Three College Undergrads Named 2024 Goldwater Scholars

2024 Goldwater Scholars (clockwise from top left)  Hayle Kim, Kaitlin Mrksich, Eric Tao and Eric Myzelev. (Images: Courtesy of the Center for Undergraduate Research and Fellowships)

Three College undergraduates have received Goldwater Scholarships, awarded to second- or third-year students planning research careers in mathematics, the natural sciences, or engineering. Penn’s 2024 Goldwater Scholars are Hayle Kim, C’25, Eric Myzelev, C’25, and Eric Tao, C’25, along with Kaitlin Mrksich, a third year in the School of Engineering and Applied Science.

They are among the 438 students named 2024 Goldwater Scholars from 1,353 undergraduate students nominated by 446 academic institutions in the United States, according to the Barry Goldwater Scholarship & Excellence in Education Foundation. Each scholarship provides as much as $7,500 each year for as many as two years of undergraduate study.

Kim, from Knoxville, Tennessee, is majoring in neuroscience. She works in the lab of Matthew Kayser at Penn Medicine, where she studies the molecular basis of sleep maturation using Drosophila melanogaster as a model organism. She is co-founder and co-president of the undergraduate chapter of the Asian Pacific American Medical Student Association and was the internal vice president of the Penn Korean Student Association. She is a teaching assistant for the course Chronobiology and Sleep taught by David Raizen, professor of neurology, and has been a learning assistant and peer tutor for general chemistry. Kim is a University Scholar and CURF Research Peer Advisor. She volunteers for the nonprofit One House at a Time in its Beds for Kids program, and in the emergency department of the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. After graduating, Kim plans to pursue an M.D./Ph.D. in neuroscience.

Myzelev, from Toronto, is majoring in mathematics, with a minor in computer and information science, and is submatriculating for a master’s degree. His research interests include algebra, combinatorics, and using deep learning to solve partial differential equations. Myzelev has worked on numerous research projects in combinatorics and deep learning, has both a co-authored publication and an accepted paper, and has presented his work at several international conferences. Myzelev has been a research assistant for Sasha Indarte, assistant professor of finance at the Wharton School, using recurrent neural networks to identify racial biases in personal bankruptcy outcomes, and he was an intern with the Penn Wharton Budget Model. He is a problem writer for the Canadian Astronomy and Astrophysics Olympiad and an event supervisor for Science Olympiad at Penn. After graduating, Myzelev plans to pursue a Ph.D. in math and research algebraic geometry and combinatorics.

Tao, from Wallingford, Pennsylvania, is majoring in cognitive science, mathematics, and logic, with a focus on language and the mind. They are interested in related fields including physics, linguistics, and logic. Tao studies the neuroscience of social behavior under Marc Schmidt, professor of biology, using multimodal mating displays in the brown-headed cowbird as a model system. Tao co-founded the Penn Math Contest to promote enthusiasm for mathematics among high schoolers, and volunteers with similar organizations such as Science Olympiad at Penn. Tao also works as a teaching assistant in Penn’s Mathematics Department. After graduating, Tao plans to pursue a graduate degree in computational neuroscience.

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