Latest News from: Virginia Tech

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Released: 7-Feb-2006 12:00 AM EST
Orion and VBI to Develop Diagnostics for Lethal Viruses
Virginia Tech

The Virginia Bioinformatics Institute at Virginia Tech and Orion Integrated Biosciences Inc. today announced that they have signed an agreement to facilitate the development of new diagnostic methods for key viral pathogens. Under the terms of the agreement, information on encephalic and hemorrhagic viruses.

Released: 2-Feb-2006 1:55 PM EST
Extreme Safety Corps Develops Safe System for Fast Construction
Virginia Tech

To make sure ABC's "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition" construction in Blacksburg, Va., was as safe as it was fast, Virginia Tech's Center for Innovation in Construction Safety and Health developed the Rapid Universal Safety and Health (RUSH) system and 50 faculty members and students served on the "Extreme Safety Corps."

Released: 19-Dec-2005 10:10 AM EST
An Engineer, a Dentist, a Veterinarian Build Bone Tissue
Virginia Tech

Most oral cancers are detected at advanced stages, requiring surgery and radiation. Repair of the diseased tissue often requires reconstruction. A more viable scaffold material capable of faster and higher quality bone formation could improve clinical outcomes for all oral constructions.

Released: 19-Dec-2005 10:00 AM EST
Teens Express Mixed Emotions About Parent Deployment
Virginia Tech

Understanding how a parent's deployment affects the emotional and behavioral development of their teenage children is the focal point of research conducted at Virginia Tech.

Released: 31-Oct-2005 4:00 PM EST
Virginia Tech to Showcase Super Computing Over New National Network
Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech will present advances in supercomputing and networking at the Supercomputing 2005 Conference in Seattle Nov. 12-18. The university will partner its Apple-based supercomputer, System X, with other supercomputers to respond to a challenge involving high performance computing storage capability.

12-Oct-2005 11:40 AM EDT
Researchers Determine Influences in IT Career Choices for Women
Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech research demonstrates that high school and college women who express an interest in a computer-related career share five central characteristics, including using computers at an early age, but typically not for computer games, and not discussing the career with a variety of people.

Released: 10-Oct-2005 8:00 AM EDT
Electrical Engineer Works on Personalizing Medical Treatment
Virginia Tech

Yue Wang is working with physicians to analyze cancer data from the cellular, molecular, and genetic levels. His team is developing tools that create analysis algorithms and are developing, optimizing, and validating neural network classifiers so that cancer can be more accurately classified and therapy can be personally tailored for optimal response.

Released: 6-Oct-2005 3:10 PM EDT
Both Virginia Tech Vehicles Selected for Grand Challenge
Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech's "Cliff" and "Rocky" are among an elite group of 23 autonomous vehicles that will rev their engines on Saturday, Oct. 8 at the starting line of the $2 million DARPA Grand Challenge race through the Mojave Desert.

Released: 28-Sep-2005 11:20 AM EDT
Network Dynamics, Simulation Science Lab Created
Virginia Tech

Virginia Bioinformatics Institute at Virginia Tech has established the Network Dynamics and Simulation Science Laboratory. Led by Christopher L. Barrett, the lab designs and analyzes simulations of extremely large systems and implements them on high-performance computer systems.

Released: 19-Sep-2005 12:00 AM EDT
Researchers to Help Smart Radios Form Cognitive Network
Virginia Tech

Cognitive radios can seemingly adapt to their environment and learn. Now Virginia Tech's Center for Wireless Telecommunications, with NSF funding, will develop a cognitive engine to allow the radios to share a distributed knowledge base to use for individual and collective reasoning and learning.

Released: 19-Sep-2005 12:00 AM EDT
Have Land Reforms Encouraged Active Lifestyles?
Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech's Metropolitan Institute is evaluating land reforms implemented after the Smart Growth Act five years ago in Wisconsin.

Released: 12-Sep-2005 12:10 PM EDT
Enhanced Imaging Techniques Could Improve Medical Diagnosis
Virginia Tech

Chris Wyatt is a Virginia Tech electrical engineer who is attempting to provide the medical community with better, quicker, and more relevant images of the human body. The side effects are not bad either "“"“ lower medical costs, new treatments, and earlier disease detection.

Released: 7-Sep-2005 11:00 AM EDT
Disaster Recovery, Disaster Preparation Experts
Virginia Tech

After the hurricane, and before the next one: Virginia Tech offers an expert on helping children cope with trauma. And before the next hurricane, why not listen to experts on disaster risk reduction and on communications systems for public safety, interoperability and coordination between agencies, and citizen notification.

Released: 29-Aug-2005 12:00 AM EDT
Engineer Investigates Enzyme Link to Neurological Disease
Virginia Tech

In the presence of unusually high levels of protein bonding catalysts, transglutaminases, too dense clusters of proteins can block neurovascular transport and cause neural cell death. Two Virginia Tech engineers are evaluating specific therapies to fight abnormally high TGase binding.

Released: 15-Aug-2005 8:00 AM EDT
What Really Happens When a Virus Enters the Body?
Virginia Tech

Does the immune system respond to foreign invaders or to damage? Two Virginia Tech researchers are using signal and image processing to observe the infection process and immune system response.

Released: 8-Aug-2005 3:45 PM EDT
Book on Nietzsche and Architecture Honored
Virginia Tech

Markus Breitschmid's book, "Der bauende Geist. Friedrich Nietzsche und die Architektur," or "The Building Spirit. Friedrich Nietzsche and Architecture," has been selected by the Institute of Philosophy in Karlsruhe-Germany as one of 14 seminal texts along with books by Aristotle, Heidegger, and Kepler written on the problem of architectural space.

Released: 8-Aug-2005 3:30 PM EDT
Three Professors Combine Talents in Play's World Premiere
Virginia Tech

"Eurydice," a one-woman play by internationally-acclaimed Virginia Tech English professor Thomas Gardner is being staged at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. "Eurydice" runs August 8-10 in the Greyfriars Kirk House.

Released: 31-May-2005 9:45 AM EDT
Virginia Tech Students Building Solar House
Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech students are building a a completely self-sufficient, energy-efficient, solar powered house, that will generate enough energy to power all the needs of the house, run a small home-based business, and power a solar car. The house uses renewable materials, innovative technologies, and potentially cost-effective construction methods.

Released: 16-May-2005 5:05 PM EDT
Defense Department Funds Advanced Military Wireless Networks Research
Virginia Tech

A testbed platform for wireless mobile ad hoc networks and wireless sensor networks will be the first of its kind at a U.S. university. Military mobile ad hoc wireless networks can connect groups while on the move. Wireless sensor networks are stationary. The researchers are investigation ways to integrate the network types.

Released: 13-May-2005 12:00 PM EDT
Student-Designed Furniture Selected for International Show
Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech's Industrial Design Program has been selected to present their work at the International Contemporary Furniture Fair at the Javits Center in New York May 14-17, 2005, North America's premier event for contemporary design.

Released: 20-Apr-2005 3:10 PM EDT
Congress Told Progress Slow in Bosnia-Herzegovina
Virginia Tech

A professor of international affairs tells a congressional subcommittee hearing on "Bosnia-Herzegovina: Unfinished Business" that 10 years after the Dayton Peace Accords ended the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina, the peace agreements' weaknesses account for the relative lack of progress and the legacy of ethnic cleansing endures.

Released: 11-Apr-2005 4:30 PM EDT
Being Too Clean Could Be Hazardous to Your Health and the Environment
Virginia Tech

Researchers at Virginia Tech have discovered that the use of antimicrobial soaps and other products may be directly exposing consumers to significant quantities of chloroform.

Released: 6-Apr-2005 6:00 PM EDT
Conclave Historian Releases Book in Paperback
Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech history professor Fred Baumgartner has spent many years researching the process and history of papal elections. He can expound on various queries about the process, from the most trivial to the ones most recently imposed by John Paul II.

Released: 15-Mar-2005 11:40 AM EST
Students Learn First Hand How to Speak Up on Behalf of Consumers
Virginia Tech

Courses on Consumer Rights and Consumer Protection come to life as students track legislation then witness the process first hand.

Released: 10-Mar-2005 9:30 AM EST
Training Program Developed to Implement Animal Identification System
Virginia Tech

Virginia Cooperative Extension has created a training CD and will offer educational programs beginning in April to implement the national animal identification program in Virginia. The Virginia program includes use of GPS coordinates as part of premise identification.

Released: 22-Feb-2005 1:00 PM EST
Book Urges Codes of Conduct for Classroom Behavior for Students, Teachers
Virginia Tech

A new book from the "New Directions for Teaching and Learning" series contends that lapses in student behavior often reflect shortcomings in the person at the head of the class.

Released: 1-Feb-2005 11:00 AM EST
Stiff Arteries, Heart Disease: A Problem of Waist Management
Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech research is uncovering why individuals with an "apple," or abdominal, fat distribution pattern are at a substantially higher risk of developing cardiovascular and metabolic diseases compared with those with a "pear" or lower body fat distribution pattern.

Released: 23-Dec-2004 12:20 PM EST
Fannie Mae and Vioxx Whistleblowers Have Predictable Fates
Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech professor Joyce Rothschild says many whistleblowers have both ethical characteristics and fates in common.

Released: 16-Nov-2004 11:00 AM EST
Researchers Create Free, Downloadable Software Radio Design Tool
Virginia Tech

The Mobile and Portable Radio Research Group at Virginia Tech has developed the fundamental software for use in designing software radios and is offering this tool free to other wireless communications researchers throughout the world.

Released: 8-Nov-2004 12:00 AM EST
Virginia Tech, TIGR Sign Memorandum for New Alliance
Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech President Charles Steger announced that the university and The Institute for Genomic Research have signed a memorandum of understanding. The new alliance will enrich the university's basic research capacity in the life sciences and enhance TIGR's computational and experimental capacity.

Released: 3-Nov-2004 11:00 AM EST
Tips on Holiday Moderation and Keeping Pets Safe
Virginia Tech

Holiday tips from two Virginia Tech faculty members: 1) Keep it simple; 2) Keep pets safe.

Released: 27-Oct-2004 11:00 AM EDT
Semiconductor Design Industry Faces Potential Roadblock
Virginia Tech

A Virginia Tech research group has announced key breakthroughs in semiconductor design verification. They have been able to reduce the process exponentially.

Released: 18-Oct-2004 11:00 AM EDT
Geospatial Center Provides Infrastructure, Hazard Assessment
Virginia Tech

Using layers of location-based information, Virginia Tech's award-winning Geospatial Information Technology Center helps government assess risks due to floods, winds, fires, earthquake, and human-caused disasters.

Released: 7-Oct-2004 12:00 AM EDT
US Agency for International Development Awards $34 Million to VA Tech
Virginia Tech

The U.S. Agency for International Development Economic Growth, Agriculture, and Trade Program has awarded Virginia two grants totaling $34 million over 5 years to lead two international programs that will enhance food security while limiting negative impacts on natural resources.

Released: 4-Oct-2004 12:00 AM EDT
Research to Improve Construction Safety
Virginia Tech

Each year some 38,000 construction injuries are reported, according to the Labor Department. The National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health has awarded Virginia Tech $3.4 million to investigate ways to reduce work-related accidents, injuries, and fatalities in the small construction industry.

Released: 28-Sep-2004 12:00 AM EDT
Plants Provide Model for New Shape-changing Materials
Virginia Tech

Over the next 17 months, Virginia Tech will lead a team of researchers exploring the development of a new class of materials that will use plant protein structures in an attempt to mimic biological systems.

Released: 21-Sep-2004 9:00 AM EDT
Virginia Tech Supercomputer Lead Designer Top Young Innovator
Virginia Tech

Srinidhi Varadarajan, director of its Terascale Computing Facility, has been named to the 2004 list of the world's 100 Top Young Innovators by Technology Review, MIT's Magazine of Innovation.

Released: 15-Sep-2004 1:20 PM EDT
Researchers to Study Recruitment, Retention of African-Americans in IT
Virginia Tech

NSF-funded research is looking at the recruitment and retention of African-Americans in IT-related graduate studies and jobs.

Released: 9-Sep-2004 10:40 AM EDT
Engineers Model Effects of Hurricane Force Winds on Structures
Virginia Tech

The researchers of the Hurricane Loss Reduction Consortium have instrumented homes along the Florida coast that were subjected to the winds of various storms. They have analyzed these results and made preliminary comparisons to wind tunnel results.

Released: 9-Sep-2004 9:20 AM EDT
Reporting Source for Disaster Recovery
Virginia Tech

To help the news media give its readers information they need to recover from a disaster, Virginia Cooperative Extension has developed a website with publications and tips.

Released: 30-Aug-2004 9:30 AM EDT
Two Virginia Tech Energy-related Inventions Win R&D 100 Awards
Virginia Tech

Sensors invented by the Center for Photonics Technology will make oil wells more productive. Meanwhile, an economical fuel cell material created by the Macromolecules and Interfaces Institute will reduce our dependence on petroleum-based energy.

Released: 28-Jul-2004 4:30 PM EDT
Cover Your Nose: Smelly 'Corpse Plant' Due to Bloom
Virginia Tech

A blooming Amorphophallus titanum, or titan arum, is so rare that only 20 have bloomed in the United States. VT's second such plant will flower on or about August 4.

Released: 30-Jun-2004 4:50 PM EDT
Affordable Homes Available in VA, Despite Housing Prices Increases
Virginia Tech

Affordable homeownership is generally available in most of Virginia, according to a recent study that measures affordability based on percent of income required for owner-occupied homes. But regions like Northern Va.-Fairfax and Dulles-Loudoun are out of reach for the average Virginian.

Released: 28-Jun-2004 6:10 AM EDT
Virginia Tech/DoD to Ready Unmanned Vehicles for Military Roles
Virginia Tech

Unmanned air-ground vehicle experiments will begin this year at the Virginia International Raceway near Danville as an initial step in the Joint Unmanned Systems Testing, Experimentation, and Research (JOUSTER) program.

Released: 25-Jun-2004 5:00 PM EDT
Cuban Expert Laments Developments That Further Restrict Travel
Virginia Tech

A professor of geography says that the federal government's latest tightening this week of study travel is a sad development for students and scholars. The restrictions abolish the short term trips and mandate that study trips must be at least 10 weeks long.

Released: 25-Jun-2004 3:10 PM EDT
Forestry Expert Helps Children to Save Bay Dune
Virginia Tech

An associate professor of forestry and Extension specialist has been advising students and teachers at Ocean View Elementary School in Norfolk, Va., to save what appears to be the last mature dune in Norfolk on the southern shore of the Chesapeake Bay.

Released: 24-Jun-2004 6:30 AM EDT
Formaldehyde-free Wood Products Possible, Just Not Viable
Virginia Tech

A World Health Organization panel announced last week its conclusions that formaldehyde poses a greater hazard than previously thought. Emissions cannot be completely eliminated for certain adhesives. Emission-free alternatives exist but cost more.

   
Released: 11-Jun-2004 12:30 PM EDT
Tip Sheet: Fight Against Sudden Oak Death Disease
Virginia Tech

Researchers have mapped the genome of the pathogens that cause sudden oak death, killing tens of thousands of California and Oregon oak trees. It has now been found in woody ornamentals in the east. Nursery and eastern forest contact information is provided.

Released: 9-Jun-2004 6:10 AM EDT
Expandable Radio Collar Enables Researchers to Study Black Bear Cubs
Virginia Tech

Researchers have developed a way to monitor survival of black bear cubs in Virginia by using an expandable radio collar.

Released: 1-Jun-2004 5:50 AM EDT
Secrets to Life on Mars, Predicting Volcano Eruption May be Locked in Tiny Bubbles
Virginia Tech

By summer 2005, researchers will be able to look for evidence of water on Mars by examining submicroscopic bubbles in martian meteorites, determine whether fluids and silicate melts trapped in volcanic rock can help predict future eruptions, and locate buried mineral deposits using data from surface rocks.



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