Curated News: Grant Funded News

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Released: 7-Jun-2023 3:15 PM EDT
Looking deeper with adaptive six-dimensional nanoscopy
Washington University in St. Louis

Matthew Lew, an associate professor of electrical and systems engineering at the McKelvey School of Engineering at Washington University in St. Louis, has received a five-year $2 million Maximizing Investigators’ Research Award (MIRA) from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to support his ongoing work to improve microscopic imaging techniques.

Newswise: Tufts Clinical and Translational Science Institute Receives $78.4 Million NIH Grant
Released: 7-Jun-2023 11:00 AM EDT
Tufts Clinical and Translational Science Institute Receives $78.4 Million NIH Grant
Tufts University

Tufts Clinical and Translational Science Institute (CTSI) has received a $78.4 million Clinical and Translational Science Award from the NIH, the fourth consecutive grant since its founding in 2008. The grant provides federal funding over the next seven years to support research services, resources, and educational programs, and local, regional, and national initiatives. The award was announced by Tufts University and Tufts Medicine on June 7.

   
Released: 7-Jun-2023 10:00 AM EDT
Montefiore Einstein Cancer Center Awarded $2.9M NCI Calabresi Training Award
Montefiore Einstein Cancer Center

The National Cancer Institute (NCI)-designated Montefiore Einstein Cancer Center (MECC) has received a five-year, $2.9 million grant from the NCI to train physicians and scientists to conduct clinical and translational oncology research, with a special emphasis on investigating and addressing health inequities in the Bronx. The funding, part of the Paul Calabresi Career Development Award for Clinical Oncology (PCACO), will support up to four scholars for two to three years.

Released: 6-Jun-2023 1:35 PM EDT
National Sports Brain Bank launches with pledges of brain donations from Hall of Famer Bettis, more
University of Pittsburgh

Pitt unveils National Sports Brain Bank to track patients with contact-sports backgrounds; Steelers legends Jerome Bettis, Merril Hoge pledge brains and participation in innovative program.

Newswise: New Research Program Seeks to Identify Genes Key to Improving Resilience and Nutrition Value in Food Crops
Released: 6-Jun-2023 10:05 AM EDT
New Research Program Seeks to Identify Genes Key to Improving Resilience and Nutrition Value in Food Crops
Donald Danforth Plant Science Center

In collaboration with researchers at Purdue and Hamline Universities, Ivan Baxter, PhD, member, at the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center will lead a four-year, $2.5 million project to expand scientific understanding of the genetic processes that allow plants to absorb and make use of elements.

Newswise: Ready for risk: FAMU-FSU researcher maps flood hazards in Bay County, Florida
Released: 5-Jun-2023 4:05 PM EDT
Ready for risk: FAMU-FSU researcher maps flood hazards in Bay County, Florida
Florida State University

A new study by Ebrahim Ahmadisharaf, a researcher at the Resilient Infrastructure and Disaster Response Center in the FAMU-FSU College of Engineering, will map infrastructure and assets that are threatened by flooding in Bay County, Florida.

Newswise: Professor Receives Prestigious U.S. Fulbright Award to Explore the ‘Big Questions of Democracy and Development in Nepal’
Released: 5-Jun-2023 3:30 PM EDT
Professor Receives Prestigious U.S. Fulbright Award to Explore the ‘Big Questions of Democracy and Development in Nepal’
University of Northern Colorado

Richard Bownas has a personal connection to Nepal. Rather than keeping that to himself, Bownas will be focusing his work and research around the Nepalese Civil War traveling to the country from January to July 2024 to conduct an oral history project. He's able to do this through a U.S. Fulbright award.

Released: 5-Jun-2023 3:20 PM EDT
Study shows promising treatment for tinnitus
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

A randomized controlled clinical trial of a device shows promise for quieting the phantom noises of tinnitus.

Released: 5-Jun-2023 12:35 PM EDT
Susan and Henry Samueli give $50 million to UC Irvine’s engineering school
University of California, Irvine

The creation of three new multidisciplinary research institutes in The Henry Samueli School of Engineering is being made possible by a $50 million gift from Susan and Henry Samueli to the University of California, Irvine. Unified under the banner “Engineering+,” the Engineering+Health Institute, Engineering+Society Institute and Engineering+Environment Institute will allow researchers from diverse disciplines to conduct transformational research addressing the most important issues facing humanity today.

Newswise: Scientists Use Machine Learning to ‘See’ How the Brain Adapts to Different Environments
Released: 5-Jun-2023 11:05 AM EDT
Scientists Use Machine Learning to ‘See’ How the Brain Adapts to Different Environments
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Johns Hopkins scientists have developed a method involving artificial intelligence to visualize and track changes in the strength of synapses — the connection points through which nerve cells in the brain communicate — in live animals. The technique, described in Nature Methods, should lead, the scientists say, to a better understanding of how such connections in human brains change with learning, aging, injury and disease.

   

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This news release is embargoed until 2-Jun-2023 11:00 AM EDT Released to reporters: 1-Jun-2023 8:00 AM EDT

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Newswise: USDA grant expands data-sharing initiative that reveals swine disease trends
Released: 2-Jun-2023 10:50 AM EDT
USDA grant expands data-sharing initiative that reveals swine disease trends
Iowa State University

After pioneering a system to improve swine health by collecting and publicizing pathogen testing results from large public veterinary laboratories across the Midwest, a team led by faculty from Iowa State University’s College of Veterinary Medicine is planning to bore even deeper to glean more insight from the vast data set.

30-May-2023 5:00 AM EDT
New Research Suggests Wheat Crops May Be Threatened by Unprecedented Heat and Drought
Tufts University

A recent study led by a researcher at the Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University found that the likelihood of extreme temperatures that could affect crop yields has increased significantly in wheat-producing regions of the U.S. and China.

Newswise: New research may explain why, despite “the munchies”, frequent cannabis users are leaner than non-users
Released: 1-Jun-2023 4:05 PM EDT
New research may explain why, despite “the munchies”, frequent cannabis users are leaner than non-users
University of California, Irvine

Despite getting “the munchies”, people who frequently use cannabis are leaner and less prone to diabetes than those who don’t. University of California, Irvine researchers have now uncovered a possible explanation for this paradox – and it’s not good news.

Newswise: St. Jude finds NLRP12 as a new drug target for infection, inflammation and hemolytic diseases
Released: 1-Jun-2023 3:40 PM EDT
St. Jude finds NLRP12 as a new drug target for infection, inflammation and hemolytic diseases
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

Scientists at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital found key “on” switch, NLRP12, for innate immune cell death in diseases that cause red blood cells to rupture, which can lead to inflammation and multi-organ failure.

Newswise: Cancer cells rev up synthesis, compared with neighbors
Released: 1-Jun-2023 3:35 PM EDT
Cancer cells rev up synthesis, compared with neighbors
Washington University in St. Louis

Tumors are composed of rapidly multiplying cancer cells. Understanding which biochemical processes fuel their relentless growth can provide hints at therapeutic targets. Researchers from Washington University in St. Louis have developed a technology to study tumor growth in another dimension — literally. The scientists established a new method to watch what nutrients are used at which rates spatially throughout a tissue.

Newswise: Family resemblance: How T cells could fight many coronaviruses at once
Released: 1-Jun-2023 3:00 PM EDT
Family resemblance: How T cells could fight many coronaviruses at once
La Jolla Institute for Immunology

Scientists at La Jolla Institute for Immunology show that T cells can recognize several different viral targets, called "antigens," shared between most coronaviruses, including common cold coronaviruses and SARS-CoV-2. They also looked more in-depth at what fragments of these antigens, called “epitopes,” are recognized and how conserved they are across different coronaviruses.

Newswise: Axions whisper, but can you hear them? FAMU-FSU College of Engineering researchers think so
Released: 1-Jun-2023 2:20 PM EDT
Axions whisper, but can you hear them? FAMU-FSU College of Engineering researchers think so
Florida State University

Researchers at the FAMU-FSU College of Engineering are working with scientists from the Axion Dark Matter Experiment (ADMX) team at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) on a U.S. Department of Energy project to develop particle detectors that are sensitive enough to find these particles. The research, funded by a $350,000 grant, is part of a greater effort by the Department of Energy to explore the development of superconducting quantum detectors.

Released: 1-Jun-2023 12:45 PM EDT
Rutgers Tobacco Surveillance Center Will Provide FDA With Unprecedented Data
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Researchers receive $18 million to provide real-time information about new tobacco products, marketing and usage.

Released: 1-Jun-2023 11:45 AM EDT
Wayne State to develop application to conduct automated motivational interviewing counseling focused on weight loss
Wayne State University Division of Research

The National Institute of Nursing Research of the National Institutes of Health has awarded Wayne State University a grant of nearly $404,000 to focus on modern artificial intelligence (AI) technologies that could aid weight loss counseling.

   
Released: 1-Jun-2023 10:35 AM EDT
Tweets Showed Increasing Loneliness Among Emergency Medicine Doctors During COVID-19
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

Social media study found a steady increase in expressions of loneliness and depression as the pandemic continued

Released: 31-May-2023 6:10 PM EDT
DOE Announces $46 Million for Commercial Fusion Energy Development
Department of Energy, Office of Science

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today announced $46 million in funding to eight companies advancing designs and research and development for fusion power plants, representing a major step in President Biden’s commitment to a pilot-scale demonstration of fusion within a decade. Fusion reactions power the stars, and research is underway to make fusion energy production on Earth possible, providing an abundant, inherently safe, non-carbon-emitting energy source for the planet. This funding from the Milestone-Based Fusion Development Program will solidify U.S. leadership in fusion commercialization, a gamechanger that would help the United States meet the President’s goal of reaching a net-zero economy by 2050.

30-May-2023 2:45 PM EDT
New Penn Medicine Study Uncovers Key Details of Fat Cells, Advancing Potential Treatments for Obesity, Diabetes
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

New research has unlocked insights into how “good fat” tissue could potentially be harnessed to combat obesity and remove glucose from the blood, helping to control diabetes. Published today in Science Advances, the work is a collaboration between researchers with the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and University of Cambridge, Free University of Brussels and University of East Anglia.

Newswise: Overfishing Linked to Rapid Evolution of Codfish
Released: 31-May-2023 11:05 AM EDT
Overfishing Linked to Rapid Evolution of Codfish
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

The overfishing of codfish spanning the second half of the 20th century indicates that human action can force evolutionary changes more quickly than widely believed, according to a Rutgers-led study. Published in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, a report by scientists offers the first genomic evidence that Atlantic cod evolved new traits over only decades during a period of overfishing – evolutionary changes that scientists formerly believed could take millions of years.

Newswise: Genetic change increased bird flu severity during U.S. spread
Released: 30-May-2023 1:15 PM EDT
Genetic change increased bird flu severity during U.S. spread
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

Scientists at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital have discovered H5N1 avian influenza viruses gained the ability to cause severe disease and target the brain in mammals as they spread across North America.

   
Newswise: UA Little Rock Receives $1 Million Grant to Protect Against Energy-Focused Cyberattacks
Released: 30-May-2023 9:50 AM EDT
UA Little Rock Receives $1 Million Grant to Protect Against Energy-Focused Cyberattacks
University of Arkansas at Little Rock

The University of Arkansas at Little Rock and its partners announced the expansion of the Emerging Threat Information Sharing and Analysis Center (ET-ISAC) to further strengthen the fight against the escalating threat of cybersecurity attacks in the energy sector. This new project adds to the already operational Forge Institute Emerging Threat Center and enables purposeful collaboration to expand operational capabilities and enhance regional threat information sharing.

Released: 29-May-2023 2:55 PM EDT
Alzheimer's Center at Temple Awarded $3.8 Million from Pennsylvania Department of Health to Lead Collaborative Investigation into Vascular Risk Factors in Dementia
Alzheimer's Center at Temple University Lewis Katz School of Medicine

Alzheimer's disease is the most common form of dementia in the elderly. Memory loss and difficulty thinking worsen progressively, with some patients eventually becoming delusional, disoriented, and vulnerable to mood swings and depression. Finding ways to slow or reverse this progression, or even prevent symptoms from developing in the first place, are major goals in Alzheimer's research.

Released: 25-May-2023 5:05 PM EDT
Women with breast cancer shed pounds thanks to telephone-based weight loss program, clinical trial finds
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

A clinical trial, led by Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, has shown that a telephone-based weight loss program can help patients with breast cancer whose body mass index is in the overweight or obese range lower their weight by a meaningful degree.

25-May-2023 1:00 AM EDT
Climate-stressed trees get a boost from new microbial partnerships
University of Wisconsin–Madison

Plants live across wide ranges of heat and cold and rain and drought, but they don’t fill their niches alone. Along with the animals and insects that live on and around a tree — pitching in now and then to aid pollination or pest control or seed dispersal — there are innumerable microbes in the soil (like various fungi that grow alongside tree roots). These microbes can blunt the normal stresses of life by helping trees draw in more nutrients and water or influencing the time they leaf out or flower to best match seasonal conditions.

Newswise:Video Embedded induction-of-a-torpor-like-state-with-ultrasound
VIDEO
Released: 25-May-2023 11:55 AM EDT
Induction of a torpor-like state with ultrasound
Washington University in St. Louis

Some animals preserve energy and heat by going into torpor, during which body temperature and metabolic rate drop, similar to hibernation. WashU researchers have safely and noninvasively induced such a state in mice and rats using ultrasound. Their work could help people with health conditions and astronauts.

   
Newswise: Can sugar and fat influence immune cell responses?
23-May-2023 12:50 PM EDT
Can sugar and fat influence immune cell responses?
La Jolla Institute for Immunology

In a new study, published in Nature Cell Biology, scientists at La Jolla Institute for Immunology (LJI) explored the location, function, gene expression, and metabolism of MAIT cells in the mouse lung.

   
Released: 25-May-2023 9:40 AM EDT
UTHealth Houston awarded nearly $13M in grants to study treatments for traumatic brain injury
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

Nearly $13 million in federal grant funds to study treatments for traumatic brain injury, which kills an average of 190 people and hospitalizes another 600 in the U.S. every day, has been awarded to UTHealth Houston by the Department of Defense’s Office of Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programs (CDMRP).

Newswise: New UCI-led research shows people who live to be 90+ with superior thinking skills are resilient to Alzheimer’s pathology in their brains
Released: 24-May-2023 2:20 PM EDT
New UCI-led research shows people who live to be 90+ with superior thinking skills are resilient to Alzheimer’s pathology in their brains
University of California, Irvine

A University of California, Irvine-led team of researchers have discovered that the oldest-old, those who live to be 90+ and have superior cognitive skills, have similar levels of brain pathology as Alzheimer’s patients, however, they also have less brain pathology of other neurodegenerative diseases that cause memory and thinking problems.

Newswise: $2.5M Gift Targets Gaps in Circadian Biology and Medicine
Released: 23-May-2023 3:15 PM EDT
$2.5M Gift Targets Gaps in Circadian Biology and Medicine
University of California San Diego

A $2.5 million initiative supported by philanthropists Irwin and Joan Jacobs has created the Stuart and Barbara L. Brody Endowed Chair in Circadian Biology and Medicine, along with a supporting research fund, to target largely unexplored areas related to circadian biology and patient health.

   
Released: 23-May-2023 10:05 AM EDT
RPI and Albany Medical College Researchers Awarded $3.3 Million To Improve Breast Cancer Treatment Using Artificial Intelligence
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI)

Researchers from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) and Albany Medical College were awarded a $3.3 million grant over five years by the National Cancer Institute to use artificial intelligence (AI) to improve targeted drug therapy in HER2-positive breast cancer treatment. HER2-positive breast cancer tends to grow and spread quickly, but targeted treatments improve outcomes.

   
Released: 23-May-2023 10:00 AM EDT
Hertz Foundation Announces 2023 Hertz Fellows
The Fannie and John Hertz Foundation

From advancing artificial intelligence to strengthening our national security, the 2023 Hertz Fellows will address the most pressing challenges facing our nation.

   
Newswise: TTUHSC El Paso Partners with The MolinaCares Accord and Bank of America Charitable Foundation to Improve Patient Outcomes and Access to Mental Health Services
Released: 23-May-2023 10:00 AM EDT
TTUHSC El Paso Partners with The MolinaCares Accord and Bank of America Charitable Foundation to Improve Patient Outcomes and Access to Mental Health Services
Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso

Mental health is a significant issue across the country. In 2021, over 57 million adults in the United States – about 1 in 5 – experienced mental illness, according to the National Alliance on Mental Illness. As of February 2023, 36.8% of adults in Texas reported symptoms of anxiety and/or depressive disorder, compared to 32.3% of adults in the U.S., according to a Kaiser Family Foundation analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data.

Newswise: Cheap and effective monitoring of glacier discharge
Released: 23-May-2023 12:05 AM EDT
Cheap and effective monitoring of glacier discharge
Hokkaido University

Acoustic signals can be effectively used for monitoring glacial runoff and provide a cheaper and more accessible alternative to existing methods.

Newswise: Grant Funds Tree Planting on Campus in Honor of Felled Silver Maple
Released: 22-May-2023 5:45 PM EDT
Grant Funds Tree Planting on Campus in Honor of Felled Silver Maple
University of Northern Colorado

The grounds of the University of Northern Colorado received a welcome living, breathing facelift last week. As part of Arbor Day and Earth Day celebrations this year, students, faculty and staff picked up shovels and got their hands dirty planting 122 new trees across the university’s 250-acre campus.

Newswise: Scientists at Wake Forest University School of Medicine Discover Metabolic Sensor May Play Role in Alzheimer’s Disease
Released: 22-May-2023 1:05 PM EDT
Scientists at Wake Forest University School of Medicine Discover Metabolic Sensor May Play Role in Alzheimer’s Disease
Wake Forest University School of Medicine

Scientists at Wake Forest University School of Medicine have uncovered a novel mechanism that shows increased sugar intake and elevations in blood glucose are sufficient to cause amyloid plaque buildup in the brain, which increases the risk of Alzheimer’s disease.

Newswise: Windgate Foundation Supports Teacher Education with $3.5 Million Grant
Released: 22-May-2023 10:05 AM EDT
Windgate Foundation Supports Teacher Education with $3.5 Million Grant
University of Arkansas at Little Rock

The University of Arkansas at Little Rock has received a $3.5 million grant from the Windgate Foundation to endow the directorship of its School of Education. This gift will support the transformation of teacher education at UA Little Rock in its quest to become a premier provider of teachers in the state.

Released: 19-May-2023 7:50 PM EDT
New study finds common autism screening tool is effective but has limitations
UC Davis MIND Institute

A UC Davis MIND Institute analysis of 13 studies finds that a common autism screening tool is useful, but a clinician’s judgment is still needed.

Newswise: Georgia Tech to Lead NASA Center on Lunar Research and Exploration
Released: 19-May-2023 10:05 AM EDT
Georgia Tech to Lead NASA Center on Lunar Research and Exploration
Georgia Institute of Technology

Georgia Tech researchers have been selected by NASA to lead a $7.5 million center that will study the lunar environment, and explore the generation and properties of volatiles and dust.

Released: 19-May-2023 7:05 AM EDT
Uniformed Services University Receives $404K for WIC Military Outreach Program
Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (USU)

The Uniformed Services University (USU) has been awarded a $404,703 grant to implement a WIC Community Innovation and Outreach Project (WIC CIAO), designed to increase WIC enrollment in active duty military families.

Newswise: Discovery of Skin Cell Function Could Open Doors to Improved Burn Healing
Released: 18-May-2023 3:25 PM EDT
Discovery of Skin Cell Function Could Open Doors to Improved Burn Healing
National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering

Tissue engineering research has shown that a skin cell type could be a new therapeutic target to accelerate the healing of burns and possibly other wounds.

Released: 18-May-2023 2:15 PM EDT
Mount Sinai Brooklyn Expands Cancer Services, Infusion Center in $4 Million Project
Mount Sinai Health System

The Mount Sinai Health System today held a grand opening of the expansion of the Mount Sinai Brooklyn Ambulatory Infusion Center, a cancer treatment center that brings innovative cancer therapy and clinical trials to residents of southern Brooklyn.

Newswise: Finger on the pulse of drug delivery
Released: 18-May-2023 2:15 PM EDT
Finger on the pulse of drug delivery
National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering

Researchers from Rice University have created drug-filled microparticles that can be engineered to degrade and release their therapeutic cargo days or weeks after administration. By combining multiple microparticles with different degradation times into a single injection, the researchers could develop a drug formulation that delivers many doses over time.

   
Released: 17-May-2023 6:25 PM EDT
Morning Lark or Night Owl: Baylor Researchers Highlight the Influence of Behavior on the Circadian Preferences of College Students
Baylor University

A new study from researchers with Baylor University’s Sleep Neuroscience and Cognition Laboratory shows that chronotypes are more flexible than originally thought.

Newswise: Upstate 2.0 Wins $1 Million NSF Award to Transform Economy
Released: 17-May-2023 12:55 PM EDT
Upstate 2.0 Wins $1 Million NSF Award to Transform Economy
SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry

The SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry (ESF) is pleased to announce Upstate 2.0, a partnership between ESF and Cornell University that aims to bolster economic development in upstate New York, has received a $1 million development award from the National Science Foundation’s Regional Innovation Engines.

Released: 17-May-2023 12:55 PM EDT
Higher blood sugar linked to faster loss of brain power in stroke survivors
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Surviving a stroke can bring many long-term effects – including a much higher risk of dementia. But a study suggests that blood sugar may play a key role in that risk.



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