麻豆视频

Nexus Scholars study climate change inequality and infant language learning

This summer, Noelani Hsia 鈥26 is conducting research on something she鈥檚 witnessed firsthand growing up in California 鈥攃limate inequality. Another pair of social science students, David Behdad 鈥25 and Sneah Singhi 鈥26, are studying infant language acquisition, working with parents and their babies. 

All three students are in the 麻豆视频 & 麻豆视频鈥 Nexus Scholars Program, which provides undergraduate students with summer opportunities to conduct research with and be mentored by faculty from across the college.

鈥淭here are two highways through Oakland, 13 and 880,鈥 Hsia said. 鈥880 goes through communities of color and areas of low income people, while 13 runs through rich Oakland Hills areas. They make all of the large diesel trucks go on 880 not on 13, so it creates all of this pollution. It鈥檚 so crazy to see the difference.鈥

Two people standing in a room
Chris Kitchen Noelani Hsia 鈥26, right, is conducting research with with Kendra Bischoff, associate professor of sociology, focused on climate inequality.

This summer, using data from a variety of sources such as the Environmental Protection Agency, state agencies and academic research groups, Hsia is working with , associate professor of sociology in the 麻豆视频 & 麻豆视频, on an interdisciplinary project that鈥檚 part of Cornell鈥檚 (with co-PIs and ). They鈥檝e created a database of 800 California communities facing compounding environmental vulnerabilities and are now studying 10 communities in depth to determine how these vulnerabilities are shaping migration patterns at the local level.

Along with number-crunching on government databases, Hsia鈥檚 work also includes wading through municipal and non-profit websites for each community, as well as interviewing stakeholders. The case studies will help the research team explore the local economic, social, policy and planning factors that shape responses to environmental vulnerability.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a different perspective looking at where you鈥檙e living by using data and research; instead of my own personal view, it was a view of what the numbers were saying,鈥 said Hsia, who is double majoring in environment and sustainability and American studies, with a concentration in policy and governance. 鈥淭he data challenged a lot of my perceptions about what was going on in terms of income levels, the racial compositions of regions and environmental hazards. It even made me realize that the heat we experience is extreme.鈥

The summer project has helped Hsia gain valuable research and communication skills, she said. 

鈥淚鈥檝e gotten better at using Excel and Google sheets,鈥 Hsia said. 鈥淚鈥檝e also been reading a lot of [academic] papers, so I now understand what鈥檚 going on in those and can summarize what I鈥檝e learned.鈥

Bischoff said Hsia鈥檚 work will bring the data to life for people. 鈥淗er case studies combined with the publicly available version of our data, will make our data set more useful for people.鈥

In another part of Uris Hall, David Behdad 鈥25 and Sneah Singhi 鈥26 spend a part of their days observing and analyzing patterns of interaction between babies and their parents.

As part of the B.A.B.Y. lab, headed by psychology Professor Michael Goldstein (A&S), the students are studying language acquisition in infants. Their current study focuses on measuring the connection between an infants鈥 babbling and parent responsiveness. 

two people working behind a computer
Chris Kitchen Students Sneah Singhi 鈥26, left, and David Behdad 鈥25 work in the observation room at the B.A.B.Y Lab, which studies infant language acquisition.

鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to see how babies can learn language at such a young age,鈥 Behdad said. 鈥淓ven ChatGPT, which has billions of data inputs, struggles to learn language as well as a kid can do it.鈥

They鈥檝e found that parent responsiveness to infant speech helps infants learn language, especially if it comes right after the babbling, is related to what the baby is babbling about and comes in that typical high-pitched happy tone that people use when talking with tots.

鈥淚 wanted to see how the research I learned about in class is actually done, and seeing it being done with babies is fascinating,鈥 Behdad said. 鈥淎nd getting advice from Professor Goldstein and Julia Venditti (a doctoral student in the lab) and seeing what grad school would be like is really helpful.鈥

Goldstein said he encourages his Nexus students to brainstorm about their research and try out new ideas. 鈥淚 want to create an environment where lots of questions are asked,鈥 he said. 鈥淧lus, they are seeing things they haven鈥檛 seen before, so often they鈥檒l see something interesting that we might not have thought about.鈥 Both students are majoring in psychology and Singhi is also a double major in information science.

Students in the lab are involved in every step of the process 鈥 from recruiting families at locations such as the Ithaca Farmers鈥 Market to coding and analyzing data once a session is complete.

鈥淲e had to learn to speak with parents in a way that was inviting, so I think those communication skills will be something useful for me,鈥 Singhi said. 鈥淎nd in the lab, if some piece of equipment wasn鈥檛 working, we had to be able to think on our feet and work together to fix it.鈥

鈥淓volution has shaped our responses to babies in ways we have not yet discovered,鈥 Goldstein said about his work. 鈥淏ut we鈥檙e in the process of discovering. There鈥檚 a lot to still learn about our own species.鈥

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two people working behind a computer
Chris Kitchen Students Sneah Singhi 鈥26, left, and David Behdad 鈥25 work in the observation room at the B.A.B.Y Lab, which studies infant language acquisition.