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NEWS RELEASE
08-15-02
Contacts:
Gregory Geoffroy, President, (515) 294-2042
James Bloedel, Vice Provost for Research and Advanced Studies, (515) 294-6344
John McCarroll, University Relations, (515) 294-6137
FIVE NEW IOWA STATE INITIATIVES RECEIVE START-UP FUNDS
AMES, Iowa -- Five significant academic initiatives at Iowa State University will receive start-up funds this fiscal year and salary funding for seven new faculty positions next year. The interdisciplinary initiatives are intended to respond to critical needs in Iowa and the country, and enhance Iowa State's status among peer land-grant schools.
The five were selected by a faculty committee and approved by Iowa State University President Gregory Geoffroy in a competitive process that drew 31 pre-proposals. (A sixth initiative is on a fast track to get under way early this fall.)
Funding for the five initiatives, $274,000 in one-time or base funding in FY03, comes from increased tuition revenues. Faculty salary and benefits funding, totaling $801,000, has been budgeted for funding in FY04 or as soon as the new faculty positions are filled.
The ideas selected for funding are highly collaborative and will involve many researchers from across campus.
"These initiatives build on Iowa State's strengths and fit the university's land-grant mission," Geoffroy said. "They also are likely to generate significant amounts of external financial support as they progress, and by developing world-class research components, each of the initiatives will strengthen our academic programs."
Planning continues for the initiatives. It is expected that as organizational structures and other details are decided, each of the initiatives will be presented to the Board of Regents, State of Iowa, for approval.
Following is a short description of the five initiatives and the sixth, which will be administered within the College of Agriculture and also supported by faculty in the colleges of Veterinary Medicine and Liberal Arts and Sciences.
The
Combinatorial Discovery Initiative
will seek to discover and test new materials for a wide range of uses, particularly nano (high-performance) materials, biomaterials (synthetic materials that mimic living systems) and catalysts, using the combinatorial method. This relatively new chemistry method, primarily used in the pharmaceutical industry, randomly assembles molecules into thousands of combinations of compounds for testing over hours or days, instead of weeks or years required with the traditional "one-at-a-time" approach.
The
Food Safety and Food Security Initiative
will strengthen existing programs and develop strategic research and training programs that address human health risks associated with food processing, global warming and other environmental changes, globalization and agro-terrorism. It will serve farmers, producers, processors and consumers and focus on several areas: food-borne infectious diseases, food production (including post-harvest processing), food service and retail, international food security, public policy and communication, and food-borne disease models and risk analysis.
The
Human Computer Interaction (HCI) Initiative
will use ISU's Virtual Reality Applications Center to stay in front of technological trends in computers and computing in order to develop more useful interfaces for the people who use them. The emerging field of HCI essentially is the study of the relationship between humans and increasingly powerful, yet portable, computers.
The
Bioeconomy Initiative
will investigate the use of plants and agricultural crops to produce chemicals, fuels, materials and energy, reducing this country's reliance on imported petroleum and reducing air pollution associated with fossil fuels. Bio-based products are expected to enhance rural development by creating new markets demanding new crops.
The
Information Infrastructure Initiative
will strengthen information technology (IT) research at ISU by consolidating the numerous, but scattered, IT-related research activities and creating multidisciplinary teams in areas such as agricultural engineering, smart transportation systems, earthquake engineering simulations, air traffic control, genetic engineering and bioinformatics, and financial systems. IT technologies -- such as high-performance computing, new processor and memory designs, security, software engineering and distributed computing -- are expected to improve through the coordinated approach.
The sixth initiative, the
proposed Center for Integrated Animal Genomics
, will be presented to the regents for approval at their September meeting. The center will link working groups involved in research areas that build on ISU strengths and are predicted to be important in animal agriculture and human health. These include identifying and understanding the function and control of genes, developing new genetic technologies and improving the health of agriculturally important animals, and understanding the genetics of disease resistance to promote safer animal-based food products.
-30-
Ames, Iowa 50011, (515) 294-4111
Published by: University Relations,
online@iastate.edu
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