 |
 |
Innovative Research and Scholarship
Part of Yeats' "fire" that defines higher education excellence is the desire
to explore, to create, to problem solve, and never to stop expanding the boundaries
of knowledge.
The University of Cincinnati is, first of all, a community of learning and scholarship.
It is a learning community in that the people who compose this community may be described,
each and every one, primarily as learners - engaged in teaching, scholarship, and
research. It is also a learning community in the sense that the community itself
is capable of acquiring and responding to new information.
As the Information Economy evolves from an abstract concept toward an omnipresent
reality, we find that the outcomes and quality of scholarship and research have very
concrete effects on the regional and national economies. This economic value drives
a demand for technological transfer and application, and provides for the cultural
enrichment of our community.
Of 3,706 institutions of higher education in the United States, only 88 are designated
as Research I institutions by the Carnegie Commission. The University of Cincinnati
is one.
During the past year, the University of Cincinnati set a new record for external
funding: $109 million. This record was largely driven by strong growth in sponsored
research. Our faculty are working harder: research grant applications were up 19
percent over the previous year, although the number of faculty remained stable.
Because many of our faculty received research funding through other institutions
(such as Shriners Burns Institute or Childrenís Hospital Medical Center), the complete
tally for grants and contracts is more than $149 million. This places us among the
top 50 research institutions in the country. The university's Medical Center (when
funding for the Children's Hospital research base is included) ranks among the top
30 in the nation for external research funding.
More than 825 grants and contracts were awarded to UC faculty during the past year.
Here are a few highlights:
- David E. Milhorn, professor
and Chairman of the Molecular and Cellular Physiology Division at the University
of Cincinnati College of Medicine, was the recipient of the MERIT Award of the National
Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. The award recognizes outstanding research in the
area of oxygen regulation and gene mechanisms.
- University of Cincinnati
medical researcher Michael Lehman was among a team of physicians who published in
Nature a landmark paper based on their research on the human brain. The team's discovery
could have a major impact on efforts to repair deteriorating or damaged brain structures.
Lehman is on the faculty of UC's College of Medicine.
- The University of Cincinnati
is helping the Ohio Department of Transportation build an experimental bridge to
demonstrate the improved strength and durability of a high-performance concrete mix
developed at UC's College of Engineering. Tests have demonstrated that the UC-designed
concrete mix is significantly stronger than conventional concrete. It could not,
in fact, be broken under the most strenuous tests.
- University of Cincinnati
archaeologists working at Troy have uncovered a bust of the Roman Emperor Augustus.
The find was announced on the 2,060th anniversary of Augustus' birth. The statue
was discovered during ongoing excavations by UC's McMicken College of Arts &
Sciences at the site of the Trojan War.
- University of Cincinnati
researchers have developed a system for quickly synthesizing and screening antibiotics.
The system, developed by chemists in UC's McMicken College of Arts & Sciences,
uses a patented intermediate compound for rapid synthesis of new antibiotics coupled
with a high-speed method for screening activity.
- University of Cincinnati
management Professor Charles H. Matthews is three-for-three for the research he has
presented at the U.S. Association for Small Business and Entrepreneurship. Matthews,
director of UC's Small Business Institute, has won a top prize in each of the past
three years for excellence in small business research. The Institute is based in
UC's College of Business Administration.
- University of Cincinnati
aerospace researchers have developed a new infrared inspection system to spot cracks
as small as 200 microns in aircraft bodies. This non-destructive evaluation allows
engineers to test more often without damaging the aircraft. The research was conducted
in UC's College of Engineering.
- A team of University of
Cincinnati researchers spanning three colleges reported on their progress in solving
the nationís most troubling pollution problems at a national conference. The conference
marks the 10th anniversary of the Superfund Basic Research Program. UC was one of
the first universities to participate in the program and has received more than $10
million in research support over the past eight years.
- A large federal grant will
allow University of Cincinnati researchers to build a very small chemistry laboratory
- a laboratory small enough to fit on an electronic microchip. The research team
in UC's College of Engineering will develop a hand-held device for detecting proteins
in medical, environmental, or industrial settings. Its success could reduce sampling
costs - currently as much as $10,000 - to less than $50.
- It is estimated that retail
pharmacists make mistakes in three to five percent of the prescriptions they fill.
A University of Cincinnati psychologist, Anthony Grasha, has found that errors happen
most often when pharmacists are distracted, overworked, or under stress. His solution:
train pharmacists, like fighter pilots, under simulated conditions to show them when,
and how, they fail. Grasha is on the faculty of UC's McMicken College of Arts &
Sciences.
- In 1996, the University
of Cincinnati marked a quarter-century of public opinion polling through the university's
Institute for Policy Research. The best known of the Institute's polls is the Ohio
Poll, widely quoted by national media - particularly during election season.
- The Environmental Protection
Agency has awarded the University of Cincinnati College of Engineering a $15.7 million
grant for research into hazardous wastes and oil spill remediation. The grant is
the largest ever received by a college outside the University's Medical Center.
- Speaking of the Medical
Center, our researchers have developed an important tool for cardiovascular research,
in the form of transgenic mice. The University of Cincinnati supplies 80 percent
of the laboratory mice used throughout the world for research in heart disease. In
fact, the university has produced 15 percent of all transgenic mice in existence.
|