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SSU Research, Scholarship & Creativity Symposium

Research, Scholarship and Creativity Symposium Graphic

This annual in-person event features the outstanding accomplishments of faculty and students across all disciplines. It is a great opportunity to showcase your research, scholarship, and creative activities to the campus and surrounding community. Students and faculty members display their projects on posters and other media in the Student Center Main Ballroom. There is also a section for registrants to give live lightning talks highlighting their work. 

Undergraduate Students, Graduate Students & Faculty – Tuesday, April 28, 2026 (4:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m.)

If you have any general questions, please contact the Office of Research & Sponsored Programs at [email protected].

Scroll down or use the search box below to find project descriptions from all 2025 submissions.

The Voltlog: A Cheap Solution to Battery Monitoring

Engineering
College of Science, Technology, and Business
Emanuel Barajas, Antonio Kassis

AQUA (Automatic Quantitative Underwater Analysis)

Engineering
College of Science, Technology, and Business
Christopher Scott, Cameron Deleeuw, Jacob Baltierrez

Battery Voltage Simulator

Engineering
College of Science, Technology, and Business
Andres Duenas, Samuel Guzman

Push Button Feedback Kiosk

Engineering
College of Science, Technology, and Business
Alexis Buenrostro, Joseph Walkup

Investors’ Reaction to Apple’s Racial Equity and Justice Initiative

Economics
College of Science, Technology, and Business
Dylan Vargas

Human Pose Detection for Robot Societial Navigation

Computer Science
College of Science, Technology, and Business
Nicholas Cabrales, Calin Weir

Deep Learning for Environmental Sound Classification: A BirdCLEF 2025 Case Study

Computer Science
College of Science, Technology, and Business
Martin Bolx, Emily Hernandez, Ryan Nguyen

The k-distance Graph Operator

Computer Science
College of Science, Technology, and Business
David Lund, Gregory Demo

Analyzing Reductions in Kyber to Derive Key Length Recommendations for Post-Quantum Cryptography

Computer Science
College of Science, Technology, and Business
Brandon Robinson