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Released: 15-Apr-2020 2:50 PM EDT
UCI team develops smartphone application for coronavirus contact tracing
University of California, Irvine

Irvine, Calif., April 15, 2020 – On Tuesday, California Gov. Gavin Newsom suggested that reopening the state’s economy will require six steps, the first of which involves “tracing and tracking individuals” in order to identify those who need to remain in isolation. Researchers at the University of California, Irvine have developed a tool that could be instrumental in this effort.

   
Released: 15-Apr-2020 1:10 PM EDT
Penn Nursing Offering New Telehealth Online Course Free to All Healthcare Providers
University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing

During these times of uncertainty, we’re all having to change what we do and how we do it—including health care providers who have had to swiftly migrate to telehealth to offer care that doesn’t require patients to travel and visit crowded facilities for treatment. To help meet this urgent need, Penn Nursing is offering its new online training in best practices for telehealth to all health care providers, free of charge, and each completed course provides 2 CEUs.

Released: 15-Apr-2020 12:35 PM EDT
Snapshot: Email Security and Privacy
Homeland Security's Science And Technology Directorate

DHS S&T, along with BlueRISC, Inc., is developing a new Cloud-based Root-of-Trust (CRoT) technology called EPRIVO Enterprise 2.0 to address mobile device email security and privacy.

Released: 15-Apr-2020 12:05 PM EDT
Mount Sinai Launches Personalized Online Learning Platform for Nurses on the Front Line of COVID-19 Fight
Mount Sinai Health System

Project Florence enhances skills of nurses serving critically ill patients; curriculum is free to hospitals worldwide

Released: 15-Apr-2020 11:50 AM EDT
Introducing Mauricio Suarez, Fermilab head of the Illinois Accelerator Research Center
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab)

Mauricio Suarez has been with Fermilab for only a few months, yet he has already taken full command promoting a key aspect of the lab's mission: to develop new technologies for science that support U.S. industrial competitiveness. As the person in charge of connecting Fermilab with industry partners, Suarez is leading the way for the lab to foster innovation and advance technologies for the benefit of society.

Released: 15-Apr-2020 11:15 AM EDT
Synapse Biomedical receives FDA emergency approval to use temporary breathing pacing device for COVID-19
University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center

Synapse Biomedical, a spin out company from University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center (UH) and Case Western Reserve University (CWRU), has received FDA approval for emergency use of its TransAeris Diaphragmatic Pacing Stimulator System to help wean any patient off of the ventilator including COVID-19 patients. Diaphragm pacing has the potential of freeing up ventilators as patients could be moved off of ventilators and placed on the pacing system.

Released: 15-Apr-2020 9:00 AM EDT
NUS engineers invent self-healing and self-concealing silicon chip ‘fingerprint’ for stronger hardware security at low cost
National University of Singapore (NUS)

A team from National University of Singapore has invented a novel technique to create self-healing and self-concealing ‘fingerprints’ for silicon chips. This breakthrough enhances hardware security at a low cost.

Released: 15-Apr-2020 8:50 AM EDT
Finding Credible Cancer Education Resources during the COVID-19 Pandemic
Rutgers Cancer Institute

While most public, hospital and academic libraries are closed to visitors due to the COVID-19 pandemic, there is a wealth of information available online, especially for cancer patients seeking disease specific information. Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey's medical librarian shares some tips.

Released: 14-Apr-2020 3:55 PM EDT
Three electrical engineering and computer science faculty earn NSF CAREER Awards
Penn State College of Engineering

Three faculty members from the School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS) in the Penn State College of Engineering have been awarded Faculty Early Career Development Program (CAREER) Awards from the National Science Foundation (NSF).

Released: 14-Apr-2020 3:05 PM EDT
Algorithm tracker monitors Reddit rankings of COVID-19 posts
Cornell University

Since 2016, Cornell University assistant professor of communication J. Nathan Matias has tracked the algorithms on Reddit, a massive network of forums where people share content and news, and which claims to have more users than Twitter. As the coronavirus pandemic exploded, Matias began using the tool – called the COVID-19 Algo-Tracker – to monitor Reddit’s virus-related posts and threads, both to inform people about the mechanisms behind the information they’re receiving and to create a large, publicly available dataset for future research.

Released: 14-Apr-2020 12:05 PM EDT
NIH-funded MD2K Center releases app that alerts user if close contact with COVID-19 cases
National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering

Researchers at the University of Memphis-based Center of Excellence for Mobile Sensor Data-to-Knowledge (MD2K) have introduced a new mobile app that may support physical distancing during the COVID-19 pandemic. MD2K is supported by NIH with a grant administered by NIBIB.

   
Released: 14-Apr-2020 8:55 AM EDT
Coronavirus brings dawn of digital healthcare
University of Warwick

In the editorial, 'COVID-19: A new digital dawn?', published in the journal Digital Health (SAGE Publications), researchers from our Institute of Digital Healthcare at WMG, University of Warwick (together with colleagues from Warwick Medical School, University Hospitals Coventry & Warwickshire NHS Trust and Bristol Heart Institute, United Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation Trust) provide insight into how these three reasons have led to an increase in digital healthcare.

Released: 13-Apr-2020 2:00 PM EDT
Cybersecurity, tech infrastructure requires international trust
Cornell University

In new research published in the Journal Technology and Culture, Rebecca Slayton, professor of science and technology studies at Cornell University, uses the field of incident response to shed light on how experts – and nations – can more effectively combat cyberwarfare when they foster trust and transcend politics.

Released: 13-Apr-2020 11:00 AM EDT
Data Visualization Tool Examines Community Factors Underlying COVID-19 Outcomes
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI)

A new data visualization tool examines how and why COVID-19 impacts regions differently. Using daily updated data, COVIDMinder compares community risks, mediation tools, and outcomes related to COVID-19 by state across the United States, and by county within New York state.

   
Released: 13-Apr-2020 9:00 AM EDT
Tech not hurting social skills of ‘kids these days’
Ohio State University

Despite the time spent with smartphones and social media, young people today are just as socially skilled as those from the previous generation, a new study suggests.

Released: 13-Apr-2020 5:00 AM EDT
Cell Membrane Proteins Imaged in 3-D
Brookhaven National Laboratory

A team of scientists including researchers at the National Synchrotron Light Source II have demonstrated a new technique for imaging proteins in 3-D with nanoscale resolution. Their work, published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society, enables researchers to identify the precise location of proteins within individual cells, reaching the resolution of the cell membrane and the smallest subcellular organelles.

Released: 10-Apr-2020 8:05 PM EDT
US approaching peak of ‘active’ COVID-19 cases, strain on medical resources, new modeling shows
University of Washington

A new data-driven mathematical model of the coronavirus pandemic predicts that the United States will peak in the number of “active” COVID-19 cases on or around April 20, marking a critical milestone on the demand for medical resources.

   
Released: 10-Apr-2020 4:05 PM EDT
DHS S&T Awards $199K to Birmingham Start-Up for Passenger Property Screening
Homeland Security's Science And Technology Directorate

DHS) Science and Technology Directorate (S&T) awarded $199,536 Phase 1 funding to Analytical AI of Birmingham, Alabama.

Released: 10-Apr-2020 1:05 PM EDT
Staying home? A geography expert in Buffalo creates a customizable 'coloring book' of city neighborhoods
University at Buffalo

Anyone can use the map. Kids can use the map as a learning activity by identifying their house; drawing in missing features, like cars, dogs or potholes; or color-coding their neighborhood according to themes such as the number of trees on a block.

Released: 10-Apr-2020 12:15 PM EDT
Limbitless Solutions Temporarily Shifts Production from Creating Bionic Arms to Support Nationwide Coalition Producing Face Shields During COVID-19 Pandemic
University of Central Florida

Limbitless Solutions has shifted from making bionic arms for children to 3D printing components of face shields to health care workers and first-responders responding to the COVID-19.

Released: 10-Apr-2020 12:10 PM EDT
UCF and Orlando Health Partner with Stratasys to 3D-Print Critical PPE for Healthcare Providers
University of Central Florida

The University of Central Florida, Orlando Health and 3D printing company Stratasys are leading an effort to rapidly 3D-print critical personal protective equipment (PPE) to ensure it is available for local healthcare professionals in their fight against COVID-19.

Released: 10-Apr-2020 8:25 AM EDT
DHS S&T Invites Critical Infrastructure Owners & Operators to GPS Spoofing Test Event
Homeland Security's Science And Technology Directorate

DHS S&T announced today an opportunity for critical infrastructure owners & operators and GPS equipment manufacturers to test their equipment against GPS spoofing. The 2020 GPS Testing for Critical Infrastructure (GET-CI) event will be held later this year and is the third in this series of test opportunities.

   
Released: 10-Apr-2020 8:15 AM EDT
South Africa’s National Integrated Cyberinfrastructure System joins Los Alamos’ Efficient Mission Centric Computing Consortium
Los Alamos National Laboratory

Los Alamos National Laboratory’s Efficient Mission Centric Computing Consortium (EMC3) recently welcomed its first international partner, the South African National Integrated Cyberinfrastructure System (NICIS).

Released: 10-Apr-2020 8:10 AM EDT
S&T Extends MITRE Corporation Operation of HSSEDI
Homeland Security's Science And Technology Directorate

DHS S&T renewed the sponsorship for the continued operation of HSSEDI, FFRDC with the MITRE Corporation (MITRE). MITRE has operated the HSSEDI in five-year increments since 2009.

   
Released: 9-Apr-2020 3:10 PM EDT
Darden Executive Education Expands Digital Offerings to Advance Lifelong Learning Remotely
University of Virginia Darden School of Business

Rapid strategic pivots due to the coronavirus pandemic, digital disruption at massive scale and increasingly global, complex organizations — the need for lifelong learning to advance leadership capabilities and technical skills has never been greater.

Released: 9-Apr-2020 2:30 PM EDT
Leading Hospitals Choose AHIMA’s Compliant Template Library Within Artifact Health’s Mobile Physician Query Platform
American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA)

The American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA) announced today that two leading hospitals have chosen to use the AHIMA library of physician query templates available in Artifact Health’s mobile physician query platform.

Released: 9-Apr-2020 1:40 PM EDT
Social media can forecast economic impact of disasters including COVID-19 pandemic
University of Bristol

Social media should be used to chart the economic impact and recovery of businesses in countries affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, according to new research published in Nature Communications.

Released: 9-Apr-2020 1:35 PM EDT
How students and faculty can prepare to work online
Texas State University

In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, millions of students nationwide are now – or soon will be – taking classes online.

Released: 9-Apr-2020 1:05 PM EDT
Snail mail to Wi-Fi: Cornell University’s history of remote instruction
Cornell University

Generations before universities’ shift to online classes this semester due to the coronavirus pandemic, Cornell university was making strides in remote instruction – including some of the earliest, and one of the largest, distance learning programs in the United States.

Released: 9-Apr-2020 12:40 PM EDT
Balancing screen time as life moves online
Texas State University

Lately, almost all aspects of life have become “virtual.” Opportunities for in-person social engagement, education, and outdoor experiences have largely been moved onto screens.

Released: 9-Apr-2020 11:10 AM EDT
FaceTime, Faith and Zoom’ing Through Holy Week; UNH Expert on Worshipping During COVID-19
University of New Hampshire

For most religions, coming together as a community to worship is at the core of their practice, but during this unique and unsettling time of mask wearing and social distancing praying together can be a challenge as many churches remain closed during the coronavirus pandemic. Michele Dillon, a scholar of Catholicism and professor of sociology at the University of New Hampshire, finds that during one of the most holy periods on the Christian calendar clergy and parishioners are learning to make the liturgy work as online events, while continuing to follow COVID-19 guidelines.

Released: 9-Apr-2020 10:05 AM EDT
University of Redlands Political Science Professor thwarts pandemic and embraces technology to honor student work
University of Redlands

When University of Redlands Professor Renée Van Vechten offered to coordinate the second annual Western regional Pi Sigma Alpha conference, she had no inkling she would have to do so in the midst of a pandemic. But, with this year’s conference scheduled for March 20, the possibility of an in-person event began to wane as university campuses began to close and students began to attend class online. Instead of canceling or rescheduling the event, Van Vechten and U of R’s Pi Sigma Alpha students decided to host the conference virtually.

Released: 8-Apr-2020 5:35 PM EDT
SDSC’s Comet Supercomputer, TSCC Available for COVID-19 Research
University of California San Diego

The San Diego Supercomputer Center at the University of California San Diego is providing priority access to its high-performance computer systems and other resources to researchers advancing our understanding of the virus and efforts to develop an effective vaccine in as short a time as possible.

   
Released: 8-Apr-2020 3:10 PM EDT
STEM students learn as well online as in classrooms
Cornell University

Students learned just as much in online STEM college courses as they did in traditional classroom settings, and at a fraction of the cost, according to a first-of-its-kind study.

Released: 8-Apr-2020 2:10 PM EDT
Vanderbilt nursing students experience social distancing … and provide virtual clinical patient care
Vanderbilt University

Vanderbilt University School of Nursing has found innovative ways to allow their nursing pre-specialty students continue with their clinical education while social distancing during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Released: 8-Apr-2020 11:10 AM EDT
Behind-the-scenes academic support gives students a boost during atypical semester
Iowa State University

Beyond the logistical issues of migrating more than 6,000 courses online for the remainder of the spring semester, Iowa State University has also responded with academic support for students navigating this new learning environment.

Released: 7-Apr-2020 6:40 PM EDT
UW Medicine recruiting for app to predict next outbreak
University of Washington School of Medicine

UW Medicine is recruiting 25,000 people nationwide to test out a smartphone app that's intended to predict outbreaks of infections such as cold, flu, or other virus outbreaks. The app is a project funded by the Defense Department’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, which makes investments in technologies that support national security.

Released: 7-Apr-2020 5:05 PM EDT
UCLA web app will enlist public’s help in slowing the spread of COVID-19
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

UCLA researchers have launched an app called Stop COVID-19 Together, which is designed to predict the spread of COVID-19 throughout the community and to assess the effectiveness of current measures in that community, including physical distancing. The app will build a map of possible hotspots where there may be a higher risk for accelerated spread of the disease.

   
Released: 7-Apr-2020 3:40 PM EDT
Cornell Tech domestic tech abuse clinic goes virtual
Cornell University

Cornell Tech’s Clinic to End Tech Abuse has created a remote program to help survivors of intimate partner abuse use their devices without fear of monitoring or stalking.

Released: 7-Apr-2020 3:35 PM EDT
A unique heat storage technology gathers steam
Argonne National Laboratory

Many processes that generate electricity also produce heat, a potent energy resource that often goes untapped everywhere from factories to vehicles to power plants. An innovative system currently being developed at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory can quickly store heat and release it for use when needed, surpassing conventional storage options in both flexibility and efficiency.

Released: 7-Apr-2020 11:45 AM EDT
Telehealth Services Rapidly Expand at Nationwide Children’s Hospital Amid COVID-19 Response
Nationwide Children's Hospital

As the COVID-19 global pandemic continues, it is imperative community networks, including health care systems, modify how they provide services. Nationwide Children’s Hospital has quickly adapted the way care is delivered to its patients and their families.

   
Released: 7-Apr-2020 10:15 AM EDT
Study reveals patterns behind big ideas
Cornell University

“The biggest ideas – the biggest solutions – exist further away from what we already know,” said Madeline Kneeland, assistant professor in the School of Hotel Administration and first author of “Exploring Uncharted Territory: Knowledge Search Processes in the Origination of Outlier Innovation,” which published April 1 in Organization Science.

Released: 7-Apr-2020 9:00 AM EDT
Researchers Working on Computational Models to Design Ways to Treat COVID-19
Brookhaven National Laboratory

A team of Stony Brook University (SBU) researchers is working on computer models that could help speed the discovery of drugs to combat the novel coronavirus responsible for COVID-19. They are doing this work in collaboration with scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory and Argonne National Laboratory, and will be leveraging those laboratories’ computational resources and expertise.

   


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