News Archives: March, 2020

2020 EPSCoR/IDeA Annual Meeting

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On February 24, 2020, members of the EPSCoR/IDeA community gathered in Washington, D.C., for the annual meeting of the EPSCoR/IDeA Coalition and the EPSCoR/IDeA Foundation. The EPSCoR/IDeA Coalition, created in 1988, is a not-for-profit 501(c)(4) organization that works to address the geographic imbalance of federal research awards and to increase congressional appropriations for the EPSCoR/IDeA programs. The EPSCoR/IDeA Foundation, a 501 (c) (3) non-lobbying organization, supports the goals of the Coalition, working with individual states and federal agencies that oversee EPSCoR/IDeA programs. The Foundation works to ensure accurate, coordinated communications efforts from the states about the effectiveness of the EPSCoR/IDeA programs. The annual meeting serves to launch Coalition and Foundation priorities and initiatives for the year.

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UH Hilo receives $500K grant to research artificial intelligence interaction with humans

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A computer scientist at the University of Hawaiʻi at Hilo is the recipient of a more than half-a million-dollar grant from the National Science Foundation aimed at developing new techniques in artificial intelligence (AI). Assistant Professor Travis Mandel, an AI expert, will use the prestigious $549,790 award to enhance research based on human-in-the-loop AI. The techniques are based on how AI and machine learning systems collaborate with humans to solve real-world problems too challenging for either to address alone.

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Irvin Receives Inaugural W. Fred Taylor PhD Award for NIH IDeA Contributions

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Charles Irvin, Ph.D., professor of medicine and associate dean for faculty affairs at the Larner College of Medicine at the University of Vermont, has received the inaugural W. Fred Taylor PhD Award in recognition of his significant contributions to enhance the impact of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Institutional Development Award (IDeA) Program.

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University of Vermont Leads NSF Funded Study on Extreme Weather Events

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As the power of extreme weather events increase with climate change, a team of scientists warn that lakes around the world may dramatically change, threatening ecosystem health and water quality. And the international team reports that our limited understanding of how lakes—especially algae at the base of food webs—may respond to more-extreme storms represents a knowledge gap that increases the risk.

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