Three research teams with ISR faculty members were chosen for funding by the University of Maryland’s Brain and Behavior Initiative (BBI) in its FY18 seed grant program.
Through its seed grant program, the BBI successfully promotes collaborations among faculty from research areas that are traditionally exclusive. A successful seed grant competition fosters new research projects undertaken by faculty who have never worked together before as interdisciplinary teams. These collaborations are truly interdisciplinary.
For this round of seed grants, BBI received 14 proposals from 41 principal investigators (PIs) representing five colleges (BSOS, ENGR, CMNS, EDUC, and ARHU) and 15 departments. Twenty-five of the PIs were applying for BBI seed grant funding for the first time.
The committee chose the seven highest-ranked proposals for funding, including three projects with ISR faculty:
A Multimodal Sensor Discovery Platform to Study the Molecular Events Underlying the Gut-Microbiome-Brain Axis Reza Ghodssi (ECE/ISR), William Bentley (BIOE), Jens Herberholz (Psychology/NACS)
Precision Optogenetics: msec time resolution optical imaging and control of neuronal circuits Behtash Babadi (ECE; ISR affiliation), Wolfgang Losert (Physics)
Central Nervous System Processing of Learned Vocal Communication Signals William Idsardi (Linguistics/NACS), Jonathan Fritz (ISR), Robert Dooling (Psychology/NACS)
Related Articles:
Simon, Lau to investigate neural bases of natural language understanding BBI FY17 Seed Grant Winners Announced Kanold study shows autism may begin early in brain development NSF Science Now video features 'aging brain' research of Anderson, Simon and Presacco BBI Seed Grant winners announced ‘Priming’ helps the brain understand language even with poor-quality speech signals New UMD Division of Research video highlights work of Simon, Anderson Xuze Zhang wins outstanding graduate student award from the Washington Statistical Society Two ECE Graduate Students Win 2023 UMD Three Minute Thesis Competition Ghodssi invited speaker at NIMH workshop on sensor technologies to capture the complexity of behavior
May 3, 2018
|