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Texas teen wins $100,000 national science prize

A high school student from Texas has won a $100,000 scholarship for a developing a computer algorithm that helps robots navigate around obstacles, an algorithm that could be used in applications like driverless cars.
Kensen Shi
Kensen Shi, a senior at A&M Consolidated High School in College Station, Texas, right, is applauded at George Washington University in Washington on Tuesday after winning the $100,000 Grand Prize in the individual category of the Siemens Competition in Math, Science & Technology National Finals.Susan Walsh / AP
/ Source: The Associated Press

A high school student from Texas has won a $100,000 scholarship for a developing a computer algorithm that helps robots navigate around obstacles, an algorithm that could be used in applications like driverless cars.

The Siemens Foundation announced the winners of its annual science competition for high school students during a ceremony in Washington on Tuesday. Top individual honors went to 17-year-old Kensen Shi of College Station, Texas. He combined two previous algorithms into a new and more efficient one that helps robots find a safe path around obstacles.

Shi, a senior at A&M Consolidated High School, said his algorithm could also be used in robots in factories and in animation and video game design to create more realistic motion for virtual characters.

Jeremy Appelbaum, William Gil, Allen Shin
George W. Hewlett High School in Hewlett, N.Y. students, from left, Jeremy Appelbaum, William Gil and Allen Shin pose with their scholarship check at George Washington University in Washington, Tuesday, Dec. 4, 2012, after being named the top winners of the Siemens Competition in Math, Science & Technology National Finals. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)Susan Walsh / AP

Top team honors went to a trio of students from George W. Hewlett High School in Hewlett, N.Y., for their research on a protein linked to tumor formation. Seniors Jeremy Appelbaum, William Gil and Allen Shin, all 17, will share a $100,000 scholarship.

Six individuals and six teams were competing for awards. The students were the winners of regional competitions.

The runners-up in the team and individual competitions went home with $50,000 scholarships. Jiayi Peng, 17, a senior at Horace Greeley High School in Chappaqua, N.Y., won second place for her work building and studying a model that simulates the neuron network in the brain. Peng, the only female competing for individual honors, said she's interested in studying math or physics in college.

Second place team honors went to Daniel Fu and Patrick Tan of Indiana, who created new math techniques that make it easier to analyze networks of genes and proteins in the body. The networks are responsible for body rhythms involved in things like sleep.

The 16-year-old juniors got the idea for their project after watching the 2010 movie "Inception," which is about sleep and dreams.

The Siemens Foundation is a philanthropic arm of Siemens USA, which is a subsidiary of German industrial conglomerate Siemens AG. The Siemens Competition began in 1998. This year more than 1,500 projects were submitted to the competition, which is funded by the Siemens Foundation and administered by the College Board.

Online:
Siemens Foundation