Roger C. Barr of Biomedical Engineering has received an award from the University of Alabama at Birmingham for a project entitled "Novel Methods for Cardiac Microimpedance Measurement." Total funding will be $79,203 over 9 months.
April Brown of Electrical Engineering has received an award from the National Science Foundation for a project entitled "Pilot Study Graduate Student Career Perceptions and Decisions." Total funding will be $62,948 over 12 months.
Lawrence Carin of Electrical Engineering has received an award from the Department of Energy for a project entitled "Advanced Wavelet-Based Analysis of Hyper-Spectral Imagery - Follow-On Supplement." Total funding will be $525,000 over 24 months.
Lawrence Carin of Electrical Engineering has received an award from Metron, Inc. for a project entitled "Compressive Sensing in the Tactical Underwater Environment." Total funding will be $35,000 over 7 months.
Leslie M. Collins of Electrical Engineering has received an award from the Army Research Office for a project entitled "Statistical Signal Processing for Remote Sensing of Targets: Proposal for Terrestrial Science Program." Total funding will be $2,970,991 over 36 months.
Leslie M. Collins of Electrical Engineering has received an award from the National Institutes of Health for a project entitled "Towards Clinical Acceptability: Enhancing Performance of the P300-based Brain-Computer Interface via Improved Stimulus Selection and Signal Processing." Total funding will be $424,897 over 23 months.
Steven A. Cummer of Electrical Engineering has received an award from the Boeing Company for a project entitled "Negative Index Materials - Supplement." Total funding will be $3,000 over 5 months.
Christopher L. Dwyer of Electrical Engineering has received an award from the Army Research Office for a project entitled "Self-assembled Nanomaterials for Hybrid Electronic and Photonic Systems." Total funding will be $1,000,000 over 60 months.
Nan M. Jokerst of the Center for Metamaterials and Integrated Plasmonics has received an award from SensorMetrix for a project entitled "Large Area IR Metamaterial Films." Total funding will be $16,500 over 8 months.
Thomas C. Katsouleas of Electrical Engineering has received an award from the National Science Foundation for a project entitled "Collaborative: Student Training through Research on Plasma-Based Research." Total funding will be $399,999 over 59 months.
Robert E. Kielb of Mechanical Engineering has received an award from the Air Force Research Laboratory for a project entitled "Collaborative Research in Turbomachinery Aeromechanics: Duke Guide 4." Total funding will be $1,442,322 over 48 months.
Alexis M. Kuncel of Biomedical Engineering has received an award from the National Institutes of Health for a project entitled "Time Course of Parkinson's Symptoms in Response to Deep Brain Stimulation." Total funding will be $156,000 over 23 months.
Peter Lange has received an award, on behalf of the Pratt Dean's Office, from the National Institutes of Health, for a project entitled "Extramural Research Facilities Improvement Program." Total funding will be $4,213,882 over 57 months.
Kam W. Leong of Biomedical Engineering has received an award from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration for a project entitled "Development of Electroactive PVDF Membrane for Wound Healing." Total funding will be $125,000 over 6 months.
Brian P. Mann of Mechanical Engineering has received an award from the National Science Foundation for a project entitled "CAREER Travel Supplement: Measurement and Predictive Dynamics of Meso-scale Milling." Total funding will be $3,000 over 8 months.
Piotr E. Marszalek of the Center for Biologically Inspired Materials and Material Systems has received an award from the National Institutes of Health for a project entitled "Nanomechanics of Spiral Proteins." Total funding will be $238,150 over 23 months.
Matthew S. Reynolds of Electrical Engineering has received an award from the National Science Foundation for a project entitled "Collaborative Research: Assistive Object Manipulation via RFID Guided Robots." Total funding will be $234,612 over 36 months.
Lisa L. Satterwhite of Biomedical Engineering has received an award from the National Institutes of Health for a project entitled "Novel Zebrafish Models to Study Toxicity of PCBs and Pesticides During Pregnancy." Total funding will be $39,000 over 12 months.