In its first in-person event since the pandemic struck, ARCS Honolulu Chapter presented twenty 2022 ARCS Scholar Awards at the Outrigger Canoe Club May 5. Miles Lucas was named ARCS Scholar of the Year (Physical Sciences) for his work to design instruments, observational techniques and processing methods for directly imaging exoplanets and planet-forming regions in the hopes of “seeing” largely invisible gasses will help explain planet formation. Nicholas Kawasaki was named ARCS Scholar of the Year (Biological Sciences) for his investigation of ferroptosis, an iron-dependent form of cell death that occurs in the heart after blood flow is restored following a heart attack.
Read more about the 2022 Scholars or view their videos, in which they describe their research.
Special guests included the 2021 Scholar of the Year, asronomy scholar Erica Bufanda, and 1987 ARCS Scholar Paul Lucey, University of Hawai‘i at Manoa earth scientist who is he advisor to 2022 Scholar Marley Chertok.
Roz Pearson with George and Mona Elmore ARCS Scholar Nicholas Kawasaki
Dr. Jackie Maly with Bretzlaff Foundation ARCS Scholar Ahmed Afifi
College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources ARCS Scholars Rina Carrillo and Shannon Wilson
Wendy Lagareta with Sarah Ann Martin ARCS Scholar Kazuumi Fujioka
Wendy Lagareta with Sarah Ann Martin ARCS Scholar Trey Carney
Wendy Lagareta with Maybelle F. Roth ARCS Scholar Ana Flores
Institute for Astronomy Scholars Jason Hinkle and Miles Lucas
Wendy Lagareta withEllen M. Koenig ARCS Scholar Benjy Strauss
Dr. Jacquie Maly with ARCS Scholar of the Year Miles Lucas
Roz Pearson with George and Mona Elmore ARCS Scholar Katie C.Y. Lee
Wendy Lagareta with George and Mona Elmore ARCS Scholar Sarah Tucker
College of Engineering ARCS Scholars Ahmed Afifi and Rintaro Hayashi
Wendy Lagareta with ARCS Honolulu Scholar Holden Jones
Patty Lee with Toby Lee ARCS Scholar Marley Chertok
Dr. Jacquie Maly with George and Mona Elmore ARCS Scholar Miles Lucas
Dr. Jacquie Maly with Columbia Communications ARCS Scholar Jason Hinkle
Patty Lee with George and Mona Elmore ARCS Scholar Shannon McClish
Wendy Lagareta with Ellen M. Koenig ARCS Scholar Helen Sung
John A. Burns School of Medicine ARCS Scholars Katie Lee, Nicholas Kawasaki and Aneesa Golshan
College of Natural Sciences ARCS Scholars Holden Jones, Helen Sung, Kazuumi Fujioka, Trey Carney, Ana Flores, Sarah Tucker, Benjy Strauss. Not pictured, Kevin Keefe.
School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technnology ARCS Scholars Marley Chertok, Shannon McClish and Sarah Tucker. Not pictured, Terrence "TJ" Corrigan.
Dr. Jacquie Maly and Frederick Kresser ARCS Scholar Rintaro Hayashi
Jessie Radovich with Joseph Parker ARCS Scholar Shannon Wilson
Jessie Radovich with Helen Jones Farrar ARCS Scholar Rina Carrillo
2022 Honolulu ARCS Scholars of the Year Miles Lucas (Physical Sciences) and Nicholas Kawasaki (Biological Sciences)
Roz Pearson with Kai Bowden ARCS Scholar Aneesa Golshan.
To Quote a Scholar: Alexandru Sasuclark
“My research, if successful, would add a new diagnostic toolset for medical professionals to assess risk for those already at a high risk for developing neuropsychiatric disorders.”
Honolulu ARCS Scholar Alexandru Sasuclark received Best Poster Presentation at the John A. Burns School of Medicine’s 2021 Annual Biomedical Sciences and Health Disparities Symposium. The George and Virginia Starbuck ARCS Award receipient studies the role of selenium in development of particular neurons in the brain and the perineuronal net structures that surround them. Disruption in their development is characteristic of many neurodevelopmental diseases. A University of Hawai‘i at Manoa PhD candidate in Cell and Molecular Biology, Alexandru aspires to a career in industry pursuing treatments for neurological ailments.
Read about his inspiration or watch his video
To Quote a Scholar: Lucas Ellison
"The grant will cover travel to one or two conferences that I would not be able to attend otherwise."
2024 Toby Lee ARCS Scholar Lucas Ellison uses data from past droughts to analyze the performance of climate simulation models to better predict the impact of climate change.
Scholar Update: Indigenous Scientist Haunani Kane
“Climate issues are large global issues, but the solutions are really going to need to be locally based, driven by communities: community needs, and their vision for the future, as well as looking at our native people and the way that they have sustainably managed lands and their coastal resources,”
2017 Toby Lee ARCS Scholar Dr. Haunani Kane combines indigenous knowledge and modern scientific techniques in her work as Univrsity of Hawai‘i at Manoa assistant professor of earth sciences. Read more