Student Posters
A sample of recent student poster presentations from various conferences.
* Due to safety precautions, many conferences were cancelled in light of COVID-19. Our students were unable to present their research in person, but we have posted their posters below so you can view their findings.
Vivien So
Accepted for a poster presentation at the 2020 Society for Research on Adolescence Poster.
The theme of the SRA 2020 Biennial Meeting was From Genome to Globe. At the macro level, the invited program digs into key questions of our time, including youth’s engagement in voting and in political movements and in how adolescents navigate in a global society. At the micro level, the program showcases new insights about human genetics and neurobiology across the life course, and it grapples with how new forms of big data in biology can illuminate the processes of development. Also featured are modern perspectives about science, including engaging and exciting youth about reasoning, researching and debating their world.
Drexler Ortiz
Accepted for a poster presentation at the 2020 Society for Research on Adolescence Poster.
The theme of the SRA 2020 Biennial Meeting is From Genome to Globe. At the macro level, the invited program digs into key questions of our time, including youth’s engagement in voting and in political movements and in how adolescents navigate in a global society. At the micro level, the program showcases new insights about human genetics and neurobiology across the life course, and it grapples with how new forms of big data in biology can illuminate the processes of development. Also featured are modern perspectives about science, including engaging and exciting youth about reasoning, researching and debating their world.
Anmol Swaich
Anmol’s honours thesis titled South Asian Canadian young adults’ culture and sexual health was accepted to the Making Waves Conference.
The Making Waves Conference is a poster session hosted by UVic Psi Chi that congregates undergraduate researchers and academics from universities representing both Canada and the United States. It is an opportunity to learn more about psychological research processes, acquaint oneself with contemporary studies, or even participate and gain practical experience.
Madeleine Wong
Madeleine’s honours thesis titled Acculturation and enculturation differences between marital-dyads and parent-child dyads: Resources or risk? was accepted to the Making Waves Conference.
The Making Waves Conference is a poster session hosted by UVic Psi Chi that congregates undergraduate researchers and academics from universities representing both Canada and the United States. It is an opportunity to learn more about psychological research processes, acquaint oneself with contemporary studies, or even participate and gain practical experience.