Most HP Labs summer interns work for an extended period in one lab. But thanks to scheduling issues, Alex Jung, a rising high school senior at Pinewood School in Los Altos Hills, ended up splitting his internship into two discrete parts. That worked out well, allowing Jung to pursue his interests in both chemistry and virtual reality. HP Labs’ molecular biologist Caitlin DeJong is a scientist on the small life sciences team in HP’s Print Adjacencies and 3D Lab and was grateful for Jung’s help in testing chemical nanosensors. “We’re only a small group, so having interns like Alex allows us to go full steam on some pretty exciting but more exploratory and sometimes riskier projects that otherwise might take a little longer to get to,” she notes. “In this case, Alex did a great job helping me leverage our SERS nanosensors to explore the molecular profile of disease biomarkers as well as small molecules that we isolated from human blood serum and plasma. I had a lot of fun working together; it’s always energizing to discuss science with a curious and thoughtful young scientist like Alex.”
HP Immersive Experiences Lab researcher Mithra Vankipuram reports that Jung’s investigation into VR design tools was “very well received and much appreciated by the team.” Interns, she notes, “are invaluable because their point of view is unique and their questions give us a moment to look at our research in new ways.”