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Research & Science

Brain Health Research Institute is helping transform the culture of Kent State

Kent State’s New Undergraduate Neuroscience Major Thrives

Kent State University introduced a Bachelor of Science degree in Neuroscience in fall 2019, and since the launch, the major has had tremendous growth. Enrollment is projected to surpass majors that have been at Kent State for years.

Tags: Research & Science, Neuroscience, brain health, Brain Health Research Institute, College of Arts and Sciences

Kent State Today

BioBlack Team Poses with their bacteria-dyed tote bad and dress dyed with bacterium

BioBlack Team Brings Home Award From Biodesign Challenge

A team of Kent State students took home the Outstanding Science Award from the Biodesign Challenge Summit 2020 held in June.

Tags: Featured Story, Research & Science, Student Life, Environmental Science and Design Research Institute

Kent Campus

A black and white image of a chest X-ray

Kent State Mathematicians Win NSF Grant to Study Complex But Important Geometry Problems

The National Science Foundation believes Kent State University mathematicians Artem Zvavitch, Ph.D., and Dmitry Ryabogin, Ph.D., are having worthwhile conversations about some age-old unsolved problems, and it has provided support to keep the discussion going for another three years.

Tags: Research & Science, College of Arts and Sciences, Division of Research and Sponsored Programs, Department of Mathematical Sciences, National Science Foundation

Division of Research & Economic Development

FANUC Cobot Student

The College of Aeronautics and Engineering Secures Tech Funding for Areas Across University

On June 1, Kent State University was approved to move forward with the purchase of $143,233 worth of equipment through the Ohio Department of Higher Education’s Regionally Aligned Priorities in Delivering Skills (RAPIDS 4) program.

Tags: Research & Science, College of Aeronautics & Engineering, Kent State University at Stark, Design Innovation

College of Aeronautics and Engineering

car glass

Graduate Student Creates Smart Glass for Privacy and Heat Applications

Yingfei Jiang, a College of Arts and Science graduate student in the Chemical Physics program and the Advanced Materials and Liquid Crystal Institute at Kent State University, and his advisor Deng-Ke Yang, Ph.D., a professor in the Department of Physics, have invented the first ever dual-mode smart glass technology that can control both radiant energy flow (heat) and privacy through a tinted material.

Tags: Research & Science, College of Arts and Sciences, Chemical Physics, Department of Physics, AMLCI, Advance Materials and Liquid Crystal Institute, Yingfei Jiang, Deng-Ke Yang, Research and Science, Switchable Windows, Liquid Crystals, Smart Glass

College of Arts & Sciences

A rift along the Larsen C ice shelf from the vantage point of NASA's DC-8 research aircraft. Image acquired by NASA on November 10, 2016. Photo credit: John Sonntag / NASA

Revised Look at Ancient Glaciers Predicts Faster Melting Rate in Antarctica

Joseph D. Ortiz, Ph.D., professor and assistant chair in the College of Arts and Sciences’ Department of Geology at Kent State University, recently authored a “News and Views” article in Nature Geoscience that discusses research carried out by another research team that reassessed the melt history and timing of the collapse of the Eurasian Ice Sheet Complex during the Last Deglaciation.

Tags: Research & Science, Joe Ortiz, Department of Earth Sciences, College of Arts and Sciences, climate change, Antarctica, Glaciers, Nature Geoscience, Environmental Science and Design Research Institute

Department of Earth Sciences

10 Questions about Contact Tracing App With Gokarna Sharma

10 Questions With Gokarna Sharma żěè¶ĚĘÓƵ the Contact Tracing App

Apple and Google partnered in early April to create a new smartphone app that uses Bluetooth to track coronavirus cases. Using a technology called contact tracing, the app alerts a user when they come in contact with someone who has been positively diagnosed with COVID-19. Gokarna Sharma, assistant professor in Computer Science, recently answered 10 questions about the new app based on his professional opinion. Sharma is experienced in algorithms, blockchain and smart technologies such as this.

Tags: Health, Research & Science, Community & Society, Global Reach, COVID-19 HUB

Kent State Today

A rift along the Larsen C ice shelf from the vantage point of NASA's DC-8 research aircraft. Image acquired by NASA on November 10, 2016. Photo credit: John Sonntag / NASA

Revised Look at Ancient Glaciers Predicts Faster Melting Rate in Antarctica

Joseph D. Ortiz, Ph.D., professor and assistant chair in the College of Arts and Sciences’ Department of Geology at Kent State University, recently authored a “News and Views” article in Nature Geoscience that discusses research carried out by another research team that reassessed the melt history and timing of the collapse of the Eurasian Ice Sheet Complex during the Last Deglaciation.

Tags: Research & Science, Joe Ortiz, Department of Earth Sciences, College of Arts and Sciences, climate change, Antarctica, Glaciers, Nature Geoscience, Environmental Science and Design Research Institute

College of Arts & Sciences

Autism Research is represented by an image of the brain

Kent State University's Autism Research Ongoing on Various Fronts

April’s observance as Autism Awareness Month is coming to a close, but research into the whys and hows of autism is always ongoing at Kent State University.

Michael N. Lehman, Ph.D., director of the Brain Health Research Institute at Kent State, said the university supports autism research that focuses on basic discoveries within the brain, as well as applied human research of students with autism, which makes Kent State’s body of research unique and diverse.

Tags: Research & Science, Student Life

Kent Campus