WVU Receives Federal Funding For Scientific Research

West Virginia University was awarded close to $2.6 million from the National Science Foundation (NSF) for three scientific research projects.

West Virginia University (WVU) was awarded close to $2.6 million from the National Science Foundation (NSF) for three scientific research projects.

The majority of the money – $2 million – will go towards a physics research project into two-photon imaging, including through upgrading existing imaging facilities. The technology has neuroscience applications, as the high-resolution imaging from two-photon microscopes allows researchers to study complex motor-to-sensory circuits and how they interact.

A helium recovery system will receive $300,000, and when built, it will capture, recycle and reuse helium. The helium will support research in chemistry, biology and nuclear magnetic resonance.

The remaining $300,000 will fund a project to investigate the role of new quantum materials in technological advancements, including artificial intelligence and interdisciplinary fields that bridge materials and data science.

Grant Transforming Neuroscience Research In W.Va.

The team aims to understand how certain mental stressors change the development of the brain and how it is wired.

The National Science Foundation will fund a project to expand the field of neuroscience throughout the Mountain State.

Neuroscience is the study of the nervous system, its functions and disorders. By studying these developments, researchers hope to learn how to identify changes in the brain and their causes leading to diseases like dementia and Parkinson’s disease.

West Virginia University (WVU) will receive $9.3 million as part of the project which includes Marshall University, West Virginia State University and Shepherd University, with the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission (HEPC) heading up the initiative.

By increasing academic scientific research, making strategic faculty and staff hires, and adding state-of-the-art infrastructure to address the field’s most perplexing challenges, Randy Nelson, professor and chair of Neuroscience at West Virginia University, hopes to expand the region’s understanding of his field of study.

“I think the study of neuroscience is fundamentally important,” Nelson said. “The next frontier is understanding how the brain is wired, and how those connections develop, or maintain, is critical to understand how our brain works, how we perceive things, how we learn and memorize material out in the world.”

Nelson said he plans to study synaptic and circuit plasticity, which involve changes in neurons and the connections between them as the result of developmental or environmental changes.

“Understanding the mechanisms underlying how neural circuits are modeled, is important for typical brain development and maintenance,” Nelson said. “And then, once we understand how things work typically, then when things go south, we’re able to intervene.”

The team aims to understand how certain mental stressors change the development of the brain and how it is wired.

“Understanding how that might happen may help us understand how to prevent that from happening in a malnourish situation,” Nelson said. “These neural circuits develop and what might happen if they don’t develop correctly. So I think that the focus of this grant project is looking at typical function and development.”

The project also includes implementing education and development activities for students in K-12, as well as undergraduates at a collegiate level.

“I think it’ll help students going out and looking at any kind of career, whatever they’re interested in studying brain science, or they’re interested in engineering careers, or any kind of career now is going to be driven by an understanding of big datasets,” Nelson said. “I think what this does is provide fundamental information to make our students super competitive when they’re going out into the world after high school.”

There will also be a program to assist teachers in furthering their education. They can attend camps and learn about neuroscience and data coding and bring that knowledge back to their school.

The project will also involve undergraduates, offering some of them paid positions for this vital experience.

“I think what I really liked about this proposal is that it involves a lot of our new faculty, young faculty who have joined the department since we formed in 2018,” Nelson said. “They’re young and energetic, and they’re up to date with the newest techniques. And now we’re getting them the instrumentation necessary for them to be state of the art here in WVU, and working with our neuroscience colleagues at the other three institutions, going to strengthen neuroscience here and allow us to be playing with the national leaders.”

Neuroscientist to Head WVU and Rockefeller Institute

WVU Medicine has appointed Dr. Ali Rezai to lead the clinical and research programs at the newly formed West Virginia University Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute.

Rezai is a neurosurgeon whose clinical expertise includes neurosurgical and neuromodulation management of patients with Parkinson’s disease, dystonia, chronic pain, brain and spinal cord injuries and severe mood and anxiety disorders.

According to the institute, Rezai has been a leader in innovative use of brain implants for treating Parkinson’s disease, obsessive-compulsive disorder, Alzheimer’s disease, and traumatic brain injury.

He holds 54 U.S. patents and has developed technologies that led to creation of a company that produces micro-implants to treat chronic pain and headaches.

Rezai and his team are expected to work with other WVU schools such as engineering and computer science to develop new medical technologies.

Marshall U. Expands Neuroscience Program

The Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine has expanded its neuroscience program.

The university is creating separate departments of neurosurgery and neurology.

Joseph I. Shapiro, dean of the school of medicine, says Anthony Alberico will become chairman of the department of neurosurgery.

Alberico received his medical degree from the Temple University School of Medicine and completed residency training at the Medical College of Virginia.

He is experienced in the management of spinal disorders and in developing advances in spine care. Alberico is board-certified in neurosurgery and joined Marshall in 2007.     

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