🌊 Advancing Environmental Science with AI 🌊 UConn researchers are using machine learning to model "dead zones" in lakes -- oxygen-deprived areas that can lead to fish mortality, water quality issues, and other harmful environmental and economic impacts. This work is crucial for understanding and mitigating the impacts of these zones on aquatic ecosystems. By applying advanced AI techniques, researchers are providing valuable insights that will inform better management and conservation practices. https://lnkd.in/eK9-GWz7 #UConnResearch #UConn #Research #MachineLearning #EnvironmentalScience #Conservation
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With an award of $3.4 million from the U.S. Department of Education, UConn researchers are launching “Project Focus” to increase nationwide recognition of gifted students. https://lnkd.in/eXsgX6P8 “Project Focus is really all about supporting teachers in how they engage in questioning and discussion in the classroom, as a way of giving more students access to the opportunity to engage in high-level discussion about what they’re learning,” says project PI Catherine Little, a professor in the UConn Neag School of Education who specializes in giftedness, creativity, and talent development.
Helping Teachers Recognize Gifted Learners and Elevate Classroom Conversation
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No use crying over 80-year-old milk! 🥛Instead, researchers in UConn's department of pathobiology and veterinary science are analyzing it to trace the history of antibiotic resistance. https://lnkd.in/e8kRHi_g
Uncovering New Details from 1940s Milk Samples - UConn Today
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Lijing Wang, an incoming assistant professor of geosciences in the UConn College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, will be conducting one of just 35 projects supported by the first-ever National Artificial Intelligence Research Resource (NAIRR) Pilot. https://lnkd.in/exSxE_VP Her project studies water flow in mountainous areas where the lack of data about snow melt and water movement makes predictions about the area’s future water flow difficult to compute or inaccurate. 🏔 “Mountainous watersheds provide significant water resources,” says Wang. “Conducting intensive monitoring is key to understanding water availability, but it’s not feasible in every catchment. Together with monitoring, an AI tool could help us evaluate these water variations more efficiently in the face of climate change.” 💧
The U.S. National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) are thrilled to announce the first 35 projects that will be supported with computational time through the National Artificial Intelligence Research Resource (NAIRR) Pilot, marking a significant milestone in fostering responsible AI research across the nation. “The NAIRR Pilot, fueled by the need to advance responsible AI research and broaden access to cutting-edge resources needed for AI research, symbolizes a firm stride toward democratizing access to vital AI tools across the talented communities in all corners of our country,” said NSF Director Sethuraman Panchanathan. “While this is only the first step in our NAIRR efforts, we plan to rapidly expand our partnerships and secure the level of investments needed to realize the NAIRR vision and unlock the full potential of AI for the benefit of humanity and society.” In addition, the NAIRR Pilot has opened a second opportunity for researchers and educators to apply for access to resources that support AI research, which will also enable educators to train students through hands-on projects. The pilot embraces diversity and collaboration acknowledging that addressing AI challenges requires a collective effort across sectors, and empowers researchers and educators from diverse U.S. institutions, including minority-serving institutions and small businesses, to contribute various perspectives and technical directions. Learn more: https://bit.ly/3y8EhQc 📷: Charlotte Geary/NSF
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Climate change is happening worldwide, but the Arctic provides an unusually rich and diverse environment to study its effects. https://lnkd.in/eazZGtw9 With an award of $15 million from the National Science Foundation (NSF), researchers at UConn, the Woodwell Climate Research Center, and Columbia University are forming the Evolving Meta-Ecosystems (EvoME) Institute to study ecosystem resilience in the Arctic. UConn professor of ecology and evolutionary biology Mark Urban will co-lead the project, along with UConn scientists Jill Wegrzyn, Rachel O’Neill, Cory Merow, and Dan Bolnick. UConn contributors will work with experts in diverse disciplines from 14 institutions on the project over the next six years. “Our larger goal is to come up with a more holistic view of ecosystem extending across time, space, disciplines, and ecosystems that we can use in forecasting the effects of climate change on the Arctic,” says Urban, who is founder and director of UConn’s Center of Biological Risk. “There are a lot of synergies here that will help us forecast the future. It will also enhance our ability to work together and learn from one another to answer these questions.”
Arctic-Focused Climate Change Research Initiative Earns Coveted $15 Million NSF Award - UConn Today
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Researchers at UConn's Connecticut Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory (CVMDL) have sequenced the genome of the rabies virus recently detected in a Connecticut black bear, helping protect wildlife and the public against future cases. https://lnkd.in/ezU2YQTm This rare case is only the second time the lab has seen rabies in a black bear. By sequencing the virus, researchers will be able to better understand and monitor its spread. "We have created a sequencing lab inside a diagnostic lab that is allowing us to dig more into what is going on," says Guillermo Risatti, CVMDL director and professor in the department of pathobiology and veterinary science.
UConn Lab Sequences Rabies in Black Bear - UConn Today
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Two teams of students, advised by UConn College of Agriculture, Health and Natural Resources faculty, are headed to the finals of the U.S. Department of Energy’s AlgaePrize competition. https://lnkd.in/eT6HRt-n The interdisciplinary teams will develop sustainable, algae-based products for use as a poultry feed supplement and food preservative. #UConnResearch #UConn #research #algae #algaeprize #usdoe #energy #sustainability #poultry #preservatives
Innovative Algae Technologies Help UConn Teams Advance in National Competition - UConn Today
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