Sixteen Columbia undergraduate affiliates awarded NSF-GRFP graduate research fellowships

Sixteen students and alumni of Columbia’s three undergraduate programs have been awarded graduate research fellowships through the National Science Foundation. The Graduate Research Fellowship Program (NSF-GRFP) represents one of the nation’s most prestigious recognitions for young engineers, scientists, and social scientists.

The NSF-GRFP supports outstanding graduate students in NSF-supported scientific disciplines or in STEM education, who are pursuing full-time, research-based master’s and doctoral degrees at accredited American institutions. Each Fellowship provides three years of support over a five-year fellowship period. For each of the three years of support, NSF provides a $37,000 stipend and $16,000 cost of education allowance to the graduate degree-granting institution.

NSF Fellows are expected to become “knowledge experts” who will contribute significantly to research, teaching, and innovations in science and engineering and, as the oldest graduate fellowship of its kind, the GRFP has a long history of selecting recipients who achieve high levels of success in their future academic and professional careers.

The NSF typically receives over 12,000 applications and offers approximately 1,000 fellowships each year. This year, 16 Columbia College, General Studies, and Columbia Engineering affiliates have been awarded fellowships, with an additional 25 affiliates receiving an Honorable Mention.

Congratulations to this year’s awardees!

Erin Ahern, CC'2024, Biophysics
Miriam Aziz, CC'2024, Chemistry
Abdul Latif Daniel Bamba, SEAS'2022, Electrical Engineering
Pablo Jose Buitrago, SEAS'2025, Computer Engineering
Ishaan P Chandratreya, SEAS'2022, Computer Science
Claire Chen, CC'2017, Physics and Math
William Hirasawa Das, CC'2025, Computer Science
Kathryn Lampo, SEAS'2025, Mechanical Engineering
Joonsoo Lee, SEAS'2024, Applied Math
Zachary A Lihn, CC'2025, Math
Alexandria C Malilay, CC'2022, Ecology, Evolution, and Environmental Biology
Daniel Camilo Pineda Rodriguez, CC'23, Biochemistry
Patrick Minwan Puma, SEAS'24, Computer Engineering
Ana Reif, CC'24, Ecology, Evolution, and Environmental Biology
Ratna Sharma, SEAS'25, Biomedical Engineering
Zheheng Xiao, CC'25, Math


Honorable Mention

Dreyton G Amador, SEAS'23, Biomedical Engineering
Ryan Anselm, CC'24, Computer Science
Eric J Che, CC'23, Computer Science
Neranjan S De Silva, GS'17, Applied Mathematics
Cameron Grant, CC'24, Earth Science
Hsinyen Huang, SEAS'23, Biomedical Engineering
Ranger Kuang, SEAS'25, Computer Science
Jolie L'Heureux, CC'24, Astrophysics
Emma Joy Layton, CC'23, Earth Science
Eleanor Madeleine Lin, CC'24, Computer Science
Juliana Margaux Marston, CC'25, Environmental Chemistry
Clare Lily McGillis, SEAS'23, Civil Engineering
Lucas Melo, SEAS'22, Computer Science
Samuel Carlyle Morgan, CC'23, Mathematics-Statistics
Zarmeen Mussa, CC/SEAS'19, Applied Math, Biomedical Engineering
Ruby L Mustill, CC'21, Anthropology
John Van Nguyen, CC'23 , Ecology, Evolution, and Environmental Biology
Berkan Tim Ottlik, SEAS'25, Computer Science
Sridevi Rama Pulugurtha, SEAS'25, Applied Physics
Nathan Emmanuel, Rojas Ocampo, SEAS'23, Biomedical Engineering
Doran C Sekaran, CC'23 , Biochemistry
Sandhya Sethuraman, SEAS'25, Chemical Engineering
Noah Simon, GS'23, Econ-Political Science
Davis H Smith, CC'25, Biochemistry
Mason M Smith, CC'23, Slavic Studies
Ceaser Stringfield, CC'24, Applied Physics
Stephanie Tarrab, CC'25 , Biomedical Engineering
Richard B Tuddenham, CC'25, Physics
Gilead Turok, CC'23, Applied Math
Bryan A Uceda-Alvarez, CC'23, Neuroscience
Matthew Werneken, CC'25, Astrophysics
Ari Noah Willner, SEAS'24, Applied Physics
Andrew Yang, SEAS'25, Applied Physics

To learn more about the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program, visit the URF website or schedule a meeting with a URF advisor!