The Regeneron Science Talent Search, known from its establishment in 1942 to 1998 as the Westinghouse Science Talent Search and from 1999 to 2016 as the Intel Science Talent Search, is a research-based science competition in the United States for high school seniors hosted by the Society for Science. It has been referred to as "the nation's oldest and most prestigious" science competition and several of its alumni have gone on to be scientists prominent in their fields. In his speech at the dinner honoring the 1991 winners, President George H. W. Bush called the competition the "Super Bowl of science."

History

While attending the 1939 New York World's Fair, Society for Science director Watson Davis met Edward Pendray, a Westinghouse Electric Corporation executive. Together, they brainstormed ways to encourage youth to go into scientific fields and expand science fair competitions to the national level, and created the Westinghouse Science Talent Search (Westinghouse STS). The first competition was held in 1942, won by Paul Teschan of Shorewood, Wisconsin and Marina Meyers of Farmingdale, New York. Throughout an era of sexism in academia, the competition has always allowed male and female students to compete, though awards were given separately until 1949.

In 1998, Intel outbid several other potential sponsors and became the competition's sponsor; the name of the competition was changed from the Westinghouse Science Talent Search to the Intel Science Talent Search (Intel STS). In May 2016, it was announced that Regeneron Pharmaceuticals would be the new title sponsor. Since its founding, some 147,000 students have entered the competition. Over 22,000 have been named semifinalists and 2,920 have traveled to Washington, D.C., as contest finalists. Collectively, they have received millions of dollars in scholarships and gone on to later receive MacArthur Fellowships (20 alumni), Nobel Prizes (13 alumni), National Medals of Science (eleven alumni), the Breakthrough Prize (seven alumni), the Fields Medal (two alumni), the Lasker Award (two alumni) and numerous other accolades. Multiple alumni were later elected to the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering, and many have served in various government positions and as professors at top universities. Actress Natalie Portman was a semifinalist in 1998 and 1947 participant Leon Cooper's name was borrowed for Sheldon Cooper, a character on The Big Bang Theory who is portrayed as being a science prodigy.

Competition

Entrants to the competition conduct original research — sometimes at home and sometimes by working with research teams at universities, hospitals and private laboratories. The selection process is highly competitive, and a research paper, letters of recommendation, essays, test scores, extracurricular activities, and high school transcripts are factored in the selection of finalists and winners.

Prizes

Each year, approximately 2,000 projects are submitted. The top 300 scholars (previously called semifinalists or honorable mentions) are announced in mid-January and each receive $2,000. In addition to the scholar award prize money, each scholar's school receives an award of $2,000 from the title sponsor for each scholar named. In late January, the top 40 finalists (the award winners) are announced. In March, finalists are flown to Washington, D.C., for a week, where they are interviewed by a judging panel about their projects and to assess their STEM knowledge, creativity and problem-solving abilities. Past judges have included Glenn T. Seaborg and Joseph Hooton Taylor, Jr., both Nobel laurates. The top 40 finalists each receive prizes starting at $25,000 and the winners are announced at an awards ceremony.

Prizes (as of 2023)
AwardPrize
1st place$250,000
2nd place$175,000
3rd place$150,000
4th place$100,000
5th place$90,000
6th place$80,000
7th place$70,000
8th place$60,000
9th place$50,000
10th place$40,000
30 finalists$25,000
300 scholars$2,000

Demography

The Science Talent Search is open to high school seniors living in the United States, and US citizens living abroad. Since the beginning of the competition, a large number of winners have come from New York, representing nearly one-third of the finalists in the years that Westinghouse sponsored the competition. New York has continued to lead the states in finalists in more recent years, more closely followed by California, and with significant numbers of finalists from Maryland, Texas, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Florida, Virginia, and Illinois.

Top states for finalists
StateTotal finalistsWestinghouse (1942–1998)Intel (1999–2016)Regeneron (2017–2026)
New York104375221576
California33916310373
Illinois174149241
Pennsylvania1341011815
New Jersey132872421
Maryland127654517
Florida125842416
Virginia121821623
Texas111543225
Massachusetts110682418
Ohio9378105
Oregon61302011
Wisconsin604893
Michigan5937157
Connecticut5730189
Indiana564394
Finalists by state (1942–2026)
State1942194319441945194619471948194919501951195219531954195519561957195819591960196119621963196419651966196719681969197019711972197319741975197619771978197919801981198219831984198519861987198819891990199119921993199419951996199719981999200020012002200320042005200620072008200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202420252026
Alabama0020000000000000100000000001001010000011110010100200100000001000110010000000000000100
Alaska0000000000000000000000010000011000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
Arizona0011001010211021102121101000000100000000000000000000000010001001100101000100001011201
Arkansas0000000000000000001000000000000000000110000010010000000000100000000000000000000010000
California3211533324332341432055331354223425313354401331314342136245441234330581110712111067829798610
Colorado0000101000000101020100001100011110002100000001000101100111001000110000010100301001101
Connecticut0100221010102300001001010010100100001011101011001101100001021210210112111012001202101
Delaware0000000000000100000000000010000000000000000000000000100010000000001000000000010110100
District of Columbia0010110200101010101101000100100000000000000000000000000000100110000000000000000000000
Florida0110000000000000102252211223134213140223041342310111133231220504101102110123201123220
Georgia0010000000120011000202012100101001010000101010100010000001020011001000121000010010000
Hawaii0000000000000000000001000000001202011010000000001001000001100100001000001000100000010
Idaho1000000010000000000100000001000010000000000000000000000000000000100000000010000000000
Illinois3326443201423535344421142434762213303222512305231221000211005004310221211100000001000
Indiana3000001010221133122200102111001100120010111000000002010010011010000010211011002010000
Iowa0100000100000010100100011000100001001000000000100100020001100010001000000000000110000
Kansas1000200101000101000011000000000000000000011000000011010000000000000000000000000000000
Kentucky0000000000001000000100021000100000100000000000000000000000100000010000010000020100001
Louisiana0000000100000000000000002000001012000000000010000000000001011000100000000000000010100
Maine0100010002000010000000000000000000010000001000000000000000001000000000000020000100000
Maryland0000000001002010220201412111100101212321112002024155012046324144432010114233531200102
Massachusetts0000012112110111323224213231102002212000012301211010402002211121101111123121413112131
Michigan0011001000000011100000000130000001101120121233110100131010000111131011310011011112001
Minnesota1000110001012020002000012100000020010000010000010003210110011111000201100000000010000
Mississippi0000000000001200000000000000000000000100001000000002010200000000000000000000100000000
Missouri0201101200010001001100000000000101002000101100010000100000010000001100000010001000000
Montana0000000000100011120000000000000100000020001100011000100100100000000000000000000000000
Nebraska0002000000200101100100110100000100000101010010000100100000000000000001000000000000000
Nevada0000000000000000000000100010000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000001000100
New Hampshire0100010001011000000000000000000000000000000010000000100000000000010000000012100110301
New Jersey2241333213322321213002321021011121302102203200112310011201002000031323122403024120135
New Mexico0100000000000000100000100000010000110000010002010101010110000101001010010000002000010
New York179141511141413231418151310811998111410121097691411111291013141415141715191712151516191914207141515181512171315201813131215911710778885986108985
North Carolina0000000000000000001000000000010000000100000000010102020000200100011012002101010014031
North Dakota1000000000000000000000000000000100000000000000000000000000000000010010000000000000000
Ohio0431034323010203130331023422121120311000301022110101100000020001110300000110101100020
Oklahoma0200100100011011001001001001100021110100100000100000000020000100010110000001021000000
Oregon1001111122012012100101010000002011000010001100000000020101010120211212030211202300111
Pennsylvania2632421313022111231031212353441142132000100342122110100101120000004102130122220030213
Rhode Island0001000010000000010000000000001110001000000001000000001000000000010000000000000000010
South Carolina0000000000000000010000000000011100010100000000000000001000000000001000000000002000000
South Dakota0000001010010000000000100000000000000000000000000000100000000000000000001000000000000
Tennessee0001010111000100010000010110001010100110010001000000000000000000000000021010010001010
Texas0000000100011001011211120314213130011213120000101102122110222112023233313113211522126
Utah0000000100000000000000000000000100000000000000100000200000000000100000000100000000000
Vermont0000000000000000000000000000100000000000000000000000000000000010000000000000000000000
Virginia0101000000110020111101412323030121231222010421312424214332020020111210110111432323231
Washington0000200010001010000012000001000001010001000000011001010101100001101010100101010111120
West Virginia2110110001001201001000001000000000100101000000000001002000000000010000010000000000000
Wisconsin3245012100010221121010020000020111010011111100100011100100001001101310000100012000000
Wyoming0010000000000000101000000000000020000000000000000000000000010000000000000000000000000
Puerto Rico0000000000000000000000000000000000000000010100000000000001000000000000000000000000000
Guam0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000001000000000000000000000000

Certain high schools have been particularly successful at placing semifinalists and finalists in the Science Talent Search. From the early years of the competition, two specialized high schools in New York City dominated the competition: Bronx High School of Science and Stuyvesant High School. Other New York schools have also had notable success in the competition, including Ward Melville High School in East Setauket, Byram Hills High School in Armonk, Jericho High School in Jericho, and Paul D. Schreiber Senior High School in Port Washington. In the 1980s and 1990s, other specialized STEM schools, including Virginia's Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology and Maryland's Montgomery Blair High School, began to produce large numbers of finalists to rival the New York schools. In the 21st century, a new group of specialized STEM schools have had growing success in the competition, including New Jersey's Bergen County Academies, and the private Harker School in California.

List of winners

1942–1948

First-place winners from 1942 to 1948
YearTop boyTop girlRef.
NameHome cityNameHome city
1942Paul TeschanShorewood, WisconsinMarina MeyersFarmingdale, New York
1943Reinhart SchiffNew Rochelle, New YorkGloria LauerAmes, Iowa
1944Amber DavidsonFort Bridger, WyomingAnne Van BurenNew York City
1945Edward KosowerBrooklynMarion JoswickBrooklyn
1946Jules KernenSt. LouisE. Marilyn CurranElizabethtown, Pennsylvania
1947Martin KarplusWest Newton, MassachusettsVera Dyson-HudsonCold Spring Harbor, New York
1948Andrew KendeEvanston, IllinoisBarbara SearleFlushing, Queens

1949–present

First-place winners from 1949–present
Year1st placeHome city or high schoolRef.
1949Dwight TaylorAltadena, California
1950Saul SternbergThe Bronx
1951Robert J. KolenkowNiagara Falls, New York
1952Karl MuenchEvanston, Illinois
1953Edward PhillipsLincoln, Massachusetts
1954Alan HaughtBethesda, Maryland
1955Frederick GreenleafAllentown, Pennsylvania
1956Robert MooreSilver Spring, Maryland
1957Brett NordgrenSouth Bend, Indiana
1958Reinier Beeuwkes IIINewton, Massachusetts
1959John LetcherLexington, Virginia
1960Jerome SpitznerSt. James, Minnesota
1961Joshua WallmanNew York City
1962Christopher CherniakEau Gallie, Florida
1963Sylvain CappellNew York City
1964Robert SproullAlexandria, Virginia
1965Larry HowardCanoga Park, Los Angeles
1966Henry Wagner Jr.Gwynedd Valley, Pennsylvania
1967Nevin Summers Jr.Jacksonville, Florida
1968Roger Y. TsienLivingston High School
1969Lane P. HughstonDallas
1970Kirk ShinskyAllentown, Pennsylvania
1971James Van AkenWestern Springs, Illinois
1972Nina F. SchorDouglaston–Little Neck, Queens
1973Arvind SrivastavaFort Collins, Colorado
1974Eric LanderStuyvesant High School
1975Paul ZeitzStuyvesant High School
1976Edward Phinney IIILeverett, Massachusetts
1977Richard SchiratoDallas
1978Michael BriggsAdelphi, Maryland
1979Ron UnzNorth Hollywood High School
1980Lisa RandallStuyvesant High School
1981Amy ReichelNew York City
1982Reena GordonBrooklyn
1983Paul NingNew York City
1984Christopher MontanaroSouth Paris, Maine
1985Alan HuLa Jolla
1986Wendy ChungMiami Killian Senior High School
1987Louise ChangWestmont, Illinois
1988Chetan NayakNew York City
1989Christopher SkinnerLittle Rock, Arkansas
1990Matthew HeadrickUniversity of Chicago Laboratory Schools
1991Ashley ReiterCharlotte, North Carolina
1992Kurt ThornWading River, New York
1993Elizabeth PineChicago
1994Forrest AndersonHelena, Montana
1995Irene ChenSan Diego
1996Jacob LurieMontgomery Blair High School
1997Adam CohenNew York City
1998Christopher MihelichCarmel, Indiana
1999Natalia ToroBoulder, Colorado
2000Viviana RiscaPort Washington, New York
2001Mariangela LisantiWestport, Connecticut
2002Ryan PattersonGrand Junction, Colorado
2003Jamie RubinFort Myers, Florida
2004Herbert Mason HedbergNorth Attleborough, Massachusetts
2005David BauerThe Bronx
2006Shannon BabbHighland, Utah
2007Mary MastermanOklahoma City
2008Shivani SudDurham, North Carolina
2009Eric LarsonEugene, Oregon
2010Erika DeBenedictisAlbuquerque, New Mexico
2011Evan O'DorneyDanville, California
2012Nithin TummaFort Gratiot Township, Michigan
2013Sarah VolzColorado Springs, Colorado
2014Eric ChenSan Diego
2015Noah GolowichLexington, Massachusetts
Andrew JinSan Jose, California
Michael Hofmann WinerSilver Spring, Maryland
2016Amol PunjabiWorcester, Massachusetts
Paige BrownBangor, Maine
Maya VarmaSan Jose, California
2017Indrani DasOradell, New Jersey
2018Benjamin FiresterNew York City
2019Ana HumphreyAlexandria, Virginia
2020Lillian PetersenLos Alamos, New Mexico
2021Yunseo ChoiExeter, New Hampshire
2022Christine YeSammamish, Washington
2023Neel MoudgalSaline, Michigan
2024Achyuta RajaramExeter, New Hampshire
2025Matteo PazPasadena High School
2026Connor HillPort Matilda, Pennsylvania

Other past winners

Notable finalists, semifinalists, and other top participants
NameYearPlacedHigh schoolNotability
Evelyne Pease Tyner1942FinalistEnvironmentalist who conserved large areas of native prairie with an ecology centre named after her, awarded the LEED award.
Robert Kraichnan19442nd boyNational Academy of Sciences
Ben Mottelson1944FinalistLyons Township High School1975 Nobel Prize in Physics
Andrew Sessler1945FinalistForest Hills High SchoolNational Academy of Sciences
Gerald Edelman1946Honorable mentionJohn Adams High School1972 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
Leon Cooper1947FinalistBronx High School of Science1972 Nobel Prize in Physics
Ronald Breslow1948Finalist1991 National Medal of Science
R. Stephen Berry1948FinalistEast High School1983 MacArthur Fellowship, National Academy of Sciences
Fred Brooks1949Honorable mentionGreenville High School1985 National Medal of Technology and Innovation
Walter Gilbert1949FinalistSidwell Friends School1980 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
Paul Cohen1950FinalistStuyvesant High School1966 Fields Medal; 1967 National Medal of Science
Sheldon Glashow1950FinalistBronx High School of Science1979 Nobel Prize in Physics
Dana Scott1950Honorable MentionC. K. McClatchy High School1976 Turing Award
John L. Hall1952Honorable MentionSouth High School2005 Nobel Prize in Physics
David Mumford1953FinalistPhillips Exeter Academy1974 Fields Medal
Joanna Russ1953Top 10William Howard Taft High SchoolHugo and Nebula Awards, author of The Female Man
Alar Toomre1953Honorable mentionSewanhaka High School1984 MacArthur Fellowship
Marcian Hoff1954Top 10Churchville-Chili Senior High School2009 National Medal of Technology and Innovation
Roald Hoffmann1955FinalistStuyvesant High School1981 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
Mary-Dell Chilton1956FinalistHinsdale Township High School2023 National Medal of Technology and Innovation
Leroy Hood1956FinalistShelby High School2011 National Medal of Science
Donald Knuth1956Honorable mentionMilwaukee Lutheran High School1974 Turing Award, 1979 National Medal of Science
Jane S. Richardson19583rd placeTeaneck High School1985 MacArthur Fellowship, National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Medicine
John Henry Schwarz1958Honorable mentionNorth Shore High School1987 MacArthur Fellowship; 2014 Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics
Kip Thorne1958Honorable mentionLogan High School2017 Nobel Prize in Physics
Charles H. Bennett19604th placeCroton-Harmon High School2023 Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics
Robert Axelrod1961FinalistEvanston Township High School2012 National Medal of Science
Whitfield Diffie1961HonorsJamaica High School2015 Turing Award
Gary A. Wegner1963HonorsBothell High SchoolHumboldt Prize
Paul L. Modrich1964HonorsRaton High School2015 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
Ray Kurzweil1965FinalistMartin Van Buren High School1999 National Medal of Technology and Innovation
Frank Wilczek1967FinalistMartin Van Buren High School2004 Nobel Prize in Physics
Alvin Roth1968HonorsMartin Van Buren High School2012 Nobel Prize in Economics
Gordon J. Freeman1969FinalistArlington Heights High SchoolNational Academy of Sciences
Thomas Felix Rosenbaum1973FinalistForest Hills High SchoolPresident, California Institute of Technology
F. Thomson Leighton19742nd placeStuyvesant High SchoolNational Academy of Sciences, Akamai Technologies co-founder and CEO
Ronald Vale1976FinalistHollywood High SchoolNational Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Medicine
George Yancopoulos1976Top 10Bronx High School of ScienceNational Academy of Sciences, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals co-founder and CSO
Richard H. Ebright1977FinalistMuhlenberg High SchoolAmerican Academy of Arts and Sciences
David Spergel1978HonorsJohn Glenn High School2001 MacArthur Fellow; 2018 Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics
Brian Greene1980FinalistStuyvesant High SchoolThe Elegant Universe author
Noam Elkies1982FinalistStuyvesant High School2004 Levi L. Conant Prize
Lisa Su1986HonorsBronx High School of ScienceIEEE Robert N. Noyce Medal; CEO of AMD
Jordan Ellenberg19892nd placeWinston Churchill High SchoolAmerican Mathematical Society Fellow
David R. Liu19902nd placeRiverside Poly High SchoolNational Academy of Sciences
Maneesh Agrawala1990FinalistMontgomery Blair High School2009 MacArthur Fellowship
Christopher Bouton1992FinalistSaint Ann's School (Brooklyn)Entagen founder and CEO
Wei-Hwa Huang19936th placeMontgomery Blair High SchoolWorld Puzzle Champion 1995, 1997–1999
Robert Sarvis19944th placeThomas Jefferson High School for Science and TechnologyLibertarian politician
Daniel Biss1995FinalistBloomington North High SchoolMayor of Evanston, Illinois
Bill Thies1997FinalistState College Area High School2016 MacArthur Fellowship
Parker Conrad19983rd placeThe Collegiate SchoolEntrepreneur; founder and CEO of Rippling
Natalie Portman1998SemifinalistSyosset High SchoolActress
Keith Winstein19994th placeIllinois Mathematics and Science Academy2014 SIGCOMM Doctoral Dissertation Award
Feng Zhang20003rd placeTheodore Roosevelt High SchoolNational Academy of Sciences
Monika Schleier-Smith2001SemifinalistThomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology2020 MacArthur Fellow
Tianhui Michael Li20032nd placeOregon Episcopal SchoolMarshall Scholar, Hertz Foundation Fellow, data scientist, founder and CEO of The Data Incubator
Lester Mackey20036th placeHalf Hollow Hills High School West2023 MacArthur Fellowship

See also

External links