May 2, 2025
Reception & Presentations 2pm to 5pm
Cal Poly Humboldt Library
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Presenters & Abstracts: Search
History of the Book: Digital Exhibits Featuring the HSU Rare Books Collection
Heather Madar
Art
Faculty
Chia Chen
Art
Undergraduate Student
Mary Bone
Art
Undergraduate Student
College of Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences
Students from Heather Madar's Art 301M: History of the Book class will present their digital exhibits. These exhibits showcase materials from the HSU library's Rare Book collections. Mary Bone's exhibit uses a comparative framework to explore music and song books from the collection and examines them in light of their cultures of origin and use. Chia Chen's exhibit takes a close look at a book that features a set of the 1957 remake of Debucourt's fashion plates from 1789-1808. Originally published in women's fashion journals, these plates modeled late 18th century Parisian clothing styles and also display contemporary manners and customs.
Cohort Effectiveness Amongst Criminology and Sociology Freshman
Samantha Silver
Sociology
Graduate Student
College of Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences
Research presenting the effectiveness of cohorts as a means for improving freshman retention and academic performance amongst Sociology and Criminology courses.
Potter Valley Project Relicensing: The Fate of Two Watersheds
Colin Mateer
Environmental Studies
Undergraduate Student
College of Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences
At the headwaters of the Eel River stand two large dams. Not far from the Eel River is the Russian River, which has become hydrologically connected across a natural divide by a mile long diversion tunnel transporting water from the dammed Van Arsdale Reservoir in the Eel River into the Russian River. The dams will be up for relicensing in 2022, and as such stakeholders have come together to begin the political process. An interdisciplinary analysis of the current dialogue and data provides a critical tool in understanding the complexity of the relicensing process that will ultimately decide the fate of the two watersheds and the human and non-human communities that share the water.
Digitizing Stratigraphic Maps
Lily Camara
Anthropology
Undergraduate Student
Marisa Bazaldua
Anthropology
Undergraduate Student
College of Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences
This project is aimed at digitizing hand-drawn stratigraphic maps of excavations from the Dos Hombres to Gran Cacao (DH2GC) archaeological project in northwestern Belize. Archaeological illustration is a form of technical illustration that graphically records material derived from an archaeological context. Illustration is a powerful medium for disseminating knowledge, as it demonstrates the excavation process and captures history as it is unearthed. We use Adobe Illustrator CS3 software for the digitization process. Finished maps are used in the annual report for the Institute of Archaeology (IoA) in Belize.
Oh my God. I am the highest I have ever been: User Experiences with Cannabis Edibles
Josh Meisel
Sociology
Faculty
Grecia Alfaro
Sociology
Undergraduate Student
Marco Chavez
Sociology
Undergraduate Student
Rosa Cuevas
Sociology
Undergraduate Student
Jay Schoenfield
Sociology
Undergraduate Student
Jessica Smith
Sociology
Graduate Student
Torisha Stone
Sociology
Graduate Student
College of Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences
Cannabis legalization in the U.S. is associated with greater usage, new cultivation methods, increased THC potency, and new modes of ingestion. Inconsistent edibles labeling and dosage control resulted in a spike in cannabis edible related emergency room admissions. This study examined negative user experiences with edibles. We conducted in-depth interviews with a nonrandom sample of 45 medical and recreational cannabis users in California and Colorado. We asked interviewees about their prior use, negative edible experience, and short and long-term responses to their bad edible experience. We coded interviews for the sources and behavioral implications of negative edible experiences.
AHHA, A New Perspective For Addressing Homelessness
Lindsey Diggs
Environmental Studies
Undergraduate Student
College of Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences
The Affordable Homeless Housing Alternatives (AHHA) nonprofit, based in Eureka, California, challenges the dominant approaches used to solve homelessness within the community. They believe everyone has the right to a safe living environment no matter their present circumstances. AHHA aims to build transitional housing in the form of tiny house villages. Their main focus is to highlight the importance of community amongst those that are disadvantaged and to incorporate it into the heart of all proposed solutions moving forward.
Public Lands Bill- Drafting of Environmental Bills in the United States' Current Contemporary Political Arena.
Megan Burke
Political Science
Undergraduate Student
College of Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences
This project focuses on my work with Congressman Jared Huffman's office and their efforts regarding the upcoming Public Lands Bill. They are working on restoring and revitalizing forests and watersheds, conserving ecologically significant areas, and expanding recreation opportunities in the North Coast. My internship has allowed me to see the American political system in action and witness local community participation in drafting of bills and has provided a window into the political feasibility of bills around environmental issues in the current contemporary political arena.
Environmental Impacts of the Homeless Population in Humboldt County
Jennifer Mara Arvizu
Political Science
Undergraduate Student
College of Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences
There are many attempts to “solve” the homelessness problem in Humboldt County, but most have been unsuccessful, and they have not properly assessed the environmental impact that has been a result of human habitation in urban areas, particularly within riparian zones. Because homeless individuals are not considered within the traditional census boundaries, there isn’t reliable population statistics and the estimates vary widely. Within this research, I will examine environmental and socio-economic relationships within homeless population, including societal cost and environmental destruction.
3-Dimensional Modeling of DH2GC Archeological Sites
Jonathan Roldan
Anthropology
Undergraduate Student
Eden Oleson
Anthropology
Undergraduate Student
Boston O'Donohue
Anthropology
Undergraduate Student
Sarah Conner
Anthropology
Undergraduate Student
College of Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences
This project presents a modern method to preserve and study the past. 3D Technology is taking over current research in the archaeology field. Agisoft Photoscan is a 3D rendering software that has aided in this new methodology and form of inquiry. The basis of this project is to process field data from the Dos Hombres to Gran Cacao Archaeological Project and configure a 3D model of excavation sites from the 2017 field season.The objective of this project is to provide a method to analysis and conserve archaeological artifacts, sites, and features. As a result of this research, a model will be produced to facilitate access to the archaeological project without being physically present.
Humboldt County Sanctuary Initiative
Kevin Olmar Martinez
Political Science
Undergraduate Student
Crystal Rosales
Political Science
Undergraduate Student
College of Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences
Centro Del Pueblo was created in response to the wave of anti immigration rhetoric and the increase of ICE raids in Humboldt County. The organization advocates for immigrant rights, organizing rallies, marches and most recently pushing its own initiative for sanctuary in Humboldt County. The initiative itself wont violate SB54 in anyway or violate the U.S. Constitution, what it will do is add extra layers of protection for the undocumented community from being persecuted by ICE, and promoting a safer community between the county and the immigrant community.