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Puentes 2025-2026 View Other Sessions

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Latine Research Week 2026

Latine Research Week (LRW) is a conference that celebrates the scholarship of University of Michigan students, researchers and faculty who conduct research and who would like to learn about Latine experiences and connect with other students, faculty, and staff at U-M who share that interest. LRW provides a unique, interdisciplinary space where scholars across campus can share their research and build new connections. From February 16 to February 19, 2026, researchers will be able to showcase their work in oral presentation sessions, a poster session, and various sponsored events. Additionally, LRW will feature a keynote address and opportunities to connect with scholars from across disciplines. Puentes is honored to announce our Latine Research Week (LRW) 2026 theme: Pa’lante! Building on the legacy of our previous themes, 2024’s Illuminating Familismo and 2025’s Raíces y Presencia: Growing a Legacy Together, this year, we invite our community to reflect on resilience, perseverance, and the determination to move forward. “Pa’lante” is a Spanish contraction of “para adelante,” meaning “forward” or “onward.” Yet its significance extends far beyond a literal translation. Rooted in Puerto Rican and broader Caribbean communities, “pa’lante” has long served as a word of encouragement when times are challenging turning into a word evoking strength, resilience and liberation. In the 1960s, the Young Lords, a Puerto Rican civil rights group established in Chicago, titled their newspaper Pa’lante, turning the word into a call for liberation and collective action. The word became even more commonly used once the Young Lords came to more prominence in communities like East Harlem and the South Bronx in New York. “Pa’lante” became a mindset of strength and resilience during Puerto Rico’s recovery after Hurricane Maria and continues to be used as a word Latines use in recognition of the spirit of moving forward, persisting despite difficulties, and affirmation. “Pa’lante” is spoken as an encouragement: keep going, don’t stop, move onward. To say “Pa’lante” is to affirm that, even when we encounter barriers, political challenges, or personal struggles, we continue moving forward with the strength of our ancestors, the solidarity of our communities, and the joy of our cultures. By centering “Pa’lante” as our theme, Latine Research Week 2026 celebrates the ways resilience, joy, and perseverance are interwoven in our scholarship and lives as scholars. Just as Pa’lante insists on hope and forward momentum, our research too pushes knowledge, justice, and community well-being ahead. This theme recognizes our presence as an act of resilience in itself, honors the marks we leave as we push boundaries and reimagine what is possible, and calls us to create legacies that future generations will carry forward.




Latine Research Week (LRW) is a conference that celebrates the scholarship of University of Michigan students, researchers and faculty who conduct research and who would like to learn about Latine experiences and connect with other students, faculty, and staff at U-M who share that interest. LRW provides a unique, interdisciplinary space where scholars across campus can share their research and build new connections. From February 16 to February 19, 2026, researchers will be able to showcase their work in oral presentation sessions, a poster session, and various sponsored events. Additionally, LRW will feature a keynote address and opportunities to connect with scholars from across disciplines. Puentes is honored to announce our Latine Research Week (LRW) 2026 theme: Pa’lante! Building on the legacy of our previous themes, 2024’s Illuminating Familismo and 2025’s Raíces y Presencia: Growing a Legacy Together, this year, we invite our community to reflect on resilience, perseverance, and the determination to move forward. “Pa’lante” is a Spanish contraction of “para adelante,” meaning “forward” or “onward.” Yet its significance extends far beyond a literal translation. Rooted in Puerto Rican and broader Caribbean communities, “pa’lante” has long served as a word of encouragement when times are challenging turning into a word evoking strength, resilience and liberation. In the 1960s, the Young Lords, a Puerto Rican civil rights group established in Chicago, titled their newspaper Pa’lante, turning the word into a call for liberation and collective action. The word became even more commonly used once the Young Lords came to more prominence in communities like East Harlem and the South Bronx in New York. “Pa’lante” became a mindset of strength and resilience during Puerto Rico’s recovery after Hurricane Maria and continues to be used as a word Latines use in recognition of the spirit of moving forward, persisting despite difficulties, and affirmation. “Pa’lante” is spoken as an encouragement: keep going, don’t stop, move onward. To say “Pa’lante” is to affirm that, even when we encounter barriers, political challenges, or personal struggles, we continue moving forward with the strength of our ancestors, the solidarity of our communities, and the joy of our cultures. By centering “Pa’lante” as our theme, Latine Research Week 2026 celebrates the ways resilience, joy, and perseverance are interwoven in our scholarship and lives as scholars. Just as Pa’lante insists on hope and forward momentum, our research too pushes knowledge, justice, and community well-being ahead. This theme recognizes our presence as an act of resilience in itself, honors the marks we leave as we push boundaries and reimagine what is possible, and calls us to create legacies that future generations will carry forward.

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East Conference Room Rackham 4th Floor

Speakers:

Cinthya Aros-Caballero: Aumento de la resistencia al fuego de las membranas de elastómero en robots a escala de insecto alimentados químicamente

Ellen Yeats: Histotripsia: cirugia no invasiva con ultrasonidos

Yeishmary M. Soto Muñiz: Historia Evolutiva y Genética Poblacional del Mono Nocturno Andino (Aotus miconax)

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East Conference Room Rackham 4th Floor

Speakers:

Julianna Sanromán: Memory Is a Border I Keep Crossing: Art, Migration, and Latino Futurism

Ayla Moulaz Carvalho: Moving forward through design: the use of mathematics textbooks in Brazil and the US

Erick Guapizaca: INDIGENOUS CONSENT IN THE SHADOW OF INVESTOR-STATE ARBITRATION

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Assembly Hall Rackham
Speakers:
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Amphitheater

Opening Ceremony for LRW

  • Keynote Speaker Dr. Mara Ostfeld 
  • Free professional headshots
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East Conference Room Rackham 4th Floor

Speakers: 


Esther Guerrero: Equity by Design: Communicating for Safer Births in Detroit


Anna Sophia Rodríguez Santana: Navigating a Stressful Transition: How Maternal Health Barriers Impact Mental Health Among Latina Women

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East Conference Room Rackham 4th Floor

Speakers:


Eric Roman: Operando Visualization of Void Formation at Lithium/Solid Electrolyte Interfaces

Manikandan Pandiyan: Demonstrating the Value of Wet Organic Waste (WOW) through Hydrothermal Carbonization: Carbon Brownies as a Value-Added Product

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East Conference Room Rackham 4th Floor

Speakers:


Stephanie Colón-Rodríguez: Controls on Solar Wind Entry to Earth's Magnetosphere

Anthony Carreon: Automated Design Optimization via Strategic Search with Large Language Models

Jimmy Hayes: Electrochemical Methane Oxidation to Sustainable Chemicals on Boron Doped Diamond (BDD)

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East Conference Room Rackham 4th Floor

Speakers:


Cecilia Solis-Barroso: Creating Collaborative Spaces for Language Advocacy & Research: A Nahuatl/Spanish Bilingualism Workshop

Isaias Ceballos: Experiential and Attitudinal Effects on Hispanic Name Pronunciations

Rosa Noriega-Rocha: Writing from the borderlands: Chicana Historians’ reflections on the field of history and politics of knowledge production 

Stefania Becerra Lavado: Lima Is Not Monolingual: Quechua Presence and Raciolinguistic Ideologies in Peru’s Capital City

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East Conference Room Rackham 4th Floor

Speakers:

Vanessa Quevedo Barrios: A CRISPR-Based Cancer Targeting Technology 

Yara Victoria Gomez Peinado: Evaluating Expression-Driven Functional Rescue of MLH1/PMS2 Variants with Residual MMR Activity

Paula Arellano: The Role of Plasma Conditions on the Properties of MoS2 Films Grown by PEALD Using H2 plasma and Di-tert-butyl Disulfide

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West Conference Room

Speakers:

Sofia I. Jordan: Café Gran Batey and the Formation of an Agroecological Landscape in the Mountains of Puerto Rico in Collaboration with IALA-PR

Fime de la Fuente: Oro Negro <> Agüita de Colonia: Overlaying Stories in Borikén Coffee

Jaedyn Medrano: Centering Community Engaged Sustainability in Higher Education

Cynthia Gutierrez Navarro: Embodying the Lived Experiences of Promotoras del Agua - Leaders in Community-based Solutions for Safe Water and Environmental Justice

Bibi Macias: National Roadmap to Ending Shutoffs

Rocio Cisneros: Defining the Role of Plasmalogens in Lysosomal Homeostasis

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East Conference Room Rackham 4th Floor

Speakers:

Stephanie Morales: Examining Acquiescent Response Trajectories in the Health and Retirement Study

Eduardo Ochoa Rivera: Conformal Prediction for Ensembles: Improving Efficiency via Score-Based Aggregation

Félix A. Báez-Santiago: Address-Based Sampling in Puerto Rico: Challenges and Methodological Lessons

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East Conference Room Rackham 4th Floor

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William Calvo-Quiros: Low N' Slow: Moving Forward as a Lowrider

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East Conference Room Rackham 4th Floor

Speakers:

Lester Mejia Gomez: Laws of the land: Children disapprove of inequitable immigration policies but not entry regulation

Charlotte Cunningham: Exploring Language and Cultural Barriers Experienced by Hispanic K-12 Students

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East Conference Room Rackham 4th Floor

Speakers:

Valeria Ortiz Villalobos: The Organization of Language and Literacy Skills in Spanish-English Bilingual Children

Zahira Flores-Gaona: Oral Narratives and Reading Fluency in Spanish–English Bilingual Learners

Saydy Bravo-Lopez: Análisis del desarrollo del español en los EEUU: Effects of attending a bilingual school versus a non-bilingual school on heritage language

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East Conference Room Rackham 4th Floor

Speakers:

Chelsea Arenas: Lessons Planners Can Learn from Collaborating with Coalitions like Los Deliveristas Unidos

Kristina M. Fullerton Rico: International Immobility: How Social Scientists Misunderstand the Impacts of Undocumented Status and How Mixed-Status Families Overcome Borders

Jocelyne Ramirez-Badillo: The effects of inequitable water service provision: water management and women’s domestic labor in Iztapalapa, Mexico City 

Rocío Quintana Guzmán: "Political Loopholes" and the Persistence of Transgender Health Inequities: A Qualitative Study in Mexico City

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Assembly Hall Rackham

Poster Presenters: 

Luziene Seixas dos Santos: What modulates herbivory? The role of environmental factors and plant traits in global herbivory patterns

Mariana Chavez: The Uplifting Latinx Students and Families to Strengthen Education Access and Engagement 

Ana Castaneda Montoya: Radiative Fluxes from GOES ABI Imagery for Investigating Diurnal Processes in Tropical Anvil Clouds

Paola Isabel Medina-Cabrera: Investigating the roles of GLI transcription factors in the pancreatic cancer microenvironment.

Yixin Zhang: Latino Seasonal Labor, Visibility, and Precarity in Colorado’s Mountain Resort Economies

Victor Muñoz: Code-switching and Memory

Jennifer Zamudio: “Being believed is everything”: Patient Perspectives of Connection in Care

Heizel Acosta: Epigenetic Tumor Suppressor KMT2D Shapes the Immune Landscape in Pancreatic Cancer

Marielynn Herrera: Voices in Care: Maternal Health Care Experiences of Latina Mothers Through a Mixed-Methods Case Study

Jacqueline Aguiar: Insights from AI into child Spanish heritage language development, "No sabo-ness" and Hispanic identities

Emily Jimenez: Photocatalytic Alkene Hydrofunctionalization Utilizing Acridine-Lewis Acid Complexes

Diana Paulina Villalobos Calderón: Building Scientific Spanish Vocabulary in Bilingual Heritage Language Children: The Role of Home and School Mixed-Learning

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East Conference Room Rackham 4th Floor

Speakers:

Yang Li: Navigability of thousands of adaptive landscapes of RNA and protein expressions by trans-regulatory mutations

Giovanna Munoz-Gonzalez: Timing Matters: How Disturbance and Nutrient Addition Shape Grasslands across the Growing Season

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East Conference Room Rackham 4th Floor

Speakers:

Ana Cecilia Saavedra Bazan: Spiral Trajectory Design and DIP Reconstruction for High-Resolution Cardiac MRF of the Atria

Carlos Urrego : Type 2 Diabetes Impairs Bone Architecture by Decreasing Formation and Increasing Resorption in Skeletally Mature Female Mice

Laura Lucia Constain-Montoya: Rational approach to understanding the behavior of members in steel frame lateral load resisting systems

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East Conference Room Rackham 4th Floor

A panel discussion on how language shapes identity, belonging, and everyday experiences in Latine communities 


Speakers:

Viviana M. Vélez Negrón 

Isaias Ceballos 

Zahira Flores-Gaona 

Sophia Sims 

Jacqueline Aguiar 


Moderator: 

Cecilia Solis-Barroso

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Puentes 2025-2026
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