Newswise — One of the nation's oldest and most respected non-profit science organizations will provide more than $68,000 in travel fellowships to underrepresented minority students and scientists to attend the Experimental Biology conference in New Orleans, April 18-22. The American Physiological Society (APS), which administers the program, has announced that 40 fellows will receive the travel awards.

APS administers the program with financial support from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) and the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS). Both NIDDK and NIGMS are part of the National Institutes of Health.

The APS Minority Travel Fellowship Program is designed to encourage more students from minority groups that are underrepresented in science to become scientists and remain in the field. African-American, Hispanic, Native American and Pacific Islander undergraduate, graduate and post-doctoral students and faculty are eligible for the fellowships. The APS has awarded travel fellowships to approximately 575 minority students and faculty since 1987, when the program began.

In addition to paying travel and registration costs, each fellow is paired with an established researcher, an APS member who is usually in the same research area as the student. More than 60 APS members volunteer each year to be mentors. A number of former minority travel fellows -- now established researchers with their own graduate students -- serve as mentors themselves.

The program provides many career networking opportunities. The mentor introduces the fellow to other established scientists at the conference, and the fellows meet other minority students at an orientation and reception for current and past travel fellows. APS also invites fellows to career workshops, sessions on special skills development, and other special sessions during the conference.Past fellows have praised the program, saying they received advice concerning their research from scientists they met through the program and also learned the ins and outs of interviewing for a postdoctoral or faculty position. The 2009 Minority Travel Fellows are as follows:

Adebowale Adebiyi, University of Tennessee Health Science CenterImo Akpan, University of PennsylvaniaGustavo R. Ares, Henry Ford HospitalKrystal N. Brinson, Medical College of GeorgiaRaquel M. Brown, Southern Illinois UniversityHeidy L. Contreras, University of California, IrvineZelieann Rivera Craig, University of ArizonaJohn H. Dubinion, University of Mississippi Medical CenterJorge L. Gamboa, University of KentuckyFernanda RC Giachini, University of Sao Paulo / Medial College of GeorgiaShea Gilliam-Davis, Wake Forest University School of MedicineAlbert L. Gonzales, Colorado State UniversityHelmut Bandeira Gottlieb, University of the Incarnate WordDolores Doane Guest, University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignTanYa Gwathmey, Wake Forest UniversityAndres Hernandez, Auburn UniversityMarcela Herrera, Henry Ford HospitalMichael Hoffman, University of Wisconsin-MadisonDebra L. Irsik, University of Nebraska Medical CenterErin M. Keen-Rhinehart, Harbor UCLA Medical CenterAnna K. Leal, UT SouthwesternNatasha Lugo-Escobar, University of Puerto Rico Medical Sciences CampusJeffrey B. Mason, University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary MedicineKeisa Mathis, Louisiana State University Health Sciences CenterCathy C. Moore, University of North Carolina at CharlotteNorma B. Ojeda, University of Mississippi Medical CenterKarl D. Pendergrass, Wake Forest UniversityArthur J. Pope, University Of FloridaClintoria L. Richards-Williams, Emory University/Atlanta VA Medical CenterLilliana Sanchez, University of New MexicoOlga I. Santiago, Ponce School of MedicineAerial L. Singleton, New Mexico State UniversityMesia Moore Steed, Wake Forest UniversityCarmen M. Troncoso Brindeiro, University of Nebraska Medical CenterCarla M. Trujillo, New Mexico State UniversityJohana Vallejo-Elias, Midwestern University - Arizona Osteopathic School of MedicineVabren L. Watts, Meharry Medical CollegeLetitia Weigand, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public HealthLeslie D. White, University of Flordia-College of MedicineJustin L. Wilson, Howard University

Physiology is the study of how molecules, cells, tissues and organs function to create health or disease. The American Physiological Society has been an integral part of this scientific discovery process since it was established in 1887. The Society provides a wide range of research, educational and career support and programming to further the contributions of physiology to understanding diseased and healthy states.