search

UMD     This Site






Professor Cynthia Moss (Psychology) is the principal investigator for a new four-year, $1.3 million NSF/NIH grant, "Innovative Technologies Inspired by Biosonar."

Co-PIs for this grant are Assistant Professor Timothy Horiuchi (ECE/ISR), Professor P.S. Krishnaprasad (ECE/ISR), Professor Shihab Shamma (ECE/ISR) and ISR-affiliated Assistant Professor Jonathan Simon (ECE/Biology).

The project will advance understanding of the transformation of sensory information to motor commands for adaptive behaviors such as tracking, reaching, grasping and steering around obstacles in the natural environment.

A more complete understanding of the computations supporting these vital functions of the nervous system will facilitate treatment and rehabilitation when they fail to develop normally or break down through disease. The echolocating bat will be used as a model system because it exhibits rich but well-defined adaptive motor patterns that indicate changing behavioral states. This interdisiplinary project brings together biology, neural recording telemetry, and control systems in novel and important ways.

This grant in the NSF/NIH Collaborative Research in Computational Neuroscience (CRCNS) program is funded by the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering.

September 8, 2004


«Previous Story  

 

 

Current Headlines

University of Maryland Research is Redefining Health Care

Anticipation Builds as Zupnik Hall Nears Completion

Alireza Khaligh Named ISR Director

ECE Chair Sennur Ulukus Named to Turkish Science Academy

MATRIX Lab Workshop Focuses on Fielding Autonomous Systems

Research Team Led by Prof. Damena Agonafer Wins Best Paper Award in Data Center Sustainability

Celebrating Black History Month 2026

OmniSpeech Launches Real-Time Voice Deepfake Detection

The Future Takes Flight at Maryland

Maryland Engineering Maintains Status as National Leader in Online Education

 
 
Back to top  
Home Clark School Home UMD Home