LCOM Graduate Student Council

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The mission of this council is to represent and support the interests of all graduate students receiving training within the Larner College of Medicine or its affiliated graduate umbrella programs.  Students represented are at the masters and doctoral levels, as well as, in person and online. The council interfaces with Larner leadership and other student groups and acts in an advisory role to provide direct and programmatic student support, facilitating an inclusive and supported community.

The council members can be reached by emailing graduate.student.council@med.uvm.edu

 


Meet Your 2023 Larner Council Members!

20232024a

Top L-R: Anne Snyder, Amila Semic, Sarah Abeling
Bottom L-R:  Patrick Olson, Jenna McDonald, Jenna Borovinsky,Clemens Probst

Did you know...

... UVM has an institutional license with the National Postdoc Association, so all graduate students can gain access to their resources? Link here.
...Larner LEAP is looking for a graduate student representative? Interested? Contact Erin Montgomery.

Bivona Creates an Open-Source Mouse Wheel

March 9, 2022 by Michelle Bookless

Like many inventions, the LOST-Wheel was born out of necessity and, jokes Bivona, out of spite. In his final years as a Cellular, Molecular, and Biomedical Sciences graduate student, Bivona worked on a grant-funded project in the laboratory of UVM Larner College of Medicine Professor of Medicine Matthew Poynter, Ph.D. The project, says Poynter, aims to determine the contribution of skeletal muscle contractile muscle cells (myocytes) to local and systemic inflammation and the potential benefits of exercise to diminish overexuberant or protracted inflammation. The work relies heavily on the study of mouse models after they exercise either on rodent treadmills (yes, they make treadmills for rodents) or on small circular machines commonly called mouse wheels.

JJ Bivona, Ph.D., sits at a desk in his lab holding his invention - the LOST Wheel. A computer screen behind him displays a rendering of the invention.

Faint whirring and clicking noises emit from the 3D printer on the counter behind University of Vermont (UVM) postdoctoral fellow J.J. Bivona, Ph.D.’22, as it moves purposefully from side-to-side and up-and-down. The layers of molten plastic carefully deposited by the initial passes of the machine don’t look like much yet, but the computer monitor on Bivona’s desk hints at the appearance of the finished product. As Bivona moves his computer mouse, a teal object that looks like a small, plastic satellite dish spins on the screen—allowing him to see the object in multiple dimensions and from every angle. The object is a key component of Bivona’s recent invention—a 3D-printable open-source mouse wheel he calls the Lockable Open-Source Training (LOST) Wheel.

Read the full story >>

Bivona Creates an Open-Source Mouse Wheel

March 9, 2022 by Michelle Bookless

Like many inventions, the LOST-Wheel was born out of necessity and, jokes Bivona, out of spite. In his final years as a Cellular, Molecular, and Biomedical Sciences graduate student, Bivona worked on a grant-funded project in the laboratory of UVM Larner College of Medicine Professor of Medicine Matthew Poynter, Ph.D. The project, says Poynter, aims to determine the contribution of skeletal muscle contractile muscle cells (myocytes) to local and systemic inflammation and the potential benefits of exercise to diminish overexuberant or protracted inflammation. The work relies heavily on the study of mouse models after they exercise either on rodent treadmills (yes, they make treadmills for rodents) or on small circular machines commonly called mouse wheels.

JJ Bivona, Ph.D., sits at a desk in his lab holding his invention - the LOST Wheel. A computer screen behind him displays a rendering of the invention.

Faint whirring and clicking noises emit from the 3D printer on the counter behind University of Vermont (UVM) postdoctoral fellow J.J. Bivona, Ph.D.’22, as it moves purposefully from side-to-side and up-and-down. The layers of molten plastic carefully deposited by the initial passes of the machine don’t look like much yet, but the computer monitor on Bivona’s desk hints at the appearance of the finished product. As Bivona moves his computer mouse, a teal object that looks like a small, plastic satellite dish spins on the screen—allowing him to see the object in multiple dimensions and from every angle. The object is a key component of Bivona’s recent invention—a 3D-printable open-source mouse wheel he calls the Lockable Open-Source Training (LOST) Wheel.

Read the full story >>

 

 


Previous Council Representatives

    2022-2023
    • Hannah Despres
    • Sean Lenahan
    • Kiera Malone
    • Matt Mullen
    • Joe Owuor
    • Anne Snyder
    • Liz Sparks
    • Kevin Pham
    • Michael Villalpando

    2021-2022

    • Hannah Despres
    • Dorcas Lohese
    • Matthew Mullen
    • Sean Lenahan
    • Joe Owuor

    2020-2021

    • JJ Bivona
    • Hannah Despres
    • Mike Hoaglund
    • Axel Masquelin
    • Harly Rodriquez
    • Amanda Sidwell

    2019-2020 (Inaugural year)

    • JJ Bivona
    • Caitlin Coates
    • Axel Masquelin
    • Amanda Sidwell
    • Marcus Weinman