Tuesday, February 10, 2026
ADVT 
International

Two Indian-Americans Win $150000 Top Prize In Intel Science Talent Search Contest

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Mar, 2016 01:39 PM
    Breaking a three-year dry spell for Indian-Americans, two 17-year-old high school students have won the top prize of $150,000 with their medical-related projects in the prestigious Intel Science Talent Search contest, the society for Science and Public (SSP) announced on Tuesday.
     
    Although Indian-Americans have formed one of the largest ethnic contingents year after year at the contest and won several prizes, none had won the top prize since 2012 when Nithin Reddy Tumma received it for cancer research.
     
    Two of the $75,000 second prizes, and two of the $35,000 third place prizes this year were also bagged by Indian diaspora teenagers.
     
    Amol Punjabi won the First Place Medal of Distinction for basic research for developing a software that could help drug makers develop new therapies for cancer and heart disease. He is from Marlborough in Massachusetts.
     
    Maya Varma's smartphone-based lung function analyzer won her the First Place Medal of Distinction for innovation.
     
    Maya Verma used $35 worth of hobbyist electronics and free computer-aided design tools to create the low-cost device that diagnoses lung disease as accurately as expensive devices currently used in medical laboratories, the SSP said. She is from Cupertino in California.
     
    SSP president Maya Ajmera said: "They and the rest of the top winners of Intel STS (Science Talent Search) 2016 are using science and technology to help address the problems they see in the world and will be at the forefront of creating the solutions we need for the future."
     
    The prizes were given in three categories: Basic research, innovation and global good. All the Indian winners were in the research and innovation categories.
     
     
    Meena Jagadeesan of Naperville, Illinois, won the Second Place Medal of Distinction for basic research for her work in mathematics.
     
    Meena investigated an object in algebraic combinatorics, or the mathematics of counting, to reveal a novel relationship between classes of graphs.
     
    For his study of random nanowire networks as a less costly alternative to the transparent conductors now used in touchscreen devices, Milind Jagota won the Second Place Medal of Distinction for Innovation. He is from Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.
     
    The two third place winners were Kunal Shroff and Kavya Ravichandran.
     
    Shroff of Great Falls, Virginia, discovered new relationships between the key protein associated with Huntington's disease and the biological processes of cellular death that cause Huntington's symptoms. His work may lead to new treatments, SSP said.
     
    Ravichandran studied the use of nanomedicine to destroy potentially fatal blood clots that can cause heart attacks and strokes. She is from Westlake, Ohio.
     
    Fourteen Indian diaspora students were among the 40 students chosen to be finalists from among 1,750 students who entered the contest. The finals were held in Washington.
     
    Among the Indian students' projects, eight related to the field of medicine, and three to mathematics, with one combining mathematics and cancer research.
     
    This is the 75th year of the Science Talent Search competition, whose alumni have gone on to win 12 Nobel prizes, two Fields Medals, 11 National Medals of Science, 18 MacArthur Foundation "Genius" Fellowships.
     
    One of the MacArthur fellows is computer scientist Maneesh Agrawala, a 1990 Science Talent Search finalist.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Entrepreneur Who Jacked Up Price Of A Lifesaving Drug Is Arrested On Securities Fraud Charges

    Entrepreneur Who Jacked Up Price Of A Lifesaving Drug Is Arrested On Securities Fraud Charges
    If convicted, he could get up to 20 years in prison. He left court without speaking to reporters. His attorneys had no immediate comment.

    Entrepreneur Who Jacked Up Price Of A Lifesaving Drug Is Arrested On Securities Fraud Charges

    Shutting Off Extremists' Internet Access Isn't As Easy As Donald Trump Makes It Sound

    Shutting Off Extremists' Internet Access Isn't As Easy As Donald Trump Makes It Sound
    NEW YORK — Donald Trump says the government must work with "brilliant people" in Silicon Valley to keep violent extremists offline, even if it means shutting down parts of the Internet.

    Shutting Off Extremists' Internet Access Isn't As Easy As Donald Trump Makes It Sound

    President Obama Names Indian American Activist Harold D'souza To Human Trafficking Advisory Body

    President Obama Names Indian American Activist Harold D'souza To Human Trafficking Advisory Body
    "I am honoured that these talented individuals have decided to serve our country," he said naming d'Souza and 10 others to the council.

    President Obama Names Indian American Activist Harold D'souza To Human Trafficking Advisory Body

    Amid Protest, France's Le Pen Removes Tweet Of IS Execution Of American Foley; Leaves Others

    Amid Protest, France's Le Pen Removes Tweet Of IS Execution Of American Foley; Leaves Others
    French authorities are investigating the tweets, which Le Pen posted in response to a journalist who made an analogy between her anti-immigration National Front party and the Islamic State group.

    Amid Protest, France's Le Pen Removes Tweet Of IS Execution Of American Foley; Leaves Others

    WhatsApp Back Online In Brazil After Judge Temporarily Blocked Popular Messaging Service

    A Brazilian judge on Thursday struck down a lower court ruling that temporarily ordered telecoms to block the popular messaging service, snarling communications for many of its 100 million users in Brazil for about 12 hours.

    WhatsApp Back Online In Brazil After Judge Temporarily Blocked Popular Messaging Service

    In The Heart Of Europe's 'terrorist Hub', Youth Alienation Keeps Nerves On Edge

    In The Heart Of Europe's 'terrorist Hub', Youth Alienation Keeps Nerves On Edge
    To a casual visitor, this province of Brussels may look like any other - a bit run down in parts, but largely having the glass-fronted stores, cafes and bars visible in most other places across Europe.

    In The Heart Of Europe's 'terrorist Hub', Youth Alienation Keeps Nerves On Edge