6 Indian American teens get prestigious Davidson Fellows scholarships

Press Trust of India  |  Washington 

Reflecting the domination of the community in science and technology, half a dozen Indian American teenagers have been bestowed with the prestigious 2018 Davidson Fellows scholarships.

In all 20 meritorious students from across the country were presented with the 2018 Davidson Fellows Scholarships in on Friday.

Named as the among "The 10 Biggest Scholarships in the World" and one of the "7 Prestigious Undergrad Scholarships", the fellowship is offered by the to students who are 18 years or younger and who demonstrate the development of their talents with a significant piece of work in science, mathematics, technology, engineering, music, literature, philosophy or outside the box.

Kavya Kopparapu, 18, from Virginia and Rahul Subramaniam, 17, from were recipients of USD 50,000 each as 2018 Davidson Fellows laureates. Kopparapu was recognised for her innovative personalised, targeted treatment for patients with cancer, and Subramaniam for developing an early warning system for Zika virus in mosquito populations.

Three of the Indian Americans from Arizona, from Virginia and from bagged the 2018 Davidson Fellows award of USD 25,000 each.

Tripathi, 16, received the award for utilising and to find a solution for poor indoor air quality (IAQ). His research on IAQ has the potential to prevent diseases, save millions of lives and billions of dollars from lost productivity.

Konan's project addresses the recovery of buried earthquake victims after natural disasters. He was inspired to build a system capable of detecting humans through rubble after watching the devastating feeds of families and first-response teams searching for buried victims in the 2015 earthquake.

Marissa, 18, won the award for her novel heart disease therapeutic that treats all of the disease's components simultaneously by attacking crucial cellular processes that are the root cause of heart disease.

Rajiv Movva, 18, from is a recipient of the USD 10,000 for building a computer model that can use a particular DNA sequence as input to predict level as output, which sheds much light on the poorly understood "dark genome" that doesn't directly code for proteins.

All Davidson Fellows also received a letter from the US wherein he encouraged the winners to "apply their and talents to serve our communities".

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, October 02 2018. 08:00 IST