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Eberhard Voit (CSE, BME) Headshot Fall 2011

May 22, 2013 — Investigators at Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University, along with partners at the Georgia Institute of Technology, have received a $4 million grant over four years to establish the HERCULES Center at Emory University (Health and Exposome Research Center: Understanding Lifetime Exposures). The grant is the first exposome-based center grant awarded in the United States. 

Toroidal droplets

May 21, 2013 — A fried breakfast food popular in Spain provided the inspiration for the development of doughnut-shaped droplets that may provide scientists with a new approach for studying fundamental issues in physics, mathematics and materials.

Drug Side Effects

May 20, 2013 — A new study of both computer-created and natural proteins suggests that the number of unique pockets – sites where small molecule pharmaceutical compounds can bind to proteins – is surprisingly small, meaning drug side effects may be impossible to avoid. The study also found that the fundamental biochemical processes needed for life could have been enabled by the simple physics of protein folding. 

Confined Spaces Locomotion - Researchers

May 20, 2013 — Future teams of subterranean search and rescue robots may owe their success to the lowly fire ant, a much despised insect whose painful bites and extensive networks of underground tunnels are all-too-familiar to people living in the southern United States.

Lymphatic on a Chip

May 20, 2013 — Georgia Tech has won a Grand Challenges Explorations Grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.  J. Brandon Dixon, assistant professor in Georgia Tech’s George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering, will pursue an innovative global health and development research project, titled “Lymphatic on a chip as a model for lymphatic filariasis (LF) parasites.”

Professor Bojan Petrovic

Georgia Tech Awarded $6 Million to Improve Safety of Nuclear Reactors

October 1, 2012 — The Georgia Institute of Technology has won a $6 million federal grant to design improvements that strengthen the performance and safety of nuclear systems beyond today’s capabilities. 

High-Interference Object Perception

Eliminating Visual Clutter Helps People with Mild Cognitive Impairment

October 1, 2012 — A new study from Georgia Tech and the University of Toronto suggests that memory impairments for people diagnosed with early stage Alzheimer’s disease may be due, in part, to problems in determining the differences between similar objects. The findings also support growing research indicating that a part of the brain once believed to support memory exclusively – the medial temporal lobe - also plays a role in object perception.

Robert Todd and Jon Sanford

CATEA Receives $3.1M in Grants to Transform Built Environment for People with Disabilities

September 28, 2012 — Two new grants awarded to the College of Architecture's Center for Assistive Technology and Environmental Access total $3.1 million.

Uncalibrated Visual Servoing

Easy Guider: Intuitive Visual Control Provides Faster Remote Operation of Robots

September 25, 2012 — Using a novel method of integrating video technology and familiar control devices, a research team from the Georgia Institute of Technology is developing a technique to simplify remote control of robotic devices.   

Child Study Lab

Georgia Tech Creating High-Tech Tools to Study Autism

September 25, 2012 — Researchers in Georgia Tech’s Center for Behavior Imaging have developed two new technological tools that automatically measure relevant behaviors of children, and promise to have significant impact on the understanding of behavioral disorders such as autism.

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