 So as we grow as a research university, no event is more important or more emblematic than this student research conference. You're seeing growing numbers of students not only engaged in research but eager to present the results of their research and their discovery in this forum. And we're seeing today more than 300 of those presentations. We looked at executive function which is inhibitory control, decision-making, and planning and trying to relate that to certain things like physical activity behavior and diet. So essentially we're just trying to see whether or not you can predict how someone participates in those things based on their scoring essentially with executive function tasks. I worked with Connie Tompkins up in rehab movement science and she's been absolutely fantastic. It's nice to have that experience in the classroom, textbook experience in the classroom and then come out and have hands-on research experience. It's really helped me get into grad school. Are you a walker or a biker at all? Huge biker. Interesting. Okay. We're trying to look at what factors affect people choosing to either walk or bicycle or not walk or bicycle in Vermont. And we're looking from a very broad perspective across the whole state, typically these studies focus on cities only. We're looking across the whole state and how some of those built environment aspects affect who chooses to walk or bike or not. Just being able to formulate the process and really go through that process has been an amazing experience. I think it teaches you so much about how to answer a question. How to first formulate the question, you know, take those thoughts that you're having and put it into a question and go out and answer that question. So we're studying mesothelioma and trying to figure out how asbestos causes mesothelioma. It's been shown that there's an inflammatory profile and asbestos has been shown to cause the activation of a molecular scaffold that leads to production of pro-inflammatory cytokines. Knowing that mesothelioma is difficult to treat and diagnose, it's very resistant to the current treatments out there. So we're trying to help improve the situation in any small way.