SIURO consists of articles written by undergraduate students in applied and computational mathematics, offering an opportunity for students to publish research they have completed as part of their undergraduate education and providing undergraduates incentives for conducting research.

The publication represents a wide range of applied topics, including but not limited to analysis, discrete mathematics, statistics, operations research, optimization, dynamical systems, modeling, and computation. Typical areas of application include but are not limited to physical, life, financial, and management sciences and engineering.

Each paper must be submitted with a letter from a project advisor. Faculty advisers or sponsors are listed as "project advisor" on the published paper.

SIURO provides an opportunity for undergraduate students to share their results and experience a full paper review process. High school students may also submit their work.

  • The project advisor may be a faculty member at the student’s institution or at an institution the student is visiting, or someone associated with a non-academic organization or government lab who supervised the research.
  • The project advisor’s letter must document the fact that the research was done while the student was an undergraduate and list the student’s graduation date or anticipated graduation date.
  • Project advisors will be listed separately from the authors with a “project advisor” byline.

From the Current Volume

Check out the latest volume and dive into advanced research and findings by undergraduate students.

Publish with SIURO

Become an Author

SIURO offers undergraduate and high school students the early opportunity to publish their research while becoming part of the scientific community.

SIURO is one of the best publications for undergraduate research in applied and computational mathematics. Beyond getting their results out into the world, when students publish their papers in SIURO, they have the edifying experience of taking their original work through the peer-review process.

Joanna Wares University of Richmond

Get Involved with SIURO

We welcome submissions from undergraduate and high school students in applied and computational mathematics.