Regeneron Science Talent Search 2025 Awards More Than $1.8 Million to High School Seniors for Innovative Scientific Research on Classifying Objects in Space, Treating a Rare Muscle Disease and Solving a Long-Standing Math Problem
$250,000 top award goes to Matteo Paz in America’s longest running and most distinguished science and math competition
Now in its 84th year, the competition celebrates and rewards young innovators who are applying their Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) talent and leadership skills to push the boundaries of discovery and address today’s pressing challenges.
Forty finalists, including Matteo, were honored this evening during an award ceremony at the
Matteo Paz , 18, ofPasadena, CA , won first place and$250,000 for designing machine-learning algorithms to efficiently comb through 200 billion entries of raw NEOWISE infrared full-sky data. By analyzing tiny changes in infrared radiation, the AI sorted the objects into 10 classes. He found 1.5 million new potential objects.
- Second place and
$175,000 went toAva Grace Cummings , 18, ofSmithfield, NC , for creating a fruit fly model of STAC3 disorder, or Native American myopathy (a rare genetic muscle disease). She found that the common nettle herb, alone or combined with the experimental drug Tirasemtiv, improved movement in both adult flies and larvae.
- Third place and
$150,000 went toOwen Jianwen Zhang , 18, ofBellevue, WA , for solving a long-standing math problem about objects called 3-uniform hypergraphs. He proved a maximum value for how many 3-uniform hypergraphs can have similar structures but differing connections. Owen's results have applications in computer science.
"Congratulations to the winners of this year's
The
“The Science Talent Search changed my life. At my high school, STS winners were treated like star athletes, and I never imagined I would belong in such an amazing group of kids who were operating at a whole different level than I had ever seen,” said
Other top honors from the competition include:
Fourth Place :Logan Lee , 18, ofHonolulu, HI received a$100,000 award for helping sterile male mosquitoes survive in the wild. These males are important in mosquito control. Logan improved their survival by giving them a transplant of wild mosquito bacteria. His transplant helped the sterile mosquitoes grow faster and survive better in the wild.
Fifth Place :Rivka Lipkovitz , 18, ofSan Francisco, CA received a$90,000 award for using statistical modeling to studyU.S. voter ID laws. She found that presidential election turnout dropped by 2.4% in states that passed strict laws after 2008. Turnout for midterm elections increased. Knowing how laws affect turnout can help shape future policies.
Sixth Place :Melody Heeju Hong , 17, ofWantagh, NY received a$80,000 award for developing a powerful, flexible statistical model for mapping sites called trans-methylation quantitative trait loci (trans-mQTL) within the human genome. These sites are key to understanding the interplay between genes and environment in disease and aging.
Seventh Place :Kevin Shen , 18, ofOlympia, WA received a$70,000 award for building a custom flight computer to control a 3D-printed airplane with oblique wings. These aircraft can be more fuel-efficient but are hard to control. His oblique-wing aircraft and flight computer improved flight efficiency by 9.2%.
Eighth Place :Minghao Zou , 18, ofSanta Clara, CA received a$60,000 award for simulating protons to probe environments that produce subatomic particles called neutrinos. He created an algorithm mimicking extreme astrophysical conditions, such as electromagnetic and gravitational forces and interactions with nearby particles. He verified it using known cases of particle motion.
Ninth Place : Thanush Patlolla, 17, ofCary, NC received a$50,000 award for approximating the density of electrons using a finite nuclear model. Using a mathematical strategy called a density function, he created a model to map electrons in a nuclear simulation. The map increased the accuracy of energy distribution predictions by 0.6%.
Tenth Place :Ray Zhang , 17, ofChantilly, VA received a$40,000 award for studying how to better treat drug-resistant Fusarium fungal infections. Ray studied how the fungus builds sticky communities of cells that resist drug treatment. He also found that using a combination of drugs better controlled the fungus.
Akilan Sankaran , 17, ofAlbuquerque, NM was named the Seaborg Award winner and selected to speak on behalf of theRegeneron Science Talent Search Class of 2025. The 40 finalists chose Akilan as the student who best exemplifies their class and the legacy of nuclear chemist Glenn T. Seaborg, who won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1951 and served on the Society’sBoard of Trustees for 30 years.
All other finalists received
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Source: Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc.