Thomas
Harris, Biomedical Engineering, $189,848 from the National
Science Foundation for “The
Vanderbilt-Northwestern-Texas-Harvard/MIT (VaNTH) Engineering
Research Center for Bioengineering Educational Technology”.
Stacy
Klein, Biomedical Engineering, $354,151 from the National
Science Foundation for “Vanderbilt University Bioengineering
Research Experiences for Teachers (RET) Site Program”.
Prasad
Shastri, Biomedical Engineering, $49,762 from Abbott Vascular
for “Next Generation Drug Elution Stent (G2DES)”.
Malcolm
Baird, Civil and Environmental Engineering, $68,000 from the
Tennessee Department of Transportation for “Traffic Incident
Management (TIM) and Emergency Transportation Operations (ETO)
Education for Public Safety Agencies in Tennessee”. Kenneth
Pence is a co-principal investigator.
James
Clarke, Civil and Environmental Engineering, $30,000 from the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission for “Development of an Educational
Course Module on Nuclear Waste Management. Module 5: Radiation
Risk Evaluations and Environmental Assessment”.
James
Dobbins, Civil and Environmental Engineering, $255,442 from the
Tennessee Department of Transportation for “Center for
Intermodal Freight Transportation Studies (CIFTS)”. Malcolm E.
Baird and Mark D. Abkowitz are co-principal investigators.
David
Kosson, Civil and Environmental Engineering, $173,500 from the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission for “Development of a Curriculum
Guide for Nuclear Environmental Protection”. Charles W. Powers,
Frank L. Parker and James H. Clarke are co-principal
investigators.
David
Kosson, Civil and Environmental Engineering, $204,609 from the
Department of Energy for “Consortium for Risk Evaluation with
Stakeholder Participation (CRESP III)”. Charles W. Powers, Mark
D. Abkowitz and James H. Clarke are co-principal investigators.
David
Kosson, Civil and Environmental Engineering, $218,038 from the
Department of Energy for “Consortium for Risk Evaluation with
Stakeholder Participation (CRESP III)”. Charles W. Powers, Mark
D. Abkowitz and James H. Clarke are co-principal investigators.
David
Kosson, Civil and Environmental Engineering, $2,000,000 from the
Department of Energy for “Consortium for Risk Evaluation with
Stakeholder Participation (CRESP III)”. Charles W. Powers, Mark
D. Abkowitz and James H. Clarke are co-principal investigators.
Eugene
LeBoeuf, Civil and Environmental Engineering, $79,763 from the
E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Company for “Model Development
Framework for the Groundwater--Surface Water Interface Phase
III”. James H. Clarke is a co-principal investigator.
G.
Jennings, Chemical Engineering, $188,489 from the National
Science Foundation for “Linear and Side-functionalized
Macromolecular Adsorbates for Enhanced Versatility in the
Self-Assembly at Surfaces”.
Bridget
Rogers, Chemical Engineering, $483,000 from the National Science
Foundation for “MRI: Acquisition of an X-ray Photoelectron
Spectrometer for Research and Education in Inorganic,
Nonoparticulate, and Biological Materials”. James H. Dickerson,
Florence Sanchez and David W. Wright are co-principal
investigators.
Gautam
Biswas, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, $155,472
from the National Science Foundation for “Collaborative
Research: REESE--Assisting and Assessing Middle School Science
Learning in Formal and Informal Settings”.
Gautam
Biswas, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, $30,227
from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration for “NASA
2006 STTR: T1.01 Distributed Multi-agent Fault Diagnosis and
Reconfiguration Control”.
Robert
Bodenheimer, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$427,055 from the National Science Foundation for “HCC: Design
and Evaluation of Spatially Aware Interfaces into Virtual
Environments”. Thomas H. Carr, John J. Rieser and Timothy P.
McNamara are co-principal investigators.
Benoit
Dawant, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, $124,198
from the Public Health Service for “Commercialization of
Image-Guided Liver Surgery”.
Gabor
Karsai, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, $502,495
from the Department of Defense for “Support for
Criticality-sensitive Coordination (CSC)”.
Gabor
Karsai, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, $81,000
from the Department of Defense for “Support for PAMS:
Producible Adaptive Model-based Software”. Janos Sztipanovits
and Sandeep Neema are co-principal investigators.
Akos
Ledeczi, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, $100,000
from the Department of Energy for “Model-based Integration,
Security Analysis and Generation of Large-scale Distributed
Applications”.
Lloyd
Massengill, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$150,000 from the Defense Threat Reduction Agency for “SET
Effects in Hi-Speed Mixed-Signal Circuits and in Advanced
Technology Nodes”. Bharat L. Bhuva, Tim Holman and Robert Reed
are co-principal investigators.
Richard
Peters, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, $30,000
from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration for
“GSRP: Integration of Probablistic Methods for Object Tracking
on Sensory Ego-sphere for Katherine Fleming”
Douglas
Schmidt, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, $80,000
from the Department of Defense for “Air Force Team for Research
in Ubiquitous Security Technologies for GIG/NCES”. Janos
Sztipanovits is a co-principal investigator.
Douglas
Schmidt, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, $50,000
from Symantec, Incorporated for “ACE-based Monitoring Facility”.
Michael
Goldfarb, Mechanical Engineering,
$273,607 from the National Science Foundation for “Engineering
Research Center for Compact and Efficient Fluid Power”. Eric
Barth is a co-principal investigator.
Robert
Pitz, Mechanical Engineering, $67,725 from the Department of
Defense for “STTR: Raman Measurements to Validate Scramjet
Predictions”.
Robert
Pitz, Mechanical Engineering, $50,000 from the Department of
Defense for “Development and Application of Hydroxyl Tagging
Velocimetry for Ramjet Test Facilities”. Joseph A. Wehrmeyer is
a co-principal investigator.
Nilanjan Sarkar, Mechanical Engineering, $60,000 from the
Autism Speaks Foundation for “Innovative Technology for Mapping
Social Engagement in Children with Autism: Adaptive
Physiological Profiling”. Robert E. Bodenheimer is a
co-principal investigator.
Alvin
Strauss, Mechanical Engineering, $390,000 from the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration for “The Tennessee Space
Grant Consortium”.
Michael Alles, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$175,000 from the Defense Threat Reduction Agency for “Design of
Radiation Hardened Nanoelectronics Focus Center (RHFC) Technology Test Chip.”
Theodore A. Bapty, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$74,684 from the Department of Energy for “Lattice QCD SCIDAC:
Optimization of Fault Mitigation for Large Commodity Clusters.”
Daniel M. Fleetwood, Electrical
Engineering and Computer Science, $100,000 from the Mission
Research Corporation for “Research, Development, Test and
Evaluation (R,D,T & E) of Radiation Effects Phenomena on
Electronic Devices Subjected to Aging Environments.” Ronald D.
Schrimpf and Sokrates T. Pantelides are co-principal
investigators.
Michael Goldfarb, Mechanical Engineering,
$175,065 from the Department of Defense for “Anthropomorphic
Upper Extremity Prosthesis.” Eric Barth is co-principal
investigator.
Thomas R. Harris, Biomedical Engineering, $79,650
from the National Science Foundation for “The
Vanderbilt-Northwestern-Texas-Harvard/MIT (VaNTH) Engineering Research Center for Bioengineering Educational
Technology.” Stacy S. Klein-Gardner is co-principal investigator.
Gabor Karsai, Electrical Engineering and Computer
Science, $290,000 from the Department of Defense for
“Model-Based Software Technologies Targeting Interoperability
for Systems of Systems.” Janos Sztipanovits, Douglas Schmidt and
Theodore A. Bapty are co-principal investigators. Karsai also
received $204,849 from the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration for “MIC Tools for Exploration Systems (MICTES).”
Yongsheng Leng, Chemical Engineering, $225,000
from the National Science Foundation for “Multi-Timescale
Molecular Simulation Study of Hydration Force, Hydrophobic
Interaction and Shear Dynamics in Nanometer Confined Aqueous
Systems.” Peter Cummings is co-principal investigator.
Douglas C. Schmidt, Electrical Engineering and
Computer Science, $60,000 from the Lockheed Missile and Space
Company, Incorporated for “Thimble Software Technology
Initiative (STI).” Schmidt also received $60,000 from the
Lockheed Missile and Space Company, Incorporated for “Quality of
Service pICKER (QUICKER) Project for the Software Technology
Initiative (STI).” Schmidt received $77,080 from the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration for “Advanced Information
Systems and Technology Program-Roses.” Gautam Biswas is
co-principal investigator.
Ronald D. Schrimpf, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$2,942,000 from the Department of Defense for “Institute for
Space and Defense Electronics.” Lloyd W. Massengill, Daniel M.
Fleetwood, Kenneth F. Galloway and Tim Holman are co-principal
investigators.
Leslie M. Shor, Civil and Environmental Engineering, $199,957
from the National Science Foundation for “IDBR EcoChip: A
Micro-Structured Microbial Habitat Array.” David Kosson, Eugene
LeBoeuf and John P. Wikso Jr. are co-principal investigators.
Greg Walker, Mechanical Engineering, $25,500 from
the Department of Defense for “SBIR: Innovative Flight
Instrumentation for Hypersonics.”
Michael Alles, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$200,000 from the Defense Threat Reduction Agency for “SBIR:
High Efficiency Compact Modeling of Radiation Effects/Lynguent.”
Benoit Dawant, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$430,246 from the Public Health Service for “Computer-Assisted
Functional Neurosurgery.” Michael J. Fitzpatrick, Douglas H.
Fisher, Robert E. Bodenheimer and Alfred B. Bonds III are
co-principal investigators.
Michael Goldfarb, Mechanical Engineering, $338,609 from the
Public Health Service for “Robotic Prosthesis for Biomimetic
Locomotion in Transfemoral Amputees.” Eric Barth and Kevin Fite
are co-principal investigators. Goldfarb also received $47,655
from the National Science Foundation for “Engineering Research
Center for Compact and Efficient Fluid Power.” Eric Barth is
co-principal investigator.
M. Douglas LeVan, Chemical Engineering, $45,801 from the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration for “Low-Power Co2
Removal and Compression System: Modeling and Supporting
Experiments.”
Michael I. Miga, Biomedical Engineering, $55,642 from the Public
Health Service for “Multimodal Registration of the Brain’s
Cortical Surface.” Benoit Dawant is co-principal investigator.
Douglas C. Schmidt, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$50,000 from the Department of Defense for “Adaptive Resource
Control for Certifiable Systems: (CoWorkEr) (RACE).” Schmidt
also received $77,000 from the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration for “Advanced Information Systems and Technology
Program-Roses.” Gautam Biswas is co-principal investigator.
John P. Wikswo Jr., Physics, $70,456 from the Public Health
Service for “Electrophysiological Implications of the Cardiac
Bidomain.” Franz J. Baudenbacher and Veniamin Sidorov are
co-principal investigators.
Julie A. Adams, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$300,166 from the National Science Foundation for “CAREER: Human
Interaction with Large Numbers of Unmanned Vehicles.”
Michael Alles, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$42,000 from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
for “Radiation Effects in Mixed Signal Circuits, SiGe Integrated
Electronics for Extreme Environments, Phase II.” Robert A. Reed
is co-principal investigator.
Peter T. Cummings, Chemical Engineering, $270,000 from the
Department of Energy for “Integrated Multi-Scale Modeling of
Molecular Computing Devices.” Sokrates T. Pantelides, Ronald D.
Schrimpf, Yongsheng Leng and Kalman Varga are co-principal
investigators.
Frederick R. Haselton, Biomedical Engineering, $191,667 from the
Public Health Service for “Multi-Spectral Quantum Dot-Based
Imaging of Molecular Expression In Vivo.”
E. Duco Jansen, Biomedical Engineering, $347,436 from the Public
Health Service for “Development of a High Resolution, High
Throughput Optical Nerve/Brain Stimulator.” Anita
Mahadevan-Jansen is co-principal investigator.
David Kosson, Civil and Environmental Engineering, $2,000,000
from the Department of Energy for “Consortium for Risk
Evaluation with Stakeholder Participation (CRESP III).”
Sankaran Mahadevan, Civil and Environmental Engineering,
$110,310 from Transportation Technology Center, Incorporated for
“Advanced Modeling Capabilities for Railroad Wheel Failure
Analysis.”
Lloyd W. Massengill, Electrical Engineering and Computer
Science, $25,000 from the Department of Defense for “DARPA PHBD
Phase 1.5.” Massengill also received $500,000 from the Defense
Threat Reduction Agency for “SET Effects in High-Speed
Mixed-Signal Circuits and in Advanced Technology Nodes.” Bharat
L. Bhuva, William T. Holman, Robert A. Reed, Ronald A. Schrimpf
and Robert A. Weller are co-principal investigators.
Florence Sanchez, Civil and Environmental Engineering, $50,000
from Arcadis, Incorporated for “Laboratory Analysis of Extracts
from Laboratory Leaching Tests and Field Leachate Samples.”
Sanchez also received $50,000 from Arcadis, Incorporated for
“Evaluation of Potential Leaching of Mercury and Other
Constituents from Coal Combustion Residues.”
Douglas C. Schmidt, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$50,000 from Siemens Aktiengesellschaft for “Applying Aspect
Oriented Programming in Development of Component Synthesis
Toolset with Model-Integrated Computing.”
Yi Cui, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, $78,848
from the National Science Foundation for “CAREER: Achieving
Self-Tunability of Peer-to-Peer Streaming Service Through
User-level QoS Inference.”
Jim L. Davidson, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$50,000 from the Tennessee Valley Authority for “Develop
Technology to Significantly Enhance Breaker Life and
Reliability.” Kevin Holmes is co-principal investigator.
Davidson also received $130,000 from the Tennessee Valley
Authority for “CVD Diamond Vacuum Emission Devices Program.”
Weng Poo Kang is co-principal investigator.
Daniel M. Fleetwood, Electrical Engineering and Computer
Science, $150,000 from the Mission Research Corporation for
“Research, Development, Test and Evaluation (R,D,T & E) of
Radiation Effects Phenomena on Electronic Devices Subjected to
Aging Environments.” Ronald D. Schrimpf and Sokrates S.
Pantelides are co-principal investigators.
Xenofon Koutsoukos, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$150,000 from the Department of Defense for “Heterogeneous
Sensor Webs for Automated Target Recognition and Tracking in
Urban Terrain – MURI Topic 26.” Janos Sztipanovits and Akos
Ledeczi are co-principal investigators.
Sankaran Mahadevan, Civil and Environmental Engineering,
$100,000 from Sandia National Laboratories for “Bayesian
Framework for Model Validation.”
D. Mitchell Wilkes, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$530,000 from the National Science Foundation for “A
Biologically Inspired Adaptive Working Memory System for
Efficient Robot Control.” Kazuhiko Kawamura and David Noelle are
co-principal investigators.
Theodore A. Bapty, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$70,000 from the Raytheon Company for “Signal Processing
Platform (SPP) – Tool Chain Enhancements and Processor
Architecture Support.” Sandeep Neema is co-principal
investigator.
Franz Baudenbacher, Biomedical Engineering, $132,547 from the
National Science Foundation for “Collaborative Proposal:
Development of a Vector SQUID Microscope for Geomagnetism.”
Michael Goldfarb, Mechanical Engineering, $200,000 from the
Department of Defense for “Anthropomorphic Upper Extremity
Prosthesis.” Eric Barth is co-principal investigator.
Nilanjan Sarkar, Mechanical Engineering, $90,426 from the
Department of Defense for “Intelligent Fault Adaptation in
Autonomous and Semi-Autonomous Robotic Systems.”
Stephen R. Schach, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$50,000 from the Microsoft Corporation for “The Non
Maintainability of Linux.”
Douglas C. Schmidt, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$600,000 from the Department of Defense for “Pollux: Enhancing
the Quality of Service of the Global Information Grid.”
Alvin M. Strauss, Mechanical Engineering, $399,910 from the
Department of Defense for “Portable Power Research Institute.”
Jimmy L. Davidson, Weng Poo Kang, Michael Goldfarb and Eric
Barth are co-principal investigators.
Michael Alles,
Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, $125,000 by the
Defense Threat Reduction Agency for “Design of Radiation
Hardened Nanoelectronics Focus Center (RHFC) Technology Test
Chip.” Jeffrey D. Black is co-principal investigator.
Theodore A. Bapty, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$36,975 by the Department of Energy for “Lattice QCD SCIDAC:
Optimization of Fault Mitigation for Large Commodity Clusters.”
Gautam Biswas, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$311,883 by the National Science Foundation for “Collaborative
Research:
REESE-Assisting and Assessing Middle School Science Learning in
Formal and Informal Settings.”
Peter T. Cummings, Chemical Engineering, $280,600 by the
National Science Foundation for “Collaborative Research:
Cyberinfrastructure for Phase-Space Mapping-Free Energies, Phase
Equilibria and Transition Paths.”
David M. Dilts, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$102,282 by the Public Health Service for “Timing and Process
Flow Analysis of Opening Clinical Trials.”
Kevin B. Fite, Mechanical Engineering, $32,798 by the Department
of Defense for “Feasibility Study of MICE Powered Upper and
Lower Extremity Prostheses.” Michael Goldfarb is co-principal
investigator.
Robert L. Galloway Jr., Biomedical Engineering, $211,932 by the
Public Health Service for “Subcontract to Intuitive Surgical for
Surgical Guidance Using Preoperative and Realtime Images (STTR).”
Aniruddha Gokhale, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$70,000 by the Department of Defense for “ORB Infrastructure for
Adaptive and Reflective Middleware Systems.” Balachandran
Natarajan is co-principal investigator.
Sanjiv Gokhale, Civil and Environmental Engineering, $75,400 by
the University of Texas Construction Industry Institute for
“Maximizing the Value of Construction in Pre-Project Planning.”
Scott Guelcher, Chemical Engineering, $62,150 by the Public
Health Service for “Polyurethane Scaffold Synthesis for Tissue
Engineering.”
David Kosson, Civil and Environmental Engineering, $2,000,000 by
the Department of Energy for “Consortium for Risk Evaluation
with Stakeholder Participation (CRESP III).” Charles W. Powers
is co-principal investigator. Kosson also received $31,078 from
the Department of Energy for “Consortium for Risk Evaluation
with Stakeholder Participation II.” James H. Clarke, Andrew C.
Garrabrants and Sankaran Mahadevan are co-principal
investigators.
Sandeep Neema, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$40,000 by the BAE Systems for “SCA Rapid Development.”
William H. Robinson, Electrical Engineering and Computer
Science, $280,000 by the Defense Threat Reduction Agency for
“Study to Identify and Approach to Develop an Advanced
Radiation-Hardened Microprocessor Technology/Architecture
Capable of Melting Future Satellite and Missile System
Requirements.” Bharat L. Bhuva, Ronald D. Schrimpf, Lloyd W.
Massengill, Theodore A. Bapty and Sandeep K. Neema are
co-principal investigators.
Douglas C. Schmidt, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$100,000 by the Raytheon Company for “Technologies for
Integrating Distributed, Real-Time Embedded Infrastructure (DREI)
and Model-Driven Computing (MDC) for Command Control.” Anirudda
Gokhale is co-principal investigator. Schmidt also received
$49,415 from the National Science Foundation for “New Research
Direction in High Confidence Software Platforms for Cyber
Physical Systems Workshop.”
Alvin M. Strauss, Mechanical Engineering, $40,000 by the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration for “The Tennessee
Space Grant Consortium.”
Mark Stremler, Mechanical Engineering, $213,818 by the National
Science Foundation for “Collaborative Research: Topological
Fluid Mechanics of Stirring.”
Greg Walker, Mechanical Engineering, $312,926 by the National
Science Foundation for “Coupled Transport in Energy Conversion
Devices.”
Robert A. Weller, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$400,000 by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
for “An Unsolicited Proposal to Develop a Tool for Predicting
the Radiation-Induced Single Event Effect Response for
Semiconductor Devices and Circuits.” Robert Reed and Marcus
Mendenhall are co-principal investigators.
Adam Anderson, Biomedical Engineering, $232,236 from the Public
Health Service for “Improved Imaging of Brain White Matter.”
Akram Aldroubi is co-principal investigator.
Edsel B. Daniel, Civil and Environmental Engineering, $46,900
from the U.K. Department for International Development for “St.
Helena Environmental Information System (SHEIS) Project.”
Jim L. Davidson, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$2,973,905 from the Department of Defense for “Advanced Carbon
Nanotechnology Consortium.” Weng Poo Kang, Charles M. Lukehart,
Alvin M. Strauss and Norman H. Tolk are co-principal
investigators.
Mark Does, Biomedical Engineering, $294,903 from the Public
Health Service for “Sub-Voxel Tissue Characterization with
In-Vivo MRI.”
Leonard C. Feldman, Materials Science and Engineering, $653,292
and $86,400 from the National Science Foundation for
“Vanderbilt-Fisk Interdisciplinary Program for Research and
Education in the Nanosciences.” Sandra J. Rosenthal, Peter
Cummings and James E. Wittig are co-principal investigators.
Michael Goldfarb, Mechanical Engineering, $270,939 from the
National Science Foundation for “Engineering Research Center for
Compact and Efficient Fluid Power.” Eric Barth is co-principal
investigator.
Scott Guelcher, Chemical Engineering, $70,000 from the
Department of Defense for “Controlled Delivery of PDGF with Poly
(Ester Urethane Urea) Scaffolds.”
E. Duco Jansen, Biomedical Engineering, $339,154 from the Public
Health Service for “Optical Stimulation of Neural Tissue.” Anita
Mahadevan-Jansen is co-principal investigator.
Anita Mahadevan-Jansen, Biomedical Engineering, $299,331 from
the Public Health Service for “Development of Handheld Probe for
Confocal Microscopy and Raman Spectroscopy of Skin.”
Florence Sanchez, Civil and Environmental Engineering, $50,000
from the Arcadis, Incorporated for “Laboratory Analysis of
Extracts from Laboratory Leaching Tests and Field Leachate
Samples.” Sanchez also received $25,000 from the Arcadis,
Incorporated for “Evaluation of Potential Leaching of Mercury
and Other Constituents from Coal Combustion Residues.”
L. Roy Xu, Civil and Environmental Engineering, $47,909 from the
National Science Foundation for “SGER: Application of Dynamic
Failure Mechanics to Material and Interface Selections for
Protecting Critical Structures.”
Daniel M. Fleetwood, Electrical Engineering and Computer
Science, $250,000 from the Mission Research Corporation for
“Research, Development, Test and Evaluation (R.D.T. & E.) of
Radiation Effects Phenomena on Electronic Devices Subjected to
Aging Environments.”
Ronald D. Schrimpf and Sokrates S. Pantelides are co-principal
investigators.
Gabor Karsai, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$132,729 from the Department of Defense for “Support for
Critically Sensitive Coordination (CSC).”
Sankaran Mahadevan, Civil and Environmental Engineering, has
received two awards in the amount of $25,000 and $50,000 from
the Sandia National Laboratories for “Bayesian Framework for
Model Validation.”
Lloyd W. Massengill, Electrical Engineering and Computer
Science, $500,000 from the Defense Threat Reduction Agency for
“SET Effects in Hi-Speed Mixed-Signal Circuits and in Advanced
Technology Nodes.” Bharat L. Bhuva, Tim Holman, Robert Reed,
Ronald D.
Schrimpf and Robert A. Weller are co-principal investigators.
Clare McCabe, Chemical Engineering, $468,135 from the Department
of Defense for “A Combined Computational and Experimental Study
of Nanoscale Lubrication: Application to Micro- and Nano-Electromechanical
Systems.” G. Kane Jennings is co-principal investigator.
Veniamin Sidorov, Biomedical Engineering, $65,000 from the
American Heart Association for “The Role of Changing Ion
Concentration in Fibrillation and in Cardiac Shock Response.”
Alvin M. Strauss, Mechanical Engineering, $580,000 from the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration for “The Tennessee
Space Grant Consortium.”
Michael Alles, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$30,000 from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
for “Radiation Effects in Mixed Signal Circuits, SiGe Integrated
Electronics for Extreme Environments, Phase II.” Robert Reed is
co-principal investigator.
Peter T. Cummings, Chemical Engineering, $52,500 from the
Department of Energy for “Molecular Simulation of the Electrical
Double Layer.”
Douglas H. Fisher, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$43,951 from the Public Health Service for “Clinical and
Microarray Data Predict Lung Cancer Outcomes.”
Robert L. Galloway Jr., Biomedical Engineering, $179,746 from
the Public Health Service for “Open Architecture Image-Guided
Therapy Software System.” Galloway also received $28,990 from
the Public Health Service for “Surgical Guidance Using
Preoperative and Realtime Images (STTR Phase II).”
Thomas R. Harris, Biomedical Engineering, $55,935 from the
National Science Foundation for “The
Vanderbilt-Northwestern-Texas-Harvard/MIT (VaNTH) Engineering
Research Center for Bioengineering Educational Technology.”
Gabor Karsai, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$399,781 from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
for “Support For CMMD: Coordinated Multisource Maintenance on
Demand.” Karsai also received $161,208 from the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration for “MIC Tools for
Exploration Systems (MICTES).”
Xenofon Koutsoukos, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$87,000 from the National Science Foundation for “Distributed
Monitoring and Diagnosis of Embedded Systems Using Hierarchical
Abstractions.” Gautam Biswas is co-principal investigator.
Sankaran Mahadevan, Civil and Environmental Engineering, $28,500
from the Federal Highway Administration for “Dwight David
Eisenhower Transportation Fellowship Program ? Mark McDonald.”
Lloyd W. Massengill, Electrical Engineering and Computer
Science, $100,000 from the Department of Defense for “DARPA PHBD
Phase l.5.”
Clare McCabe, Chemical Engineering, $101,687 from the National
Science Foundation for “Development of Predictive Methods for
Thermodynamic Properties Relevant to Environmentally Benign
Processes.”
Robert Reed, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$400,000 from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
for “Advanced Modeling and Test Methods for Radiation Effects on
Microelectronic Devices.” Robert A. Weller and Marcus Mendenhall
are co-principal investigators.
Janos Sztipanovits, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$89,968 from the Department of Defense for “Future Combat
Systems:
System Development and Demonstration Phase.” Douglas Schmidt,
Garbor Karsai and Theodore A. Bapty are co-principal
investigators.
Robert A. Weller, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$25,000 from the Department of Defense for “Developing Digital
Models of Radiation Induced Single Events in Focal Plane Array
Infrared Detectors.” Ronald D. Schrimpf and Robert Reed are
co-principal investigators.
Mark D. Abkowitz, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$200,000 from the Tennessee Department of Transportation for
“Intelligent Transportation Systems Customer Relations
Applications.” James Dobbins is co-principal investigator.
(February 2006)
Michael Alles, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$250,000 from the Defense Threat Reduction Agency for “Design of
Radiation Hardened Nanoelectronics Focus Center (RHFC)
Technology Test Chip.” Jeffrey D. Black is co-principal
investigator. (February 2006)
Peter T. Cummings, Chemical Engineering, $100,000 from the
Department of Energy for “Molecular Modeling and Simulation of
Aqueous Electrolyte Systems.” Cummings also received $158,704
from the Department of Energy for “Joint Faculty Appointment ?
Vanderbilt University/Oak Ridge National Laboratory.” (February
2006)
Andrew C. Garrabrants, Civil and Environmental Engineering,
$123,753 from the Electric Power Research Institute for
“Leachate Test Methods for the Evaluation of the Effectiveness
of In-Situ Stabilization of Soil Material at Form MGP Sites.”
Leslie M. Shor is co-principal investigator. (February 2006)
Michael Goldfarb, Mechanical Engineering, $280,000 from the
Department of Defense for “Anthropomorphic Upper Extremity
Prosthesis.” Eric Barth is co-principal investigator. (February
2006)
Akos Ledeczi, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$199,671 from the Department of the Interior for “SCRIPTE: Smart
Capture, Recognition, Interpretation and Presentation of the
Tactical Environment.” Theodore A. Bapty and Peter Volgyesi are
co-principal investigators. (February 2006)
Michael I. Miga, Biomedical Engineering, $320,075 from the
Public Health Service for “Multimodal Registration of the
Brain’s Cortical Surface.” Benoit Dawant is co-principal
investigator. (February 2006)
Ronald D. Schrimpf, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$2,631,144 from the Department of Defense for “Institute for
Space and Defense Electronics.” Lloyd W. Massengill, Daniel M.
Fleetwood, Tim Holman and Kenneth F. Galloway are co-principal
investigators. (February 2006)
Janos Sztipanovits, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$345,365 from the Department of Defense for “Future Combat
Systems: System Development and Demonstration Phase.” Douglas
Schmidt, Gabor Karsai and Theodore A. Bapty are co-principal
investigators. (February 2006)
Gautam Biswas, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$44,599 by the National Science Foundation for “Collaborative
Research: Exploring the Value of Learning by Teaching.”
Scott Guelcher, Chemical Engineering, $44,000 by the Department
of Defense for “A Resorbable Polyurethane/Bone Composite
Intramedullary Rod for Fracture Fixation.”
Janos Sztipanovits, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$100,557 by the Department of Defense for “Future Combat
Systems: Software Architecture Engineering Support.” Douglas
Schmidt, Gabor Karsai and Anirudda Gokhale are co-principal
investigators.
Aniruddha Gokhale, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$110,000 by the Department of Defense for “ORB Infrastructure
for Adaptive and Reflective Middleware Systems.” Balachandran
Natarajan is co-principal investigator.
Michael Goldfarb, Mechanical Engineering, $75,551 by the
Department of the Interior for “Concept Study Proposal for
Lightweight Man-Portable Rescue Spreader.”
Scott Guelcher, Chemical Engineering, $60,995 by the Public
Health Service for “Polyurethane Scaffold Synthesis for Tissue
Engineering.”
Gabor Karsai, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$208,552 by the Department of Defense for “Support for CARTE:
Comprehensive, Analytic, Real-Time Execution of Joint Air
Operations.” Christopher van Buskirk is co-principal
investigator.
David Kosson, Civil and Environmental Engineering, $159,653 by
the Department of Energy for “Consortium for Risk Evaluation
with Stakeholder Participation II.” James H. Clarke, Andrew C.
Garrabrants and Sankaran Mahadevan are co-principal
investigators.
Michael Alles, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$33,000 by the Department of Defense for "SBIR: High Efficiency
Compact Modeling of Radiation Effects."
Adam Anderson, Biomedical Engineering, $50,000 by the National
Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression for
"Independent Investigator Award."
Robert L. Galloway Jr., Biomedical Engineering, $74,263 by the
Public Health Service for "Minimally Invasive Surgical Planning
and Training System." Michael I. Miga is co-principal
investigator.
Galloway also received $180,652 from the Public Health Service
for "Image-Guided Liver Surgery." Benoit Dawant, Michael Miga
and J. Michael Fitzpatrick are co-principal investigators.
Aniruddha Gokhale, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
$74,332 by the National Science Foundation for "CSR-SMA
Collaborative: A Model-Driven Performance Analysis Framework for
Distributed, Performance-Sensitive Software Systems."
Thomas R. Harris, Biomedical Engineering, $26,223 by the
National Science Foundation for "The LIFE Center: Dynamic
Assessment with Technology." Harris also received $2,090,400
from the National Science Foundation for "The
Vanderbilt-Northwestern-Texas-Harvard/MIT (VaNTH) Engineering
Research Center for Bioengineering Educational Technology."
Davis S. Cordray, Arlene Harris, Sean Brophy, Robert J. Roselli
and Jerry C. Collins are co-principal investigators.
David Kosson, Civil and Environmental Engineering, $187,858 by
the Department of Energy for "Consortium for Risk Evaluation
with Stakeholder Participation II." James H. Clarke, Andrew C.
Garrabrants and Sankaran Mahadevan are co-principal
investigators.