Utah
Bridging Research and Community: Utah SciComm Symposium Empowers Scientists to Share Their Story – Office of the Vice President for Research
On May 5, 2025, nearly 80 students, researchers, and professionals gathered at the Natural History Museum of Utah (NHMU) for the inaugural Utah SciComm Symposium – an event designed to empower scientists to communicate their work with clarity, creativity, and relevance. Supported by the Research!America Civic Science Microgrant, this event provided a platform for showcasing innovative science communication and fostering dialogue between disciplines and communities. While scientific rigor is essential, the true impact of research depends on how effectively we share it.
The Utah SciComm Symposium brought together voices from academia, government, and journalism. Julie Kiefer, PhD, shared insights from her work at University of Utah Health, emphasizing the power of connection in making science matter. Atim Enyenihi, PhD, offered a policy and industry lens, reminding attendees that the messenger’s identity shapes how science is received. Matthew LaPlante, PhD, drove the message home: “The challenge of science communication is not one of ‘dumbing things down,’ but rather ‘bridging our brilliances.’”
Following these talks, we hosted an Ask Me Anything (AMA) panel, where audience members submitted anonymous questions on topics ranging from career pathways in science communication to overcoming burnout, navigating misinformation, and rekindling a sense of wonder in research. This open dialogue created a space for candid conversations, making the event feel more like a community exchange than a traditional lecture series.
A centerpiece of the symposium was the SciComm Hackathon Finalist Presentations, where six graduate students showcased creative projects – including comics, visual storytelling pieces, an animated lecture, and a short-form video designed for social media – that translated their complex research for broader audiences. These projects were the result of months of dedicated work, as students developed and refined their materials with feedback from our expert judging panel and media consultant, Julie Callahan. Julie’s experience in multimedia graphics and public outreach was instrumental in helping students shape their ideas into compelling stories. More than just a showcase of scientific expertise, these projects reflected a shared commitment to storytelling, accessibility, and meaningful public engagement.
“Science communication serves as a bridge between the public and trust in science,” said Kiefer. “Without it, knowledge stays in labs and datasets, when it should be changing minds and changing lives. I’m excited to see so many talented young scientists who are passionate about explaining science and its impacts in creative ways.”
Beyond presentations, the symposium featured interactive science activities led by Utah Brain Awareness Week members from the Department of Neuroscience at the University of Utah. Attendees had the rare opportunity to hold real human brains, learning fascinating facts about brain structure and function, while the concussion goggles module allowed participants to experience the disorienting effects of mild to severe brain injuries. By testing their motor skills through this simulated “patient” lens, attendees also gained a deeper appreciation for the importance of protecting the brain from injury.
The event’s design reflected the ethos of public engagement: breaking down barriers between science and society through conversation, creativity, and shared curiosity. The Utah SciComm Symposium wasn’t just about presenting research – it was about creating a culture of communication, where storytelling and public engagement are seen as essential components of scientific practice. In an era where misinformation and polarization threaten scientific trust, equipping researchers with these skills is a necessity. By fostering a culture of science communication, we aim to build a more informed, engaged, and connected community.
Utah
Utah man with autism found after 10-day search
SALT LAKE CITY — August Beckwith, a 29-year-old Utah man with autism, has been found safe after disappearing for a second time in a matter of weeks.
“We are overjoyed and deeply grateful,” Lori Beckwith, August Beckwith’s mother, said in a post on Facebook Sunday. “Thank you to the many remarkable people who helped with compassion and kindness throughout. Wishing everyone a loving and peaceful Christmas.”
Beckwith had been missing for 24 days after disappearing from the University of Utah campus on Nov. 17. Lori Beckwith, August’s mother, had taken to Facebook to report when he had first been found.
The Beckwith family wishes for privacy at this time.
This story may be updated.
Utah
UDOT celebrates early opening of Mountain View Corridor connection to Utah County
SALT LAKE CITY (KUTV) — The Mountain View Corridor project connecting Salt Lake and Utah Counties was completed early, opening just in time for holiday travel.
The Utah Department of Transportation celebrated the early completion of the years-long project in a Friday event, with attendees able to walk the new road and take photos with Santa. The road and trails were opened to traffic after the event.
UDOT officials posted a video of the celebration, with the caption reading, in part, “This road and these trails are now yours.”
Commenters praised their work on the project—and the video itself—with some saying they’ve already driven on the new road.
“I almost cried when I went on the corridor today! It was done sooner than I thought so thank you!” one commenter wrote.
Another user called it the “best Christmas gift EVER!”
MORE | Mountain View Corridor:
Some Utahns were less pleased, bringing up concerns about the lights not operating correctly on the north end or complaints about future construction.
However, the video itself addressed the negative comments UDOT receives, specifically complaints about constant construction.
“The truth is, if you want a DOT that never does anything and therefore never inconveniences you…Well, that just ain’t us,” the post read. “We don’t do construction to you, we do it FOR you, because we ARE you. We all live here too.”
The Mountain View Corridor project, also known as the 2100 North Freeway Project, was designed to improve east-to-west traffic flow between I-15 and Redwood Road in Lehi. It also included “shared-use-paths” for pedestrians and cyclists.
UDOT officials said Redwood Road is one of the most congested roads in Utah County, following Interstate 15 and Pioneer Crossing.
Officials expect this could reduce Redwood Road delays by 75% and also help alleviate I-15 traffic in the area.
The project began in Spring 2024, with construction expected to finish in Spring 2026. UDOT officials said the project was completed four months ahead of schedule.
In order to complete the road and trails, crews moved 1.5 million tons of dirt and paved more than 350,000 square yards of concrete and asphalt.
“This new stretch of Mountain View Corridor provides meaningful relief for drivers in fast-growing Utah County,” said Carlos Braceras, UDOT Executive Director. “Opening this stretch ahead of schedule improves regional connectivity and provides drivers with safer, more dependable travel options as the area continues to grow.”
While the new extension is complete, UDOT officials plan to continue to extend the Mountain View Corridor in the future. They said the goal is for it to be a 35-mile freeway connecting Interstate 80 in Salt Lake County to State Route 73 in Utah County.
The next phase of the project is planned to begin in 2027 and will address the stretch from Porter Rockwell Boulevard in Herriman to Old Bingham Highway in West Jordan.
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Utah
Utah’s most complete, balanced game of season leads to blowout win over Eastern Washington
Utah gave itself the perfect gift going into the Christmas break — a blowout win.
The Runnin’ Utes lived up to their moniker by rolling past two-win Eastern Washington 101-77 at the Huntsman Center on Saturday night in Utah’s largest margin of victory this season.
The Utes had big nights up and down the roster — led by Keanu Dawes, Terrence Brown and Don McHenry — in the team’s final nonconference home game.
“I think it was the best game for the 40 minutes where we kind of controlled it and stayed in control and followed the game plan,” Utah coach Alex Jensen said.
How the game transpired
The contest got off to a slow, sloppy start, as Eastern Washington held an 8-6 lead four minutes in before Utah’s first mini spurt — a 7-0 run — got the home team in front.
Things stayed relatively back and forth over the next nine minutes before Utah used a 16-4 run to go up 40-27.
That set the tone for the Utes, who outscored the Eagles 26-11 over the final 7:53 of the first half to take a dominant 50-34 lead into the break.
Utah shot 74.1% from the floor and 6 of 10 from 3 in the first half, the second hottest-shooting first half from a Big 12 team this season behind only a 75.9% effort from Iowa State against Alcorn State.
The second half was a lot of back-and-forth from both sides, with the Utes going up by as many as 20 points early in the half while Eastern Washington did enough to keep the game from turning into a blowout.
That is until around the nine-minute mark, when Utah went on a 12-3 run over the next three minutes to move ahead a then game-high 21 points.
The Utes then pulled away in the game’s final minutes for their largest margin of victory this season.
This was a team win
There were a lot of solid individual performances across the board for Utah on a night when it best executed Jensen’s mantra of “playing with the pass.”
“I think that’s been the lost art in the last little while. I think fewer and fewer players get to this level and they know how to play without the basketball,” Jensen said. “That’s the one thing that I can teach them, how to create opportunities off the basketball, because they all grew up only knowing how to score with the ball.
“I keep hitting them on play with the pass, change sides of the floor and score together, which I think they did a good job. How do I fit in to the four other guys in the court, and what are my opportunities and my role? And then it’ll happen.”
The Utes had a season-high 23 assists in the victory and owned a 22-2 edge in fast break points as they played with the most confidence and poise they’ve shown all year.
Dawes embodied that mindset, as he shot a perfect 9 of 9 from the floor, scoring a season-high 21 points while adding a team-high nine rebounds and two assists.
“I just think we were able to follow the game plan, and then…we just played with the pass,” Dawes said. “We had 23 assists to their, was it 13 assists? I think it just started from how we came out the gym ready to play, and just getting everybody involved early on in the game.”
Jensen, who’s been pushing Dawes to be more assertive, said the talented junior “made a jump tonight.”
“I think he was aggressive, and our guards helped with that. … We told them all week we were going to see a lot of press, to be aggressive, and KD (was) catching it, taking it all the way. I think that was encouraging,” Jensen said.
Brown, meanwhile, showcased his ability to see the floor. In addition to scoring 20 points, he had a season-high 11 assists as Utah shot a blistering 68.4% from the floor.
“Coach emphasizes a lot going into games (that) a lot of teams are going to be crowding the paint, doing things like that,” Brown said. “So (for me, it’s) just emphasizing me finding an open man and playing with the pass, which I was doing pretty well today.”
McHenry, the other half of the Utes’ dynamic scoring guard duo, was the hottest shooter for Utah, scoring a game-high 27 points while shooting 10 of 13 from the field and making a season-high six 3-pointers. He also had three assists.
“You know, he’s another guy, pretty much every guy I want a little bit more from, but I tell him all the time he’s one of the few seniors on the team, and he’s got to be, you know, one vocal but I think Don, he’s playing off the ball more than he has in the past, and then he does a great job of letting the game come to him and picking his spots and being patient,” Jensen said.
“He and (Brown) have really done a good job with that and and they’ve done a better job playing off each other.”
Two other Utes scored in double-figures. Freshman Kendyl Sanders continued to show why he’s earning minutes by posting 13 points, a rebound and an assist against three turnovers, while Seydou Traore helped spark Utah’s offense early and finished with 10 points, four rebounds and two assists.
A first look at a depth piece, while another sits
After a long wait, Ibi Traore made his first appearance for Utah in a regular-season game.
The last time fans in the Huntsman saw him suit up was in the preseason a year ago, but a season-ending injury sidelined him last season and he had yet to play in the 2025-26 season until Saturday.
It was a modest appearance — Traore played nine minutes, made his only field goal attempt of the night and finished with two points, a rebound and a steal.
“All the credit in the world to him to be ready. A line we always use as coaches is ‘Make me play you,’ so Ibi came in,” Jensen said.
“It’s going to be probably for two, three, four minutes, but actually, he forced us to keep him in for longer, so I’m happy for him, because it’s been a long road back from the injury, but credit to him for being ready to play.”
For the second straight game, Utah sharpshooting guard Jacob Patrick was in street clothes. His absence didn’t hurt the Utes against Eastern Washington, and it gave other guards valuable minutes.
Before his injury, Patrick had earned his first start when Traore missed a game, and Patrick has been showing plenty of promise during nonconference play.
It’s something to monitor when Utah will get Patrick back out on the court.
Christmas break, then even bigger challenges
It will be nine more days before Utah (8-4) hits the floor again, when the Utes travel to face former Pac-12 rival Washington in Seattle on Dec. 29.
That post-Christmas game will be the final tuneup for Utah before Big 12 play begins with a Jan. 3 matchup with No. 1 Arizona in the Huntsman Center.
Eastern Washington’s height gave Utah some issues in this one — the Eagles had 18 offensive rebounds to just five for Utah, though the Eagles weren’t successful in turning those extra opportunities into points. The Utes only trailed 13-10 in second-chance points.
Eastern Washington had some success scoring inside, finishing with 38 points in the paint, though Utah was better, adding 52. The road team’s top two scorers were 6-foot-9 big men — Alton Hamilton IV had 19 points and nine rebounds, while Kiree Huie added 17 points and nine rebounds.
The Huskies’ top scorer is 6-foot-11 German big man, Hannes Steinbach, who averages 17.5 points and 11.9 rebounds.
Arizona is also loaded with a powerful front court, and both of Utah’s next two opponents will be a much greater challenge inside than what Utah faced Saturday night.
There’s still one more nonconference challenge before Big 12 play starts. Saturday’s effort, though, was a step in the right direction.
“I feel like the energy for our team is a big thing for us. If one person sees the ball go in the basket, we’ve got good energy for them,” Brown said.
“It gravitates to the next person, so just us playing with high joy and a high motor just gets us better every single day, and obviously bringing it into practice. You know, it starts at practice, so that’s what we do.”
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