Curated News: Grant Funded News

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Newswise: FAU Harbor Branch Receives $2.8 Million Gift to Create a Queen Conch Farm in Grand Bahama
Released: 14-Mar-2023 3:50 PM EDT
FAU Harbor Branch Receives $2.8 Million Gift to Create a Queen Conch Farm in Grand Bahama
Florida Atlantic University

This support expands FAU Harbor Branch’s extensive aquaculture and food security program focused on replenishing queen conch populations throughout the Caribbean. It also enables development of a conceptual master plan for a 25-acre innovation hub on Grand Bahama for researchers working to solve issues of island sustainability.

Released: 14-Mar-2023 3:40 PM EDT
New Study Looks at Community Recovery After Wildfire
Cal Poly Humboldt

When wildfire strikes a community, it can leave a path of destruction, and a chance for renewal. During the fire and in the immediate aftermath, residents and officials focus on protection and stabilization efforts. However, the availability of resources to support community recovery and promote resilience to future fires over the longer-term is less certain.

Newswise: AI-based systems can help identify rapidly advancing age-related macular degeneration
Released: 14-Mar-2023 3:35 PM EDT
AI-based systems can help identify rapidly advancing age-related macular degeneration
NIH, National Eye Institute (NEI)

Researchers supported by the National Eye Institute are developing artificial intelligence/machine learning (AI/ML)-based systems that not only screen for AMD but also predict which patients will likely progress to late within two years. The systems also evaluate separately one’s risk for developing late wet (neovascular) AMD from one’s risk for late dry (geographic atrophy) AMD.

Released: 14-Mar-2023 2:25 PM EDT
Potential Treatment Target for Drug-Resistant Epilepsy Identified
Tufts University

A new study by Tufts University researchers found a molecule that could be a target for treatment in patients who have become resistant to traditional anti-seizure drugs

   
Newswise: The 2023 Shaffer Grants for Innovative Glaucoma Research
Released: 14-Mar-2023 1:30 PM EDT
The 2023 Shaffer Grants for Innovative Glaucoma Research
Glaucoma Research Foundation

Shaffer Grants provide seed funds to bold investigators whose creative projects explore promising leads and show strong potential for impact on glaucoma.

Released: 14-Mar-2023 10:05 AM EDT
Pregnancy Complications Tied to Higher Risk of Death As Long As 50 Years Later
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

Even decades after delivering pre-term or with conditions like gestational diabetes or high blood pressure, those with complications in pregnancy or birth have a higher risk of death

Newswise: Simmons Cancer Center investigators receive nearly $15 million in CPRIT funding
Released: 13-Mar-2023 1:45 PM EDT
Simmons Cancer Center investigators receive nearly $15 million in CPRIT funding
UT Southwestern Medical Center

Ten scientists in the Harold C. Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center at UT Southwestern Medical Center have been awarded nearly $15 million in grants from the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas (CPRIT) to advance research on a wide range of cancer issues.

Newswise: Rutgers Scientists Identify Substance That May Have Sparked Life on Earth
Released: 13-Mar-2023 9:40 AM EDT
Rutgers Scientists Identify Substance That May Have Sparked Life on Earth
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

A team of Rutgers scientists dedicated to pinpointing the primordial origins of metabolism – a set of core chemical reactions that first powered life on Earth – has identified part of a protein that could provide scientists clues to detecting planets on the verge of producing life. The research, published in Science Advances, has important implications in the search for extraterrestrial life because it gives researchers a new clue to look for, said Vikas Nanda, a researcher at the Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine (CABM) at Rutgers.

Newswise: S&T professor leads $2 million DOE project to curb climate change, critical minerals crisis
Released: 10-Mar-2023 10:50 AM EST
S&T professor leads $2 million DOE project to curb climate change, critical minerals crisis
Missouri University of Science and Technology

A researcher at Missouri University of Science and Technology was recently tapped by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) to lead a $2 million grant project related to critical minerals and clean energy.

Newswise: Innovating for the sea: U.S. Navy grant helps FSU chemist protect ships from marine fouling
Released: 9-Mar-2023 11:50 AM EST
Innovating for the sea: U.S. Navy grant helps FSU chemist protect ships from marine fouling
Florida State University

A team of polymer chemists in Florida State University’s Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry is developing a new antifouling coating to keep these sea creatures at bay. The work is funded through a new $510,000 grant from the U.S. Office of Naval Research.

Newswise: PCORI Awards Researchers $10.2 Million to Study Individualized Model of Hemodialysis
Released: 9-Mar-2023 10:05 AM EST
PCORI Awards Researchers $10.2 Million to Study Individualized Model of Hemodialysis
Wake Forest University School of Medicine

The Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) recently awarded researchers at Wake Forest University School of Medicine $10.2 million to study the effectiveness of an individualized model of hemodialysis, a procedure in which the blood is cleaned by a dialysis machine. The project is a collaboration between the School of Medicine, the Renal Research Institute and other health care systems across the country.

Newswise: National Science Foundation awards $90.8M to Arizona State University to advance X-ray science
Released: 8-Mar-2023 4:20 PM EST
National Science Foundation awards $90.8M to Arizona State University to advance X-ray science
Arizona State University (ASU)

The National Science Foundation today announced $90.8 million in funding to Arizona State University — the largest NSF research award in the university’s history — to advance groundbreaking research in X-ray science.

6-Mar-2023 2:25 PM EST
Discovery of T cells’ role in Alzheimer’s, related diseases, suggests new treatment strategy
Washington University in St. Louis

In Alzheimer’s and related neurodegenerative diseases, the brain protein tau is closely linked to brain damage and cognitive decline. A new study from researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis indicates that T cells play a key role in tau-related neurodegeneration, a finding that suggests new treatment strategies for Alzheimer’s and related diseases.

Released: 8-Mar-2023 10:20 AM EST
Virginia Tech researchers study PTSD effects on bystanders
Virginia Tech

The traditional line of thought is that post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is caused by directly experiencing the traumatic event. However, about 10 percent of diagnosed PTSD occurs when people witness these events versus experiencing it directly themselves. Little is known about these cases of PTSD, but that’s something that Tim Jarome, an associate professor in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences School of Animal Sciences, is aiming to change with a $430,000 grant from the National Institute of Mental Health.

Newswise: Supercomputer Simulations Show Ways to Clean Up, Speed Up Gas Turbines
Released: 7-Mar-2023 7:30 PM EST
Supercomputer Simulations Show Ways to Clean Up, Speed Up Gas Turbines
University of California San Diego

Planes, trains and cruise ships travel by the power of gas turbines. Simulations of combustion engines that convert liquid fuel to mechanical energy offer new ways to develop more efficient and cleaner gas turbine combustion systems.

Newswise: WormAtlas expanding beyond C. elegans with support from NIH
Released: 7-Mar-2023 3:30 PM EST
WormAtlas expanding beyond C. elegans with support from NIH
College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

The National Institutes of Health recently pledged $2.6 million towards the Center for C. elegans Anatomy, also known as WormAtlas. The center provides anatomical resources for researchers studying C. elegans, the tiny nematode worm that serves as a model organism for higher animals, including humans. Of the total award, $950,000 goes to co-principal investigator Nathan Schroeder of the University of Illinois College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences (ACES).

   
Newswise: UAH researcher seeks to explain why lithium-ion batteries abruptly fail; earns $598K NSF CAREER Award
Released: 7-Mar-2023 12:05 PM EST
UAH researcher seeks to explain why lithium-ion batteries abruptly fail; earns $598K NSF CAREER Award
University of Alabama Huntsville

Research focused on why and how lithium-ion batteries may suddenly fail energetically, causing smoke, fire or even an explosion, a phenomenon called thermal runaway, has earned a researcher at The University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH) a National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER Award totaling $598,181.

Newswise: Heart Tissue Heads to Space to Aid Research on Aging and Impact of Long Spaceflights
Released: 7-Mar-2023 11:50 AM EST
Heart Tissue Heads to Space to Aid Research on Aging and Impact of Long Spaceflights
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers are collaborating with NASA to send human heart “tissue-on-a-chip” specimens into space as early as March. The project is designed to monitor the tissue for changes in heart muscle cells’ mitochondria (their power supply) and ability to contract in low-gravity conditions.

Newswise: SMFA at Tufts Announces Traveling Fellows for 2022
Released: 7-Mar-2023 11:00 AM EST
SMFA at Tufts Announces Traveling Fellows for 2022
Tufts University

The School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts University has announced its 2022 class of SMFA at Tufts Traveling Fellows. The five artists will journey to places around the world to conduct research and find inspiration for their art.

Newswise: With NASA grant, ISU agronomist seeking to spot crop stress from space
Released: 6-Mar-2023 5:50 PM EST
With NASA grant, ISU agronomist seeking to spot crop stress from space
Iowa State University

A research team led by Iowa State University agronomy professor Brian Hornbuckle is studying how to use satellite-based sensors to remotely detect daily changes in water content and temperature of plants in fields across the Corn Belt, a system that could act as an early warning system for crop stress.

Newswise: With $13M, UIC scientists will study lung inflammation mechanisms
Released: 6-Mar-2023 5:05 PM EST
With $13M, UIC scientists will study lung inflammation mechanisms
University of Illinois Chicago

The research team consists of six investigators who will lead three separate project grants and three separate cores, in the hopes of finding new avenues for research and treatments to help patients who suffer from conditions like chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder, pulmonary fibrosis and acute respiratory distress disorder, a common and serious complication of COVID-19.

Newswise: Can bioengineered bacteria make cancer treatments better?
Released: 6-Mar-2023 12:45 PM EST
Can bioengineered bacteria make cancer treatments better?
National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering

Bioengineers from Columbia University are developing a pipeline to systematically evaluate how bacterial treatments might synergize with existing anti-cancer therapies in preclinical models.

Newswise: Microscopic Chalk Discs in Oceans Play Key Role in Carbon Cycle by Propagating Viruses
Released: 6-Mar-2023 12:20 PM EST
Microscopic Chalk Discs in Oceans Play Key Role in Carbon Cycle by Propagating Viruses
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

A Rutgers-led team of scientists studying virus-host interactions of a globally abundant, armor-plated marine algae, Emiliania huxleyi, has found that the circular, chalk plates the algae produce can act as catalysts for viral infection, which has vast consequences for trillions of microscopic oceanic creatures and the global carbon cycle.

Newswise: Researchers seek to improve care of patients receiving advanced cancer treatment
Released: 6-Mar-2023 10:10 AM EST
Researchers seek to improve care of patients receiving advanced cancer treatment
Yale Cancer Center/Smilow Cancer Hospital

A team of Yale scientists seeks to determine which treatment sequences produce the best results for people with advanced cancer while examining the cost of these treatments. The investigators recently received a four-year, $792,000 grant from the American Cancer Society to fund their studies. Shi-Yi Wang, associate professor of epidemiology (chronic diseases) at Yale School of Public Health (YSPH) is the principal investigator for the grant.

Newswise:Video Embedded a-pitt-lab-shows-phage-attacks-in-new-light
VIDEO
Released: 6-Mar-2023 10:05 AM EST
A Pitt lab shows phage attacks in new light
University of Pittsburgh

New methodology and tools his team developed by phage expert Graham Hatful provides the opportunity to watch in unprecedented detail as a phage attacks a bacterium.

Newswise: UC Davis study uncovers age-related brain differences in autistic individuals
3-Mar-2023 10:05 AM EST
UC Davis study uncovers age-related brain differences in autistic individuals
UC Davis Health (Defunct)

Differences in genes involved in inflammation, immunity response and neural transmissions begin in childhood and evolve across the lifespan in brains of people with autism, a UC Davis MIND Institute has found.

Released: 2-Mar-2023 4:45 PM EST
UChicago Medicine-led team selected for the 2022 Michael & Lori Milken Family Foundation-PCF Challenge Award to develop novel immunotherapy approaches in advanced prostate cancer
University of Chicago Medical Center

The Prostate Cancer Foundation (PCF) has awarded a $1 million grant to a renowned specialist at the University of Chicago Medicine Comprehensive Cancer Center.

Newswise: Groundbreaking Grant to John Theurer Cancer Center Will Establish the Hennessy Institute for Cancer Prevention and Applied Molecular Medicine
Released: 2-Mar-2023 9:00 AM EST
Groundbreaking Grant to John Theurer Cancer Center Will Establish the Hennessy Institute for Cancer Prevention and Applied Molecular Medicine
Hackensack Meridian Health

A transformational grant to Hackensack Meridian John Theurer Cancer Center from the Mike & Patti Hennessy Foundation, together with Shannon H. Pulaski, Ashley Hennessy Talamo, Michael Hennessy and Christopher Hennessy, in memory of their parents Mike and Patti Hennessy and in gratitude for the care provided by Andre Goy, M.D., M.S., chairman and director, chief of Lymphoma, and director of Clinical and Translational Cancer Research at John Theurer Cancer Center, will establish the Hennessy Institute for Cancer Prevention and Applied Molecular Medicine.

Released: 1-Mar-2023 3:20 PM EST
Tracking Trash: Researchers use aerial imaging to capture rapidly changing hurricane debris data
Florida State University

Juyeong Choi, an assistant professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering in the FAMU-FSU College of Engineering, will lead a $75,000 National Science Foundation-funded study examining debris collection and illegal dumping in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian, a Category 4 storm that hit southwestern Florida in 2022.

Newswise: Researcher Leonard A. Jason pushes discovery on long COVID, ME/CFS
Released: 1-Mar-2023 2:40 PM EST
Researcher Leonard A. Jason pushes discovery on long COVID, ME/CFS
DePaul University

Leonard A. Jason, a professor of psychology at DePaul, seeks to catalyze global knowledge about virally induced chronic illness and push forward discovery.

Released: 1-Mar-2023 2:40 PM EST
Wake Forest University School of Medicine Awarded more than $1.1 Million from The Duke Endowment
Wake Forest University School of Medicine

Wake Forest University School of Medicine received four grants totaling more than $1.1 million from The Duke Endowment to help improve health in communities across North Carolina. Illustrating The Duke Endowment’s commitment to improving the health of citizens in North and South Carolina, the four grants focus on projects that enhance patient care and promote better access to health care options.

Newswise: UCLA Health receives $25.3 million for street medicine program caring for homeless
Released: 1-Mar-2023 2:05 PM EST
UCLA Health receives $25.3 million for street medicine program caring for homeless
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

The UCLA Health Homeless Healthcare Collaborative has received a $25.3 million, two-year state grant to expand access and enhance coordination of medical and behavioral health care provided to people experiencing homelessness in Los Angeles.

Newswise: Study compares third-trimester sound exposures in fetuses, premature infants
Released: 1-Mar-2023 9:40 AM EST
Study compares third-trimester sound exposures in fetuses, premature infants
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

A new study is the first to compare the sound exposures of fetuses in the last 16 weeks of pregnancy with their age-matched premature peers. The analysis reveals profound differences in their exposures to noise, language and the biological sounds of the mother, with implications for the infants’ development.

Released: 1-Mar-2023 8:05 AM EST
UTHealth Houston researchers awarded $15M in NIH BRAIN grants to study speech, epilepsy, and dyslexia
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

Three grants totaling $15 million, which aim to enhance knowledge of the brain processes that play a key role in speech, epilepsy, and reading, have been awarded to researchers at UTHealth Houston by the National Institutes of Health Brain Research Through Advancing Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) Initiative.

Released: 28-Feb-2023 6:05 PM EST
How does wildfire smoke affect pregnancy and children?
UC Davis MIND Institute

UC Davis researchers have been awarded $1.35 million from the Environmental Protection Agency to study the health impacts of wildfire smoke on pregnant people and children.

Newswise: Georgia Tech and Collaborators Receive Grant from The Rockefeller Foundation to Improve Understanding of the Mobile Broadband Experience
Released: 28-Feb-2023 5:55 PM EST
Georgia Tech and Collaborators Receive Grant from The Rockefeller Foundation to Improve Understanding of the Mobile Broadband Experience
Georgia Institute of Technology

To make connectivity more equitable, researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology are developing open-source software to empower citizens to report on cellular network quality and places without any connectivity.

Newswise: SoilTech industry-university center to develop technology to measure, track soil health
Released: 28-Feb-2023 4:25 PM EST
SoilTech industry-university center to develop technology to measure, track soil health
Iowa State University

The research groups led by Iowa State's Carmen Gomes and Jonathan Claussen will be part of a new coast-to-coast, industry-university research hub called the Center for Soil Technologies, or SoilTech. Researchers from four universities just launched the center with a $3 million grant from the National Science Foundation.

Newswise:Video Embedded super-fast-insect-urination-powered-by-the-physics-of-superpropulsion
VIDEO
27-Feb-2023 10:25 AM EST
Super-fast insect urination powered by the physics of superpropulsion
Georgia Institute of Technology

Sharpshooter insects excrete by catapulting urine droplets at high accelerations. By using computational fluid dynamics and biophysical experiments, the researchers studied the fluidic, energetic, and biomechanical principles of sharpshooter excretion. Their study reveals how an insect smaller than the tip of a pinky finger performs a feat of physics and bioengineering – superpropulsion.

Newswise: Study Finds Association Between Lifetime Experiences of Discrimination and Incidence of Dementia
Released: 28-Feb-2023 10:05 AM EST
Study Finds Association Between Lifetime Experiences of Discrimination and Incidence of Dementia
Wake Forest University School of Medicine

According to new research from Wake Forest University School of Medicine, people who experience discrimination during their lifetimes have an increased risk of dementia. The study appears in the February issue of Alzheimer’s & Dementia, the journal of the Alzheimer’s Association.

Newswise: Applications Open: SPS Partners with Google to Award 20 $2,500 Scholarships to Physics and Astronomy Undergrads
Released: 27-Feb-2023 4:00 PM EST
Applications Open: SPS Partners with Google to Award 20 $2,500 Scholarships to Physics and Astronomy Undergrads
American Institute of Physics (AIP)

AIP Foundation and the Society of Physics Students have partnered with Google to award up to 20 $2,500 scholarships to physics and astronomy undergraduate students. Applicants must be undergraduate members of SPS and have at least one full semester remaining at the time of the award. The committee will consider applicants’ interest and perseverance in physics or astronomy, their effort and potential, and their active participation in their physics department, clubs, and programs outside the classroom. Applications are due March 15/

   
Released: 27-Feb-2023 3:50 PM EST
UChicago’s Polsky Exchange Expands Its Commitment to South Side Economic Growth with the Launch of a New Illinois Small Business Development Center
University of Chicago

The Polsky Exchange at the University of Chicago will soon launch a new Illinois Small Business Development Center (SBDC) to spur and support economic growth on Chicago’s South Side. It will be the first business development center specifically dedicated to supporting South Side professional services and technology business owners, such as accountants, digital marketers, web developers, content creators, and more—a gap identified by the Polsky Exchange.

Newswise: Tulane program for K-12 students exposed to violence will expand nationally
Released: 27-Feb-2023 3:00 PM EST
Tulane program for K-12 students exposed to violence will expand nationally
Tulane University

Members of the Coalition for Compassionate Schools train teachers, staff and administrators in how to recognize the reality and impact of trauma and how to respond.

Newswise: Grad Student Kaitlan Smith Reflects on Lumbee Heritage While Embarking on Curiosity-driven Science
Released: 27-Feb-2023 11:30 AM EST
Grad Student Kaitlan Smith Reflects on Lumbee Heritage While Embarking on Curiosity-driven Science
University of North Carolina Health Care System

Pharmacology graduate student Kaitlan Smith was recently awarded a diversity supplement from the National Institute on Aging (NIA) to study the effects of aging and necroptosis. She shares her resilient journey into scientific research while reflecting on her Lumbee roots.

Newswise: Department of Defense Grants University of Miami Researcher $3.25 Million to Study Male Infertility after Spinal Cord Injury
Released: 27-Feb-2023 7:05 AM EST
Department of Defense Grants University of Miami Researcher $3.25 Million to Study Male Infertility after Spinal Cord Injury
University of Miami Health System, Miller School of Medicine

Emad Ibrahim, M.D., director of the Male Fertility Research Program at The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis and the clinical andrology lab at the Desai Sethi Urology Institute at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, has been awarded a $3.25 million grant by the Department of Defense for a four-year study on the use of an oral medication to treat an infertility issue that affects most men with spinal cord injury.

Released: 24-Feb-2023 5:10 PM EST
Rutgers Researchers to Study the Impact of Multiple Health Conditions on Medication Outcomes in Older Adults
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

The National Institutes of Health has awarded Rutgers a $3.5 million grant to conduct a five-year study exploring the impact medications have on older adults with multiple medical conditions.

Newswise: FAU Harbor Branch Lands U.S. EPA Grant for ‘Hands-on’ Indian River Lagoon Field Trip
Released: 24-Feb-2023 8:30 AM EST
FAU Harbor Branch Lands U.S. EPA Grant for ‘Hands-on’ Indian River Lagoon Field Trip
Florida Atlantic University

The project will host 125 field trips, which will educate as many as 3,125 socially disadvantaged middle and high school students about Florida’s natural resources and the importance of conserving them.

Released: 23-Feb-2023 12:05 PM EST
NIH Grant Will Fund Next Steps of Research on Dance and Brain Health
Wake Forest University School of Medicine

Wake Forest University and Wake Forest University School of Medicine will receive $3 million over five years from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to help researchers take the next steps in nearly a decade of research that indicates dance can promote cognitive health. The grant funds a new study called IGROOVE that will help researchers determine what kinds of dance, the frequency of the dance classes and what aspects of the dance class – music, social interaction, cognitive challenge – affect fitness, memory and brain health.

Newswise: The Molecular Mechanism Behind Abdominal Aneurysms
Released: 23-Feb-2023 10:05 AM EST
The Molecular Mechanism Behind Abdominal Aneurysms
University of Maryland School of Medicine

In a new study using mice, University of Maryland School of Medicine researchers were able to tease apart the molecular components involved in abdominal aneurysms to better understand how and why they form.

Newswise: UCI-led study reveals how lung cells protect themselves against RNA viral infection
Released: 22-Feb-2023 3:55 PM EST
UCI-led study reveals how lung cells protect themselves against RNA viral infection
University of California, Irvine

A new University of California, Irvine-led study uncovers how a protein, APOBEC3B, could protects cells against many different types of RNA viruses like respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), SARS-CoV2, influenza virus, poliovirus and measles, helping to prevent disease. The study was published in Nature Communications.

Newswise: Salisbury University Police Department Unveils Cutting-Edge Training Simulator as Newest Campus Safety Tool
Released: 22-Feb-2023 3:30 PM EST
Salisbury University Police Department Unveils Cutting-Edge Training Simulator as Newest Campus Safety Tool
Salisbury University

Salisbury University's new Recon 180 simulator is expected to provide enhanced training and collaboration opportunities for the SU Police Department and allied law enforcement agencies. Its goal: Help officers make the campus and surrounding areas as safe as possible.



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