search

UMD     This Site






BBI-affiliated researchers Nathan Fox (Distinguished University Professor, EDUC-Human Development and Quantitative Methodology) and Ming Hu (Assistant Professor, ARCH-Architecture Program) are among the nine recipients selected for the University of Maryland's Coronavirus Research Seed Fund Award program. The Vice President for Research invited proposals from across campus that utilize the University of Maryland’s research strengths to rapidly contribute to human health and related outcomes with respect to the 2019 novel coronavirus (COVID-19), including prevention, control, and response efforts.

Mental health was an important topic among the proposals awarded by the UMD Division of Research. Fox's project, "Adolescent Mental Health in Response to Covid-19," will identify factors of resilience and risk that could inform intervention and prevention efforts to reduce the negative mental health impact of COVID-19 and future pandemics.

In addition, a collaboration between sociology and family science will examine the impact of state and local government social distancing efforts on behavior, time spent with others, use of technology and mental and physical wellbeing. The latter project, "Assessing the Social Consequences of Covid-19," is spearheaded by Long Doan (Assistant Professor, BSOS-Sociology), Liana Sayer (Professor, BSOS-Sociology), and Jessica Fish (Assistant Professor, SPHL-Family Science).

See the full story for details on all nine of the Coronavirus Research Seed Fund projects selected.



Related Articles:
Uncovering the mysteries of networking in the brain
Poster Session Cinches Banner Year for UMD Neuroscience
The Mystery of Our Early Missing Memories
Autism Research Resonates in Hearing-Focused Project
Training Can Improve Older Adults’ Ability to Discriminate Rapid Changes in Sound
Announcing the BBI Small Animal MR Facility
How Home Alone Helped UMD Neuroscientists Unlock Brain Scan Data
How does the brain turn heard sounds into comprehensible language?
Internal predictive model characterizes brain's neural activity during listening and imagining music
Hu, Bernat Featured in Society for Women Engineers magazine

April 14, 2020


«Previous Story  

 

 

Current Headlines

Tuna-Inspired Mechanical Fin Could Boost Underwater Drone Power

Celebrating APIDA and SWANA Maryland Engineers

MATRIX Lab Establishes Industry Advisory Board

Developing Efficient Systems for Deep Sea Exploration

UMD Researchers Win Top Honor for Advancing Hardware Security

Legacy of Excellence: ISR Professor Wins Coveted Recognition

The Clark School Celebrates Women and Multiracial Engineers and Engineering Professionals

MATRIX Lab Hiring Research Development Director

Maryland Applied Graduate Engineering Launches Cutting-Edge AI Graduate Program for Fall 2025

Ingestible Capsule Advances May Lead to Earlier Detection of Diseases

 
 
Back to top  
Home Clark School Home UMD Home