Watson GROWS puts spotlight on graduate student research
Poster/demo competition showcases a spirit of innovation across all disciplines

The new Watson Graduate Research Outcomes Workshop Series (Watson GROWS) held its first event on Tuesday 鈥 a poster/demo competition where 45 entries showcased graduate students鈥 spirit of innovation and discovery.
The GROWS initiative 鈥 sponsored by the Thomas J. Watson College of Engineering and Applied Science dean鈥檚 office 鈥 aims to better highlight graduate research in all disciplines.
鈥淚鈥檓 especially proud of the way our students presented not just rigorous research, but ideas that have the potential to transform industries and communities,鈥 said Watson College Dean Atul Kelkar. 鈥淓vents like these remind us that research isn鈥檛 confined to labs 鈥 it鈥檚 a bridge to real-world solutions and a spark for interdisciplinary connection.鈥
Assistant Professor Monika Roznere 鈥 a first-year faculty member from the School of Computing 鈥 served as the main organizer and program chair for the event.
鈥淚t is my first time being part of a graduate research exhibition where all engineers and computer scientists come together to share their recent achievements or current pursuits 鈥 and I hope I keep seeing initiatives like this in the future,鈥 Roznere said. 鈥淚t was a wonderful opportunity to bring the Watson community together, share ideas, provide feedback, start potential collaborations, and gain research inspiration.鈥
Distinguished Professor Hiroki Sayama, who is Watson鈥檚 executive assistant dean for graduate studies, was initially concerned about grouping together all the different disciplines, ranging from computer science to biomedical engineering, into a single poster session.
鈥淚t turned out to be a very nice interdisciplinary compendium of Watson students鈥 research activities,鈥 Sayama said. 鈥淏y going through a wide variety of topics at a single venue, I was able to see overlaps and commonalities of research topics and methodologies. I hope the students also had a chance to review other students鈥 posters and learn from each other鈥檚 work.鈥
Giving the keynote speech was Guru Madhavan, MBA 鈥07, PhD 鈥09, who is the Norman R. Augustine Senior Scholar and senior director of programs at the National Academy of Engineering. He discussed his time at Watson as well as how Binghamton aviation innovator Ed Link and his flight trainers helped to inspire his book Wicked Problems: How to Engineer a Better World (released in 2024).
Professor Kartik Gopalan 鈥 Watson鈥檚 interim associate dean for research, corporate engagement and entrepreneurship 鈥 called the competition a big success.
鈥淲e are incredibly proud of all our talented graduate student researchers and their faculty mentors who participated,鈥 Gopalan said. 鈥淭heir creativity and brilliance on display were truly inspiring and underscores the groundbreaking research happening within Watson College. We look forward to making it an annual celebration of their ingenuity.鈥
The winners
These graduate students received awards at the Watson GROWS poster/demo competition.
- First place: Harish Kumar Lattupalli, Sidharth Rajeev, Emily M. Stallbaumer-Cyr and Md Asif Iqbal (Assistant Professor Srikanth Rangarajan and Associate Professor Scott Schiffres)
- Second place: Sai Manikandan (Assistant Professor Monika Roznere)
- Third place: Eunji Hong, Dorcas Matuwana, Sizhe Huang, Ruobai Xiao, Geunho Jang and Nicolle Gudiel Winter (Assistant Professors Siyuan Rao and Qianbin Wang)