques of modern culture. Since his 2008 suicide, Wallace’s name has come to represent a way of thinking that rejects – and perhaps transcends – the hegemonic power of late capitalism. Wallace had a problem with pleasure. His writing often seemed to deflate or deconstruct what many people enjoy. For him, so much was “supposedly fun.” To understand Wallace’s relationship with pleasure, we must see how pleasure incorporates aesthetics and consumption. Wallace takes issue with the pleasure that comes from the aesthetics of cultural commodities. Irony produces pleasure, which turns culture into a desirable commodity. In my first chapter, I argue that Wallace’s essays challenge aesthetic pleasure by deconstructing self-reflexive irony. In his descriptions of consumer culture, Wallace evokes the feeling of disgust to undo the aesthetic pleasure of consumption. In my second chapter, I move to Infinite Jest to show how Wallace engages with irony while using it to exceed aesthetic pleasure. Infinite Jest challenges the hierarchy of aesthetics and suggests that deformity and waste can be beautiful and important. Infinite Jest demonstrates that, by trusting others instead of pursuing aesthetic ideals, people can build communities that are more honest and fulfilling than the pleasure of consumption.


                                                                                            Miniature of Phenylisonitrile Ligand Synthesis and Coordination to Cobalt to Form a Catalyst for the Selective Dimerization of Linear Alpha Olefins
                                                                                            Phenylisonitrile Ligand Synthesis and Coordination to Cobalt to Form a Catalyst for the Selective Dimerization of Linear Alpha Olefins
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                                                                                            • Restriction End Date: 2026-06-01

                                                                                              Date: 2023-01-01

                                                                                              Creator: Colleen Hughes McAloon

                                                                                              Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                                                                                                Miniature of The identification and visualization of candidate early embryonic patterning genes in <i>Bradysia coprophila</i>
                                                                                                The identification and visualization of candidate early embryonic patterning genes in Bradysia coprophila
                                                                                                This record is embargoed.
                                                                                                  • Embargo End Date: 2027-05-16

                                                                                                  Date: 2024-01-01

                                                                                                  Creator: Sarah Conant

                                                                                                  Access: Embargoed



                                                                                                    Miniature of Promoter Choice in Transvection at the <i>eya</i> Gene of <i>Drosophila melanogaster</i>
                                                                                                    Promoter Choice in Transvection at the eya Gene of Drosophila melanogaster
                                                                                                    This record is embargoed.
                                                                                                      • Embargo End Date: 2027-05-15

                                                                                                      Date: 2024-01-01

                                                                                                      Creator: Victoria Dunphy

                                                                                                      Access: Embargoed



                                                                                                        Miniature of Electrical Transport Properties of Graphene
                                                                                                        Electrical Transport Properties of Graphene
                                                                                                        Access to this record is restricted to members of the Bowdoin community. Log in here to view.

                                                                                                            Date: 2023-01-01

                                                                                                            Creator: Nhi Nguyen

                                                                                                            Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                                                                                                              Miniature of Synthesis and Metalation of a Bifunctional Ligand for Hydrogen Activation
                                                                                                              Synthesis and Metalation of a Bifunctional Ligand for Hydrogen Activation
                                                                                                              This record is embargoed.
                                                                                                                • Embargo End Date: 2028-05-18

                                                                                                                Date: 2023-01-01

                                                                                                                Creator: Eliana Roberts

                                                                                                                Access: Embargoed



                                                                                                                  Miniature of When There's A Fire–Short Stories
                                                                                                                  When There's A Fire–Short Stories
                                                                                                                  Access to this record is restricted to members of the Bowdoin community. Log in here to view.

                                                                                                                      Date: 2023-01-01

                                                                                                                      Creator: Zoë Ellis Wilson

                                                                                                                      Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community




                                                                                                                        Bondi Accretion in Trumpet Geometries

                                                                                                                        Date: 2016-01-01

                                                                                                                        Creator: August J Miller

                                                                                                                        Access: Open access

                                                                                                                        The Bondi solution, which describes the radial inflow of a gas onto a non-rotating black hole, provides a powerful test for numerical relativistic codes. However, this solution is typically derived in Schwarzschild coordinates, which are not well suited for dynamical spacetime evolutions. Instead, many current numerical relativistic codes adopt moving-puncture coordinates, which render black holes in trumpet geometries. Here we transform the Bondi solution into two different trumpet coordinate systems, both of which result in regular expressions for the fluid flow extending into the black hole interior. We also evolve these solutions numerically and demonstrate their usefulness for testing and calibrating numerical codes.


                                                                                                                        Miniature of Early life adversity induces sex-specific behavioral changes and does not alter precocial neural recruitment in response to basolateral amygdala stimulation
                                                                                                                        Early life adversity induces sex-specific behavioral changes and does not alter precocial neural recruitment in response to basolateral amygdala stimulation
                                                                                                                        Access to this record is restricted to members of the Bowdoin community. Log in here to view.

                                                                                                                            Date: 2024-01-01

                                                                                                                            Creator: Zackery D. Reynolds

                                                                                                                            Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                                                                                                                              Young Authoritarians? Trends and Individual Differences in Preschoolers' Perceptions of Adult Authority

                                                                                                                              Date: 2018-05-01

                                                                                                                              Creator: Ava Alexander

                                                                                                                              Access: Open access

                                                                                                                              Although traditional stage theories (e.g., Piaget, 1965) postulate that preschool age children are guided entirely by punishment avoidance and absolute deference to authority, more recent research suggests that their concepts of adult authority are complex and vary based on social cognitive domain and the content of the commands (e.g., Tisak, 1986). Also, although past studies have shown that the majority of children will reject adult authority in certain contexts, much individual variation between children has been observed (e.g., Laupa, 1994). The current study expanded upon past research by exposing children to multiple typical and atypical commands across domains, while also testing for individual differences based on two forms of parental authoritarianism. Results showed that children as young as four reject commands that go against established moral or conventional norms, and sometimes reject commands in the personal domain. This pattern grew stronger with age. High right-wing authoritarianism was a significant predictor of more authoritarian parenting style, and also predicted lower child support for authority in typical conventional scenarios.


                                                                                                                              Miniature of Modulation of Responses to Phasic stretches by Neuromodulators GYS and SGRN in the Cardiac Central Pattern Generator of the American Lobster, H. americanus
                                                                                                                              Modulation of Responses to Phasic stretches by Neuromodulators GYS and SGRN in the Cardiac Central Pattern Generator of the American Lobster, H. americanus
                                                                                                                              Access to this record is restricted to members of the Bowdoin community. Log in here to view.

                                                                                                                                  Date: 2016-05-01

                                                                                                                                  Creator: Michael M Kang

                                                                                                                                  Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                                                                                                                                    "What's it like to be a lesbian with a cane?": A Story and Study of Queer and Disabled Identities

                                                                                                                                    Date: 2018-05-01

                                                                                                                                    Creator: M.M. Daisy Wislar

                                                                                                                                    Access: Open access

                                                                                                                                    People with disabilities are largely conceptualized as asexual; this systematically excludes disabled people from achieving agency in their sexual landscape. Drawing from interview data on the sexual lives of nine queer people living with disabilities, this project explores the lived experiences of physically disabled queer people as they relate to sexuality, sexual identity, intimacy, and the sexual body. Queer people with physical disabilities navigate identity, community, various sexual fields while also challenging misconceptions about these marginal identities. Excerpts and analysis of these interviews reveal the various strategies that queer and disabled people utilize in order to make their identities legible in the face of numerous assumptions about their experiences. Illuminating the voices of queer and disabled people, this thesis offers an important intervention to the sociological study of sexualities, gender expression, and disability, which too frequently marginalizes the voices of people who are queer and disabled.


                                                                                                                                    Sociocultural Orientations and Mental Illness Stigma: A Novel Mediational Model

                                                                                                                                    Date: 2023-01-01

                                                                                                                                    Creator: Karis Treadwell

                                                                                                                                    Access: Open access

                                                                                                                                    This study proposes a novel mediational model to investigate the relationship between sociocultural orientations and mental illness stigma by exploring empathy and controllability attributions as mediators. Past literature suggests that understanding these variables may contain important implications for guiding stigma-reducing efforts. Questionnaires assessing sociocultural orientations, empathy, blaming attributions, and general mental illness stigma were administered to 109 students at a small liberal-arts college in the northeast United States. The sample consisted of 80 female-identifying participants, 28 male-identifying participants, and 1 non-binary participant. Questionnaires administered included the Individualism and Collectivism scale (Triandis & Gelfand, 1998), the Questionnaire of Cognitive and Affective Empathy (Reniers et al., 2011), a modified version of the Attribution Questionnaire (Corrigan et al., 2003), and Day’s Mental Illness Stigma Scale (Day et al., 2007). Analysis showed that vertical sociocultural orientations were associated with more blameful attributions and heightened stigma. Horizontal collectivism was associated with increased empathy and less blameful attributions, but empathy did not mediate this relationship. Controllability attributions, but not empathy, partially mediated the relationships between both vertical orientations and stigma. These findings demonstrate the importance of sociocultural orientations, particularly the equality preference dimension, as predictors of mental illness stigma. Efforts to counter societal stigma should consider the role of sociocultural orientations and their interaction with empathy and blaming tendencies.


                                                                                                                                    Demography of a Collapsing Aerial Insectivore Population

                                                                                                                                    Date: 2017-05-01

                                                                                                                                    Creator: Liam Taylor

                                                                                                                                    Access: Open access

                                                                                                                                    Aerial insectivores have been declining across northeastern North America since the end of the 20th century. The mechanisms and demographic patterns of this decline are unclear. On Kent Island, New Brunswick, Canada, an isolated population of Tree Swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) collapsed between 1987 and 2010. To explore how demographic rates (i.e., survival, reproduction, and immigration) drove the population dynamics of these northeastern aerial insectivores, we combined productivity, population survey, and capture-recapture data in an integrated population model analysis. Neither consistently low juvenile survival rates, adult survival rates, nor clutch size were correlated with population growth rate across years. Alternatively, male and female immigration, hatching success, and fledging success rates were correlated with population growth rate. Because local hatching and fledging success rates cannot influence a population without local recruitment, we argue that the demography of these Tree Swallows is mainly structured by immigration. Parameter-substitution simulations revealed that overall decline was likely even if the population had avoided the worst years of demographic collapse. Breeding Bird Survey comparisons demonstrated how the Kent Island population represents both a demographic and geographical extreme at the edge of a declining region. These demographic patterns highlight the sensitivity, even to the point of local extinction, of some isolated populations to region-scale patterns in the production of potential immigrants.


                                                                                                                                    Miniature of Nietzsche & the Destiny of Man: Human Greatness & Great Politics
                                                                                                                                    Nietzsche & the Destiny of Man: Human Greatness & Great Politics
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                                                                                                                                    • Restriction End Date: 2025-06-01

                                                                                                                                      Date: 2024-01-01

                                                                                                                                      Creator: Alexander Tully

                                                                                                                                      Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                                                                                                                                        East End Eden: The Gentrification of Portland’s Munjoy Hill

                                                                                                                                        Date: 2024-01-01

                                                                                                                                        Creator: Katharine Kurtz

                                                                                                                                        Access: Open access

                                                                                                                                        This thesis explores the gentrification of Munjoy Hill, a neighborhood on the northeast end of Portland, Maine from 1990-2024. Once the industrial hub of the city filled with factories and an industrial shipping port in the late 1800s and early 1900s, Munjoy Hill is now the most desirable neighborhood in the city with expensive, high-end condos, water views, ocean access, and hip restaurants and breweries. I argue that Munjoy Hill’s industrial past and strong connection to the local environment has made it unique, however the recent gentrification also makes Munjoy Hill a place that resembles, gentrified neighborhoods in cities around the country. This thesis studies Munjoy Hill’s change through three lenses: environment, housing, and food and drink. In the environment chapter I argue that the Hill’s natural beauty and connection to Maine’s scenic coastline primed it for gentrification once the area deindustrialized in the 1990s. In the housing chapter I explore the dramatic increase in housing prices and three ways residents are attempting to control the changes: affordable housing development, zoning, and historic designation. In my final chapter I analyze the role of new food establishments in transforming the Hill’s culture and cementing it as a neighborhood that feels, in part, like gentrified neighborhoods around the country.


                                                                                                                                        Miniature of How do Robinhood Investors React to Macroeconomic News?
                                                                                                                                        How do Robinhood Investors React to Macroeconomic News?
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                                                                                                                                        • Restriction End Date: 2025-06-01

                                                                                                                                          Date: 2024-01-01

                                                                                                                                          Creator: Aditya S Pall-Pareek

                                                                                                                                          Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



                                                                                                                                            Miniature of An unbiased glimpse into the sex-specific effects of ketamine treatment on rats who have experienced early life adversity.
                                                                                                                                            An unbiased glimpse into the sex-specific effects of ketamine treatment on rats who have experienced early life adversity.
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                                                                                                                                                Date: 2023-01-01

                                                                                                                                                Creator: Lucia Marie O'Sullivan

                                                                                                                                                Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community