ID
Story Categories
Authored on
Mentoring record brings national award for UW-Eau Claire’s Dr. Rahul Gomes
Published on:
Intro text

For the second time in a month, the National Council on Undergraduate Research has recognized a faculty member at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire for excellence in mentoring undergraduate research students.

Dr. Rahul Gomes, interim chair of computer science and current Ramsey Mayo research professor, has been awarded the 2026 Council on Undergraduate Research Mathematical, Computing and Statistical Sciences Division Mid-Career Faculty Mentor Award.

Sections

In March, Dr. Sanchita Hati, professor of chemistry and biochemistry, received the 2026 CUR Outstanding Mentorship Award from the chemistry division.

“I was not expecting this at all,” Gomes says. “On a national level this is pretty big, and I am still quite surprised — it’s actually turned out to be amazing.”

Gomes currently is mentoring eight students who will present five distinct projects at UW-Eau Claire's Celebration of Excellence in Research and Creative Activity, which begins April 27.

“It’s a little strange to suddenly be seen as halfway through my career, but I guess that’s about right,” Gomes says. “But it means I have much more time to keep working with undergraduates, which is so important to me.

“The world today, it seems, expects our graduates to be fully prepared for industry the moment they graduate. That kind of preparation requires a lot of learning beyond the classroom, and our mentored, collaborative research, working with a team and applying their knowledge, will help give them that preparation.”

As someone who spent part of his own career mentoring students in chemistry research, Dr. Michael J. Carney, interim chancellor, is pleased to congratulate Gomes on this national distinction.

“Dr. Gomes is the epitome of excellence in terms of faculty mentorship for our students,” Carney says. “Rahul is not only a gifted and talented researcher, but he also has the unique ability to interact and inspire great things in the students he collaborates with on important undergraduate research projects. He is passionate about engaging Blugolds in meaningful research and discovery, and his leadership and drive to excel creates life-changing opportunities for our students.”

Gomes and students at Board of Regents February meeting
Dr. Rahul Gomes, along with research students Mykle Buhrow and Braden Mau, took part in a panel discussion on artificial intelligence at the Universities of Wisconsin Board of Regents meeting in February.

A mentoring record that stands on its own

Dr. Alex Smith, chair emeritus of computer science, submitted nomination materials for Gomes, and describes him, in part, as someone who listens, makes time for those seeking his help and is “always willing to solve problems and get things done.”

“I am reminded of the adage, ‘If you want something done, ask a busy person to do it.,’” Smith says. “This aptly exemplifies Rahul and helps explain why he is so effective as a mentor for undergraduate research students and is so successful in broadening undergraduate research across our institution. He deserves this mid-career recognition by the Council on Undergraduate Research.”

Gomes has received several other awards recognizing his student mentoring, including:

  • 2024 Emerging Mentor in Research, Scholarship, and Creative Activity Award, UW-Eau Claire Office of Research and Sponsored Programs
  • 2024 Collaborator of the Year Award, Mayo Clinic Health System Northwest Wisconsin
  • 2024 Best Paper Award with lead undergraduate student. IEEE International Conference on Electro Information Technology

This CUR award is not simply based on numbers, but the following figures help give some context to the volume of Gomes’ research impact at UW-Eau Claire:

  • Since joining the UW-Eau Claire faculty in 2020, Gomes has mentored 72 undergraduate research students, building a sustained research program that integrates artificial intelligence, medical imaging and high-performance computing.
  • Gomes’s mentees have co-authored 17 articles in peer-reviewed, discipline specific journals.
  • Undergraduates in his program have delivered 34 institutional and regional conference presentations and completed 23 poster presentations involving 53 students at UW-Eau Claire’s Celebration of Excellence in Research and Creative Activity.

Gomes says his prolific research program was not necessarily his initial intent but rather grew somewhat organically from what he calls “sort of a pipeline” of interested students and some Blugold Fellows research scholars who began their research with him.

“In 2020, we had quite a few computer science students who were hungry for some different academic experiences before they graduated,” Gomes says.

“I was trying to build my own research agenda with health sciences and AI, we had the Mayo collaboration and the start of the Biomedical Innovator Scholars program — the ball just got rolling. Projects were crossing into more majors, senior students were starting to mentor younger students. It just evolved to what it is now.”

Current and past mentees agree — Gomes is an exceptional mentor

Paige Keller, a senior computer science major, has been conducting bioinformatics and machine learning research with Gomes for the past four years. In summer 2025, she also was selected for a multicampus AI internship program at Royal Credit Union for which Gomes was the faculty lead at UW-Eau Claire.

Paige Keller
Paige Keller is a senior computer science major from Crystal Lake, Illinois, and a member of the Blugold women's basketball team.

“Thanks to Dr. Gomes, I was able to present my research at the 2023 National Conference on Undergraduate Research and in 2025 at Research in the Rotunda in Madison, where I shared my findings directly with state legislators and other policymakers. My work with Dr. Gomes has resulted in one peer-reviewed journal publication as co-author and one article currently under review as first author,” Keller says.

“When I saw the email that Dr. Gomes had received this award, I was filled with joy because there is no one more deserving.”

The Royal Credit Union internship program was a great example of what Gomes sees as the advantage of the integration UW-Eau Claire has in the community, the partnerships he and others across campus have helped establish, giving Blugolds recognizability in the local job market.

“Student internships and research collaborations with organizations like Royal Credit Union and Mayo Clinic Health System have worked out exceedingly well,” Gomes says. “Of course, we always hope those students might be hired after graduation, but we know for sure that these entities have come to trust that our students will always get the job done, as an intern or an employee.”

Zach Caterer, a Ph.D. candidate in biomedical engineering at the University of Colorado Boulder was a first-year student at UW-Eau Claire when he began working with Gomes on an interdisciplinary deep learning project aimed at diagnosing kidney cancers.

Despite having what he says was “zero experience” for the work, Caterer says Gomes saw his potential and he soon became fully integrated into the research team, a team on which he later became lead student. The project resulted in Caterer’s first first-author publication in the journal Bioengineering, with Gomes as senior author.

Zach Caterer
Zach Caterer is an Eau Claire native who graduated in 2024 with degrees in biochemistry/molecular biology and statistics and applied mathematics.

“My work with Dr. Gomes was a formative mentoring relationship that shaped my development as a scientist and ultimately influenced my path toward pursuing a Ph.D.,” Caterer says.

“Dr. Gomes cultivates not only technical ability but scientific identity, independence and scientific curiosity in undergraduate researchers. My journey, from a freshman with no coding experience, to a computational Ph.D. student with multiple first-author computational-based publications and mentoring experience, illustrates the transformative impact of his approach.”

Gomes says recognition like the CUR award is gratifying, but more importantly, it serves as motivation to continue building the undergraduate research ecosystem at UW-Eau Claire.

“My main goals moving forward are to keep working in health sciences, but also work on the explainable AI, mainly focusing on the probabilistic models,” Gomes says. “I hope to keep working with Mayo, where our students are having amazing opportunities. But smaller businesses in the community may need help exploring how AI can work for their organization, and our students can be the experts for them through capstones and internships.

“Most of all, I want to infuse knowledge and foster excitement in these students,” Gomes concludes. “That’s the work I see myself doing at the senior level.”

For the media
For the media
Image download