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Released: 4-Feb-2015 4:00 PM EST
Virginia Tech Climbs Two Notches in National Science Foundation Research Rankings
Virginia Tech

Rising one slot to No. 38 in university research expenditures in the United States, Virginia Tech is the only Virginia institution in the top 50 of National Science Foundation rankings and remains among the top 25 public research universities.

Released: 4-Feb-2015 4:00 PM EST
Virginia Tech Researcher Helps Find New Way to Use Electric Fields to Deliver Cancer Treatment
Virginia Tech

A team of researchers has devised a new way to target tumors with cancer-fighting drugs, a discovery that may lead to clinical treatments for cancer patients. Called iontophoresis, the technique delivers chemotherapy to select areas.

Released: 2-Feb-2015 8:00 AM EST
Reasons Why Winter Gives Flu a Leg Up Could Be Key to Prevention
Virginia Tech

As flu season continues, Virginia Tech professor Linsey Marr is studying how the disease is transmitted through the air, in hopes that her results will lead to new strategies to fight the flu.

Released: 29-Jan-2015 2:00 PM EST
Making Smart Materials Even Smarter – Earns an Engineer a Prestigious Air Force Award
Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech’s Pablo Tarazaga, an expert in the field of smart materials, has received a prestigious 2015 Air Force Young Investigator Award, valued at $449,600 over a three-year period. Tarazaga, a mechanical engineer, is one of only 57 scientists and engineers in the U.S. to receive this honor.

Released: 26-Jan-2015 10:25 AM EST
A Virginia Tech Engineering Approach Aids Georgetown Breast Cancer Researchers
Virginia Tech

A team of oncology and genetic researchers from Georgetown Lombardi and electrical and computer engineers and bioinformatics specialists from Virginia Tech collaborated in an effort designed to study the living cell as an information processing system.

Released: 19-Jan-2015 10:00 PM EST
Virginia Tech Paleontologist Names a Carnivorous Reptile That Preceded Dinosaurs
Virginia Tech

Paleontologist Sterling Nesbitt's latest addition to the paleontological vernacular is Nundasuchus, a 9-foot-long carnivorous reptile with steak knifelike teeth and bony plates on the back.

Released: 14-Jan-2015 9:00 PM EST
Scientists Developing Imaging Test for Autism Spectrum Disorder
Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech Carilion Research Institute scientists have designed a two-minute brain-imaging test that may be able to aid in the diagnosis of children with autism spectrum disorder.

Released: 14-Jan-2015 2:00 PM EST
Virginia Tech's 'Kitchen of the Future' Here, Now
Virginia Tech

The Virginia Tech Center for Design Research is unveiling the innovative future of kitchen design and construction at the Kitchen & Bath Industry Show Jan. 20-22 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Released: 12-Jan-2015 1:00 PM EST
Researchers Call for Changes in 50 Year-Old Drinking Water Standards
Virginia Tech

Andrea Dietrich, professor of civil and environmental engineering at Virginia Tech, and her colleague Gary A. Burlingame of the Philadelphia Water Department, are calling for a critical review and rethinking of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) secondary standards for maintaining consumers’ confidence in tap water as well as in its sensory quality.

Released: 9-Jan-2015 3:00 PM EST
Going Viral: Targeting Brain Cancer Cells with a Wound-Healing Drug
Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech Carilion Research Institute scientists were awarded a grant from the Commonwealth Research Commercialization Fund, part of the Center for Innovative Technology, to engineer a viral therapy for a difficult-to-treat brain cancer.

Released: 7-Jan-2015 7:00 AM EST
Snail Invaders Succumb to Vacuum-Steam Treatment
Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech researchers in the Department of Sustainable Biomaterials demonstrated that a vacuum-steam treatment is effective at destroying invasive snails in a pallet of imported tile.

Released: 4-Jan-2015 3:00 PM EST
Scientists Tap Tree Genomes to Discover Adaptation Strategies
Virginia Tech

A team of scientists has sequenced whole genomes from 544 unrelated trees of the same species. An August 2014 study identified gene sequences from Populus trichocarpa, to understand how trees adapt to different climates.

Released: 17-Dec-2014 12:00 PM EST
Virginia Tech's X.J. Meng Elected to the National Academy of Inventors
Virginia Tech

X.J. Meng, University Distinguished Professor of Molecular Virology, has been named a Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors. Meng is an inventor with 20 awarded and 17 pending U.S. patents, as well as 40 awarded foreign patents on vaccines and diagnostics.

Released: 10-Dec-2014 12:00 PM EST
Air Force Office of Scientific Research Funds Virginia Tech Materials Studies
Virginia Tech

The ability to control light in different scenarios has a variety of applications, such as creating all-optical computers that theoretically could be more efficient than electronic devices.

Released: 3-Dec-2014 10:00 AM EST
Virginia Tech Researchers Help Set Agenda on ‘Big Data’ Challenges at Virginia Academy Summit
Virginia Tech

The Virginia Summit on Science, Engineering, and Medicine will focus on challenges of collecting, storing, and interpreting massive amounts of data.

Released: 3-Dec-2014 10:00 AM EST
Virginia Tech Researchers Find a Relationship Between Sleep Cycle, Cancer Incidence
Virginia Tech

Researchers reveal that a protein responsible for regulating the body's sleep cycle, or circadian rhythm, also protects the body from developing sporadic forms of cancers.

26-Nov-2014 12:00 PM EST
Some Mosquitoes Better at Carrying Malaria Than Others
Virginia Tech

Of about 450 different species of mosquitoes in the Anopheles genus, only about 60 can transmit the Plasmodium malaria parasite that is harmful to people. The team chose 16 mosquito species that are currently found in Africa, Asia, Europe, and Latin America, but evolved from the same ancestor approximately 100 million years ago.

Released: 24-Nov-2014 10:00 PM EST
Circumstances Are Right for Weed Invasion to Escalate, Researchers Say
Virginia Tech

What some farmers grow as pasture plants others view as weeds. But with the need to cheaply feed food animals rising, circumstances are right for the weed invasion to escalate.

Released: 24-Nov-2014 2:30 PM EST
AAAS Elects 3 Virginia Tech Professors as 2014 Fellows
Virginia Tech

Honored were Madhav V. Marathe, director of the Network Dynamics and Simulation Science Lab; Joseph C. Pitt, a philosophy professor in the College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences; and Stephanie Shipp, director of the Social and Decision Analytics Lab.

Released: 4-Nov-2014 4:00 PM EST
EPA Recognizes Virginia Tech Postdoc's Research on Birds
Virginia Tech

Laura Schoenle is interested in how mercury contamination affects the levels of a stress hormone called glucocorticoid in birds. Low levels of environmental mercury can have a profound effect on animal populations in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. 

Released: 3-Nov-2014 11:00 AM EST
Groundwater Patches Play Important Role in Forest Health, Water Quality
Virginia Tech

Patches of soaked soil act as hot spots for microbes removing nitrogen from groundwater and returning it to the atmosphere.The discovery provides insight into forest health and water quality, say researchers from Virginia Tech and Cornell.

Released: 30-Oct-2014 10:15 AM EDT
Ant Behavior Might Shed Insight on Problems Facing Electronics Design
Virginia Tech

The National Science Foundation has awarded Michael Hsiao, professor of electrical and computer engineering at Virginia Tech, a grant of $418,345 to improve the accuracy in electronics design, using algorithms he designed that simulate ant behavior.

Released: 29-Oct-2014 4:00 PM EDT
Liberal or Conservative? Brain Responses to Disgusting Images Help Reveal Political Leanings
Virginia Tech

An team of scientists led by Virginia Tech reports that the strength of a person’s reaction to repulsive images can forecast their political ideology. The brain’s response to a single disgusting image was enough to predict an individual’s political ideology.

   
Released: 28-Oct-2014 4:00 PM EDT
Modeling Cancer: Virginia Tech Researchers Prove Models Can Predict Cellular Processes
Virginia Tech

Researchers developed mathematical models to predict the dynamics of cell transitions, and compared their results with actual measurements of activity in cell populations. The results could inform efforts to treat cancer patients.

Released: 28-Oct-2014 1:00 PM EDT
New Technology Shows Promise for Delivery of Therapeutics to the Brain
Virginia Tech

The researchers from the Virginia Tech – Wake Forest University School of Biomedical Engineering and Sciences described in their article in Technology published by the World Scientific Publishing Company that they have created “a tool for blood-barrier-brain disruption that uses bursts of sub-microsecond bipolar pulses to enhance the transfer of large molecules to the brain.”

Released: 20-Oct-2014 9:45 AM EDT
Research Aims to Preserve the Great Plains Grasslands
Virginia Tech

A team from four universities including Virginia Tech will use a $1.3 million National Science Foundation grant to look at governmental policies and social attitudes on the use of fire to reduce the vulnerability of grasslands to the invasion of woody plants.

Released: 10-Oct-2014 11:30 AM EDT
Nuclear Reactor Expert Discusses Ways to Prevent Fukushima-Like Damage with Scientists in Japan
Virginia Tech

Alireza Haghighat, a professor with the Nuclear Engineering Program at Virginia Tech, discussed research related to the 2011 accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear complex with scientists in Japan.

Released: 30-Sep-2014 10:00 AM EDT
Virginia Tech Researchers Discover Potential Biomarker to Detect ‘Bubble Boy’ Disorder
Virginia Tech

A genetic disease called SCID forces patients to breathe filtered air and avoid human contact because their bodies cannot fight germs. Now, using a mouse model, Virginia Tech researchers describe a potential biomarker to detect SCID.

Released: 30-Sep-2014 12:05 AM EDT
Virginia Tech’s Pruden Receives Innovation Award and $100,000 for Her Work in Water Quality
Virginia Tech

With her 2014 Busch Award, Virginia Tech’s Amy Pruden said the $100,000 in funding will be used “to help the water industry achieve an innovative and practical approach to achieving water sustainability while also addressing consumers’ concerns about the real and growing problem of antibiotic resistance.”

Released: 29-Sep-2014 11:00 PM EDT
Virginia Tech Carilion Research Institute Awarded $1.7 Million to Study Social Networking as Addiction Recovery Tool
Virginia Tech

Researchers will study how social media interactions could foster support for people recovering from alcohol, opiate, or stimulant addictions.

Released: 26-Sep-2014 4:00 PM EDT
Tooth Buried in Bone Shows Prehistoric Predators Tangled Across Land, Sea Boundaries
Virginia Tech

Before dinosaurs, it was thought the top aquatic and terrestrial predators didn't often interact. But researchers at Virginia Tech and the University of Tennessee discovered that the smaller of the two apex predators was potentially targeting the larger animal.

Released: 25-Sep-2014 10:00 PM EDT
Simulations Provided Early Alert to Deadly Potential of Ebola
Virginia Tech

A statistical report from the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention aligns with a previously released estimate about the potential threat of the Ebola virus by a national group of scientists, including simulation scientists with Virginia Tech.

Released: 25-Sep-2014 9:00 PM EDT
Virginia Tech Joins $30 Million NCAA, Department of Defense Effort to Curb Head Injuries
Virginia Tech

The initiative funds the most comprehensive study of concussion and head impact exposure ever conducted. It will enroll an estimated 25,000 male and female NCAA student-athletes during a three-year study period.

Released: 25-Sep-2014 10:00 AM EDT
Can Cartoons Be Used to Teach Machines to Understand the Visual World?
Virginia Tech

Google has awarded Devi Parikh of Virginia Tech’s Bradley Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering a Faculty Research Award that comes with $92,000 of unrestricted funding and allows her to work directly with Google researchers and engineers as they explore how to best teach machines from visual abstractions.

Released: 24-Sep-2014 4:00 PM EDT
Fossil of Ancient Multicellular Life Sets Evolutionary Timeline Back 60 Million Years
Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech geobiologist Shuhai Xiao and collaborators from the Chinese Academy of Sciences shed new light on multicellular fossils from a time 60 million years before a vast growth spurt of life known as the Cambrian Explosion occurred on Earth.

Released: 23-Sep-2014 3:00 PM EDT
U.S. Army Looks to Daphne Yao to Provide a More Secure Cyber Space
Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech computer scientist Daphne Yao’s proposed solutions to prevent insider attacks in the cyber security world will provide a leap forward to stronger Army command and control of cyberspace capabilities on the battlefield as well as in day-to-day operations.

Released: 12-Sep-2014 4:00 PM EDT
Virginia Tech Thought Leader Considers Global Response Plan for Nuclear Mishaps
Virginia Tech

A nuclear accident has no respect for lines drawn on a map. It becomes the world's problem. But for the most part, emphasis has been on prevention, not response. Until now.

Released: 8-Sep-2014 10:00 AM EDT
Speckled Beetle Key to Saving Crops in Ethiopia, Virginia Tech-Led Researchers Say
Virginia Tech

An invasive weed poses a serious and frightening threat to farming families in Ethiopia, but scientists have unleashed a new weapon in the fight against hunger: a tiny, speckled beetle.

Released: 8-Sep-2014 8:00 AM EDT
Virginia Tech Scientists Reveal Cell Secret Potentially Useful for Vaccines
Virginia Tech

Researchers open a new page in the immune system's playbook, discovering more chatter goes on among the body's infection fighters than was suspected.

Released: 2-Sep-2014 8:00 AM EDT
Scientists Find Possible Neurobiological Basis for Tradeoff Between Honesty, Self-Interest
Virginia Tech

A team of scientists from the Virginia Tech Carilion Research Institute and the University of California at Berkeley used advanced imaging techniques to study how the brain makes choices about honesty.

   
Released: 2-Sep-2014 8:00 AM EDT
So…Do You Know What’s in Your Water, Ask Virginia Tech Engineers?
Virginia Tech

Andrea Dietrich and Amanda Sain of Virginia Tech’s Via Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering estimated that 50 percent of the population taste threshold for manganese II in water, the simplest ionic manganese oxide, to be more than 1000 times the current EPA allowable level. Their findings appear in the Journal of the American Water Works Association, and they are now looking into possible secondary pollution issues with the release of manganese in air through its use in humidifiers.

Released: 20-Aug-2014 8:00 AM EDT
The Internet Was Delivered to the Masses; Parallel Computing Is Not Far Behind
Virginia Tech

The groundwork for Virginia Tech’s Wu Feng’s big data research in a “cloud” began in the mid-2000s with a multi-institutional effort to identify missing gene annotations in genomes. Today, this work is being formalized and extended as part of an National Science Foundation/Microsoft Computing in the Cloud grant that seeks to commoditize biocomputing in the cloud.

Released: 13-Aug-2014 6:00 PM EDT
Virginia Tech Unmanned Aircraft Test Site ‘Fully Operational,’ FAA Says
Virginia Tech

FAA Administrator Michael Huerta joined Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe and leaders from Virginia, Maryland, and New Jersey to watch a simulation of Virginia Tech engineers using a multirotor, unmanned aircraft to gather information at a mock accident scene on an interstate highway.

Released: 13-Aug-2014 5:00 PM EDT
Common Household Chemicals Responsible for Reproductive Declines in Mice
Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech researchers who were using a disinfectant when handling mice have discovered that two active ingredients in it cause declines in mouse reproduction.

11-Aug-2014 9:00 AM EDT
Giant Amazon Fish Becoming Extinct in Many Fishing Communities, Saved in Others
Virginia Tech

An international team of scientists compared mainstream bioeconomic theory with the lesser-known “fishing-down” theory, to discover that a large, commercially important fish from the Amazon Basin has become extinct in some local fishing communities.

Released: 11-Aug-2014 10:00 PM EDT
Neutrino Detectors Could Help Detect Nuclear Weapons
Virginia Tech

Scientists at Virginia Tech believe neutrinos could be used to monitor nuclear power plants for signs of nuclear proliferation.

Released: 4-Aug-2014 2:30 PM EDT
Veterinarians Use Nanoparticles to Deliver Cancer Treatment in Dogs, Cats
Virginia Tech

Veterinarians are testing the use of gold nanoparticles and a targeted laser treatment for solid tumors in dogs and cats.The nanoparticles circulate in the bloodstream and become temporarily captured within the incomplete blood vessel walls common in solid tumors. Then, a non-ablative laser is employed against the tumor.

   
Released: 29-Jul-2014 9:00 AM EDT
Researchers to Study Hereditary Breast Cancer to Find BRCA1 Treatment Option
Virginia Tech

People with a BRCA1 gene mutation are at much higher risk for breast cancer, but no treatments exist to specifically target this problem. Researchers will use structural biology tools to better understand this difficult-to-treat hereditary cancer.

Released: 23-Jul-2014 9:00 AM EDT
Obesity Linked to Low Endurance, Increased Fatigue in the Workplace
Virginia Tech

New engineering study conducted at Virginia Tech investigates ergonomic effects of obesity-related functional performance impairment



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