Brenda Ellis

  • Vanderbilt’s strengths in transportation, resilience research on display at National Academies’ board meeting in D.C.

    Vanderbilt’s strengths in transportation, resilience research on display at National Academies’ board meeting in D.C.

    Five graduate students named Eisenhower Fellows Vanderbilt University’s strengths in transportation, resilience and sustainability are on display this week at the Transportation Research Board’s 102nd annual meeting held in person in Washington, D.C. As part of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, the TRB provides leadership in transportation improvements and innovation. Four faculty members and six... Read More

    Jan 12, 2023

  • Automated Instrument Tracking Enhances Ophthalmic Surgery

    Automated Instrument Tracking Enhances Ophthalmic Surgery

    Technology driven by deep-learning model delivers 4D video-rate imaging, improves precision A multidisciplinary team of engineers and clinicians at Vanderbilt University Medical Center has advanced its work to develop new tools for intraoperative imaging during ophthalmic surgery. The team recently presented a novel, automated instrument tracking method that leverages multimodal imaging and deep learning to... Read More

    Dec 19, 2022

  • Civil engineers identify factors influencing bicycle crash severity in urban areas, provide recommendations for safety improvements

    Civil engineers identify factors influencing bicycle crash severity in urban areas, provide recommendations for safety improvements

    Using historical crash data, data collection, advanced classification models and machine learning algorithms that encompass critical factors in bicycle crash outcomes, Vanderbilt engineers Ishita Dash, Mark Abkowitz and Craig Philip developed an analysis that will result in a set of policies and actions that transportation planners nationwide can use to mitigate cyclists’ safety risks. The... Read More

    Dec 9, 2022

  • Michael R. King named National Academy of Inventors Fellow

    Michael R. King named National Academy of Inventors Fellow

    Vanderbilt University engineering professor Michael R. King has been elected a fellow of the National Academy of Inventors. The NAI Fellows Program recognizes academic inventors who have created or facilitated outstanding inventions that make a tangible impact on quality of life, economic development, and the welfare of society. Election to NAI Fellow is the highest... Read More

    Dec 8, 2022

  • Vanderbilt University, VUMC faculty named Highly Cited Researchers, rank in top 1% by citations

    Vanderbilt University, VUMC faculty named Highly Cited Researchers, rank in top 1% by citations

    Experts from the Institute for Scientific Information identified 13 faculty at Vanderbilt University and Vanderbilt University Medical Center as among the top one percent of cited researchers worldwide. The preliminary list of Highly Cited Researchers is drawn from the highly cited papers that rank in the top one percent by citations for field and publication... Read More

    Dec 6, 2022

  • Two Vanderbilt faculty win ‘TIME’ Best Inventions of 2022

    Two Vanderbilt faculty win ‘TIME’ Best Inventions of 2022

    Two Vanderbilt faculty who conducted translational research have received the distinction of Best Invention of 2022 from TIME magazine. TIME’s Best Inventions of 2022 Cover “These winning innovations exemplify the transformative potential of university research when it aims to solve society’s most urgent problems, and when universities partner with the broader innovation ecosystem to bring... Read More

    Dec 5, 2022

  • Two Vanderbilt faculty win ‘TIME’ Best Inventions of 2022

    Two Vanderbilt faculty win ‘TIME’ Best Inventions of 2022

    Two Vanderbilt faculty who conducted translational research have received the distinction of Best Invention of 2022 from TIME magazine. TIME’s Best Inventions of 2022 Cover “These winning innovations exemplify the transformative potential of university research when it aims to solve society’s most urgent problems, and when universities partner with the broader innovation ecosystem to bring... Read More

    Dec 5, 2022

  • AI-powered cruise control system may pave the way to fuel efficiency and traffic relief

    AI-powered cruise control system may pave the way to fuel efficiency and traffic relief

    The CIRCLES Consortium, consisting of Vanderbilt University, UC Berkeley, Temple University and Rutgers University-Camden, in coordination with Nissan North America and the Tennessee Department of Transportation, concluded a five-day open-track experiment on Nov. 18. Researchers tested an AI-powered cruise control system designed to increase fuel savings and ease traffic using 100 specially equipped Nissan Rogue... Read More

    Nov 23, 2022

  • AI-powered cruise control system may pave the way to fuel efficiency and traffic relief

    AI-powered cruise control system may pave the way to fuel efficiency and traffic relief

    The CIRCLES Consortium, consisting of Vanderbilt University, UC Berkeley, Temple University and Rutgers University-Camden, in coordination with Nissan North America and the Tennessee Department of Transportation, concluded a five-day open-track experiment on Nov. 18. Researchers tested an AI-powered cruise control system designed to increase fuel savings and ease traffic using 100 specially equipped Nissan Rogue... Read More

    Nov 23, 2022

  • Vanderbilt researchers develop app that promotes shared responsibility between parents and teens to manage family online safety and privacy

    Vanderbilt researchers develop app that promotes shared responsibility between parents and teens to manage family online safety and privacy

    For parents and teenagers alike, technology is a two-way street. Parents often rely on adolescents for help navigating new digital devices. At the same time, they are often quick to impose restrictive controls intended to keep their children safe online. To help resolve these tensions, Vanderbilt researchers, with collaborators from the University of North Carolina-Charlotte... Read More

    Nov 9, 2022

  • Vanderbilt engineering team wins $20,000 Internet of Things (IoT) challenge

    Vanderbilt engineering team wins $20,000 Internet of Things (IoT) challenge

    Four engineering juniors won $20,000 for EcoBuddy, a monitoring device that reports a car’s performance to its driver, and $10,000 in Keysight test equipment to Vanderbilt University. The team placed third in the Keysight Innovation Challenge 2022, sponsored by Keysight Technologies, a Santa Clara, California-based company that manufactures electronics test and measurement equipment and software.... Read More

    Nov 4, 2022

  • VISE affiliate receives prestigious NIH award for her research on Alzheimer’s Disease

    VISE affiliate receives prestigious NIH award for her research on Alzheimer’s Disease

    Biomedical engineering doctoral student Sarah Goodale has been awarded a National Institute on Aging Transition to Postdoc Fellowship for her proposed work on investigating fatigue and sleep disturbance symptoms in Alzheimer’s Disease and their relationship with functional and structural properties of the brain and intellectual decline. The National Institutes of Health NIA F99/K00 award supports... Read More

    Nov 3, 2022

  • Audrey Bowden receives NIH funding to develop point-of-care detection of jaundice in newborns

    Audrey Bowden receives NIH funding to develop point-of-care detection of jaundice in newborns

    Audrey Bowden, Dorothy J. Wingfield Phillips Chancellor’s Faculty Fellow and associate professor of biomedical and electrical engineering, has won a grant from the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering to develop a novel noninvasive smartphone-integrated device to provide accurate, point-of-care detection of jaundice in newborns of all skin tones. Audrey Bowden Newborns have immature... Read More

    Oct 13, 2022

  • Young researchers gain skills in new workshops offered by summer fellows program

    Young researchers gain skills in new workshops offered by summer fellows program

    Twelve exceptional undergraduates have benefited from the addition of new workshops to a 10-week Summer Fellows program that gives students first-hand experience in research laboratories and provides financial support. The Vanderbilt Institute for Surgery and Engineering’s Summer Fellows program expanded this year with the addition of two new workshops: Technical Communication in Research and Refining... Read More

    Oct 6, 2022

  • Vanderbilt researcher selected to present at UN’s COP27 in Egypt

    Vanderbilt researcher selected to present at UN’s COP27 in Egypt

    Vanderbilt University has been selected to present in two venues at the 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference, commonly referred to as COP27, Nov. 15 at Sharm el Sheikh, Egypt. Vanderbilt research assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering and Vanderbilt Climate Change Initiative Director Leah Dundon’s proposal on Vanderbilt’s ongoing research in marine shipping... Read More

    Sep 26, 2022

  • Vanderbilt engineering professor Sankaran Mahadevan wins international research award

    Vanderbilt engineering professor Sankaran Mahadevan wins international research award

    Sankaran Mahadevan, John R. Murray Sr. Professor of Engineering and civil and environmental engineering professor, is the winner of the 2022 IASSAR Distinguished Research Award. The award is presented every four years to two eminent senior researchers by the International Association on Structural Safety and Reliability at its quadrennial meeting. IASSAR promotes the study, research... Read More

    Sep 23, 2022

  • Nanoparticles boost anti-cancer immunity

    Nanoparticles boost anti-cancer immunity

    by Bill Snyder The growth of epithelial ovarian cancer, one of the most lethal malignancies, is associated with the presence of tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs), white blood cells that can block the anti-cancer activity of the immune system and immunotherapy. Fortunately, TAMs can be “repolarized,” converted from immunosuppressive tumor-promoters to inflammatory tumor-fighters. Now, Associate Professor of Pharmacology Fiona Yull,... Read More

    Aug 16, 2022

  • Environmental engineering graduate student wins DOE nuclear technology R&D award

    Environmental engineering graduate student wins DOE nuclear technology R&D award

    Megan Harkema, a third-year graduate student studying nuclear environmental engineering at Vanderbilt University, has been awarded a prize in the Innovations in Nuclear Technology R&D Awards competition sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Nuclear Fuel and Supply Chain. Read More

    Aug 12, 2022

  • Janey Camp to lead Vanderbilt Engineering center focused on transportation research

    Janey Camp to lead Vanderbilt Engineering center focused on transportation research

    Janey Camp has been named the director of the Vanderbilt Engineering Center for Transportation and Operational Resiliency (VECTOR) where interdisciplinary groups work on a variety of transportation and infrastructure resilience projects using groundbreaking applications and risk management practices. “It is an absolute honor to move into this leadership role for VECTOR at such an exciting time... Read More

    Jul 28, 2022

  • Janey Camp to lead Vanderbilt Engineering center focused on transportation research

    Janey Camp to lead Vanderbilt Engineering center focused on transportation research

    Janey Camp has been named the director of the Vanderbilt Engineering Center for Transportation and Operational Resiliency (VECTOR) where interdisciplinary groups work on a variety of transportation and infrastructure resilience projects using groundbreaking applications and risk management practices. “It is an absolute honor to move into this leadership role for VECTOR at such an exciting time... Read More

    Jul 28, 2022