Posts tagged with “Recent Grants” (All posts)
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Andrea Mazzariello, Assistant Professor of Music, is the recipient of a Southeastern Minnesota Arts Council (SEMAC) Artistic Support for Individuals grant for his project Music for Bridging. SEMAC’s funding will support the participation of Northfield musicians JC Sanford and Brady Lenzen in the improvisation, collaboration, and recording processes.
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Gao Hong, Director of the Chinese Music Ensemble and Senior Lecturer in Chinese Musical Instruments, is the recipient of a Southeastern Minnesota Arts Council (SEMAC) Artistic Support for Culture Bearers grant for her new work.
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Asuka Sango, Associate Professor of Religion and Director of Asian Studies, organized two transdisciplinary workshops with the support of a grant from the Japan Foundation, New York. Held in January and February, the online workshops featured presentations by professors, independent researchers, and curators from Japan, Europe, and North America.
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Jake Morton, Assistant Professor of Classics, has been awarded a Loeb Classical Library Foundation Fellowship for the 2021-2022 academic year. This grant will support work on his upcoming monograph, “The First Roman Invasion of Greece: Where they went, who they were, and why it matters,” which explores a groundbreaking interpretation of Roman actions in Greece between Rome’s initial invasion in 200 BC and the peace terms imposed in 167 BC. Novel methodology – a combination of topographic study, philology, and comparative history and anthropology – will be employed to argue for a new understanding of both Rome’s shifting foreign policy and developing cultural identity in this key period in Mediterranean history.
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Noboru Tomonari, Professor of Japanese and Chair of Asian Languages and Literature, received a grant from the Japan Foundation, Los Angeles, to purchase Japanese-language teaching materials. The grant enabled the purchase of 54 volumes, which are now available to students and faculty.
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Julie Neiworth receives her fifth NIH award
10 February 2021Julie Neiworth, Laurence McKinley Gould Professor of Natural Sciences and Psychology, was awarded an NIH AREA grant (2R15AG051940-02) entitled “Longitudinal Cognitive Behavioral Testing and Immunohistochemical Assessment of Alzheimer’s Disease Markers, Immune Response, Neurogenesis, and Cell Loss in a Natural Aging Primate Model.” This is a renewal of the former funded grant which examined how beta amyloid plaques and neural loss corresponded to failures in tasks testing working memory, rule shifting, and visual attention in cotton top tamarins as a natural process of aging. In this current renewal, Neiworth is adding a number of immune response measures, including the state of astrocytes and microglia in the brain and hyperphosphorylated tau, as well as signs of neurogenesis in aging tamarins. These are correlated with their tracked cognitive decline in life and indicate patterns related to natural aging, dementia, or Alzheimer’s disease like symptoms. This is Neiworth’s fifth NIH award, all involving undergraduate student collaborators.
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Mike Nishizaki, Assistant Professor of Biology, has been awarded a National Science Foundation grant for his project “Collaborative Research: RUI: Microscale interactions of foundation species with their fluid environment: biological feedbacks alter ecological interactions of mussels” (NSF OCE #2050129). Working with Emily Carrington at U. of Washington and Matthew Reidenbach at U. of Virginia, Prof. Nishizaki and his students will investigate mussel behavior and physiology using a combination of lab, field, and computational fluid dynamic model experiments.
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NSF subaward to Anya Vostinar for microbiome evolution research
12 January 2021Anya Vostinar, Assistant Professor of Computer Science, is recipient of a subaward from Michigan State University, to do work that supports lead PI Kristin Parent’s CAREER project exploring Shigella phage-mediated genetic transfer effect on microbiome evolution. Prof. Vostinar and her undergraduates will assist with computational development and analysis of a simulation of the bacteria-phage dynamics with intent toward development of a predictive tool that can ultimately be applied to other bacteria-phage interactions.
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JC Sanford, Instructor in Trombone/Euphonium & Tuba, is a recipient of a Minnesota State Arts Board Creative Support for Individuals award. JC will produce a CD and digital jazz recording with his Imminent Standards Trio to take the place of their usual monthly performances at Imminent Brewing in Northfield which has been halted by COVID-19.
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Dan Maxbauer to host student research projects testing agricultural field amendments
31 December 2020Dan Maxbauer, Assistant Professor of Geology, will receive funding from the Keck Geology Consortium, supported by National Science Foundation EAR, to host a Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU) project in summer 2021 at the Carleton campus. His project, “Carbon sequestration by enhanced silicate weathering in agricultural soils,” enables Prof. Maxbauer to mentor four students in conducting an agricultural field trial to test the efficacy of rock dust amendments, with a focus on evaluating carbon sequestration, crop yields, and soil health.
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