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  • Tata receives NSF Early CAREER Award to identify network vulnerabilities and failures

    Tata receives NSF Early CAREER Award to identify network vulnerabilities and failures

    Ahmad F. Tata, associate professor of civil and environmental engineering, has received a prestigious NSF CAREER Award for fundamental research in new approaches to network sensors and controllers scheduling. His CAREER project, “Scheduling Driving Sensing and Control Nodes in Nonlinear Networks with Applications to Fuel-Free Energy Systems,” offers a novel framework for the exploration of... Read More

    Apr 15, 2022

  • Braun receives NSF Early CAREER Award to create next-gen robots to assist humans

    Braun receives NSF Early CAREER Award to create next-gen robots to assist humans

    David Braun, assistant professor of mechanical engineering, has received a prestigious NSF CAREER Award for foundational research in mechanically adaptive robotics. His CAREER project, “Mechanically Adaptive, Energetically Passive Robotics,” will enable the creation of new-generation industrial robots, transportation systems, and devices that can assist and augment humans. The five-year, $600,000 grant will support work on robot... Read More

    Apr 13, 2022

  • International collaboration reveals how the human brain evolved to harness abstract thought

    International collaboration reveals how the human brain evolved to harness abstract thought

    By Marissa Shapiro THE IDEA The human brain is organized in functional networks—connected brain regions that communicate with each other through dedicated pathways. That is how we perceive our senses, how the body moves, how we are able to remember the past and plan for the future. The “default mode” network is the part of... Read More

    Apr 12, 2022

  • International collaboration reveals how the human brain evolved to harness abstract thought

    International collaboration reveals how the human brain evolved to harness abstract thought

    By Marissa Shapiro THE IDEA The human brain is organized in functional networks—connected brain regions that communicate with each other through dedicated pathways. That is how we perceive our senses, how the body moves, how we are able to remember the past and plan for the future. The “default mode” network is the part of... Read More

    Apr 12, 2022

  • Vanderbilt engineering researchers use artificial intelligence to help basketball players improve their shots

    Vanderbilt engineering researchers use artificial intelligence to help basketball players improve their shots

    To shoot a basketball with precision requires countless hours of practice. Usually, this happens under the watchful eye of a coach, who can provide guidance on the right mechanics of each shot. Now, though, thanks to new research from Vanderbilt University, players may soon be able to use artificial intelligence technology to work on those... Read More

    Mar 24, 2022

  • Rubinov awarded $1.1M to study molecular underpinnings of human brain networks on a large scale

    Rubinov awarded $1.1M to study molecular underpinnings of human brain networks on a large scale

    Mikail Rubinov, assistant professor of biomedical engineering, computer science, psychiatry and psychology, has been awarded a four-year, $1.1 million grant from the National Institute of Mental Health to better understand the development and organization of brain networks, as well as their change in development and aging. Rubinov and his collaborators will link aspects of gene expression and... Read More

    Mar 17, 2022

  • Wikswo, VIIBRE team on track to build third-generation ‘self-driving lab’ with $1M from NSF

    Wikswo, VIIBRE team on track to build third-generation ‘self-driving lab’ with $1M from NSF

    John Wikswo, founder and director of the Vanderbilt Institute for Integrative Biosystems Research and Education and Gordon A. Cain University Professor, is the principal investigator of a $1 million award from the National Science Foundation. The object is to build a pathbreaking “robot scientist”—a fully automated microfluidic system for parallel, independent, long-duration, machine-guided experiments. The... Read More

    Mar 5, 2022

  • Wikswo, VIIBRE team on track to build third-generation ‘self-driving lab’ with $1M from NSF

    Wikswo, VIIBRE team on track to build third-generation ‘self-driving lab’ with $1M from NSF

    John Wikswo, founder and director of the Vanderbilt Institute for Integrative Biosystems Research and Education and Gordon A. Cain University Professor, is the principal investigator of a $1 million award from the National Science Foundation. The object is to build a pathbreaking “robot scientist”—a fully automated microfluidic system for parallel, independent, long-duration, machine-guided experiments. The... Read More

    Mar 5, 2022

  • International research collaboration reveals new possibilities in nanophotonics

    International research collaboration reveals new possibilities in nanophotonics

    Joshua Caldwell, Flowers Family Chancellor’s Faculty Fellow in Engineering and associate professor of mechanical engineering, and Joseph Matson, a graduate student in Caldwell’s lab, have contributed to an international study that has discovered a new type of light-matter coupling. The work has long-term implications for how optical components can be even further miniaturized, a discovery... Read More

    Mar 3, 2022

  • Researchers test and validate platform for potential PPE tracking across U.S. hospitals

    Researchers test and validate platform for potential PPE tracking across U.S. hospitals

    A multidisciplinary team that includes a Vanderbilt computer science professor has established the foundation for an automated, up-to-date assessment of personal protective equipment across U.S. hospitals—work that got its start before the COVID-19 pandemic but took on greater urgency. Significantly, the team developed a secure, third-party system to operate independent of federal and state governments... Read More

    Feb 25, 2022

  • Multicenter team seeks to create at-home artificial lung system

    Multicenter team seeks to create at-home artificial lung system

    Vanderbilt team to focus on engineering, testing the device by Matt Batcheldor Vanderbilt University Medical Center will share in an $8.7 million federal grant to create an artificial lung system that patients with incurable lung disease can use at home. The Department of Defense Congressionally Directed Medical Research Program (CDMRP) grant will fund research to create... Read More

    Feb 24, 2022

  • AIMBE logo

    Two Vanderbilt engineering professors elected into AIMBE’s College of Fellows

    Christos Constantinidis, professor of biomedical engineering, and Zhaohua Ding, research professor of electrical engineering, have been elected to the 2022 class of the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering’s College of Fellows. Recipients of this honor are chosen for exceptional leadership and achievements in medical and biological engineering. Read More

    Feb 18, 2022

  • Microgrid illustration

    Vanderbilt to collaborate on $4.8M ARPA-E microgrid control project

    Vanderbilt computer engineers will collaborate with colleagues at North Carolina State University on a new $4.8 million project to develop technology to co-design and control microgrids. The award was among 68 grants exceeding $175 million recently announced by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy. Read More

    Feb 17, 2022

  • Breakthrough measurements/theory of vibrating atoms in nanostructures ushers in new class of technology

    Breakthrough measurements/theory of vibrating atoms in nanostructures ushers in new class of technology

    Vanderbilt researchers Sokrates Pantelides and Joshua Caldwell are part of an international collaboration that has demonstrated a new way to manipulate and measure subtle atomic vibrations in nanomaterials. This breakthrough could make it possible to develop customized functionalities to improve on and build new technologies. Sokrates Pantelides (Vanderbilt University) Joshua Caldwell (Vanderbilt University) Electron beams... Read More

    Jan 26, 2022

  • Vanderbilt-developed gunshot detection technology leads to arrest in Las Vegas shooting

    Vanderbilt-developed gunshot detection technology leads to arrest in Las Vegas shooting

    Janos Salloi. PhD’08, is company’s chief technology officer Gunshot detection technology developed by Vanderbilt engineers and commercialized by a longtime research partner recently helped lead to an arrest in a fatal shooting in Las Vegas. Within seconds of the first shot in late August 2021, 16 sensors located along the Freemont Street Experience pedestrian mall... Read More

    Jan 10, 2022

  • Game theory points to new DNA data privacy solutions

    Game theory points to new DNA data privacy solutions

    by Paul Govern Information based biomedical discovery, in particular the push toward precision medicine, depends on open-ended analysis of de-identified data from patients and research participants on the largest possible scale. Sharing data while controlling the risk of data reidentification under privacy attack is vital to the enterprise. Zhiyu Wan Game theory indicates that only... Read More

    Dec 17, 2021

  • Vanderbilt engineers’ Science paper reviews scope of atomically thin membranes for subatomic separations

    Vanderbilt engineers’ Science paper reviews scope of atomically thin membranes for subatomic separations

    A paper by Vanderbilt engineers that explores the scope to scale up the sizes of atomically thin membranes and their potential use in applications relating to energy, microscopy, and electronics is published in the journal Science. Authors Piran R. Kidambi, assistant professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering, Pavan Chaturvedi, postdoctoral scholar in the Department of... Read More

    Dec 1, 2021

  • New study reveals breakthrough tool to show how much exoskeletons reduce back injury risk

    New study reveals breakthrough tool to show how much exoskeletons reduce back injury risk

    A study led by researchers from Vanderbilt University’s Center for Rehabilitation Engineering and Assistive Technology reveals a breakthrough tool to assess the effect of exoskeletons on injury risk. The tool, called Exo-LiFFT, is an interactive calculator that will help companies looking for ways to overcome workforces struggling with musculoskeletal injuries, missed work, and accelerated retirement... Read More

    Nov 30, 2021

  • Vanderbilt to lead $5 million Air Force center of excellence in radiation effects research on electronics

    Vanderbilt to lead $5 million Air Force center of excellence in radiation effects research on electronics

    Center aims to advance the understanding of physical mechanisms responsible for radiation-induced effects on emerging technologies The Institute for Space and Defense Electronics at Vanderbilt University has been selected as the Center of Excellence in Radiation Effects by the U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the Air Force Research Lab. The $5 million, five-year program will be... Read More

    Oct 29, 2021

  • Vanderbilt to lead $5 million Air Force center of excellence in radiation effects research on electronics

    Vanderbilt to lead $5 million Air Force center of excellence in radiation effects research on electronics

    Center aims to advance the understanding of physical mechanisms responsible for radiation-induced effects on emerging technologies The Institute for Space and Defense Electronics at Vanderbilt University has been selected as the Center of Excellence in Radiation Effects by the U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the Air Force Research Lab. The $5 million, five-year program will be... Read More

    Oct 29, 2021