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The University of Iowa. External Funding 2004-2005. The Numbers The People The Impact. Total External Awards 2004-2005. The Numbers. $359.6 million Total Federal: $249.7 million Total Non-Federal: $109.9 million. The University of Iowa External Funding FY 1968-2005. (Millions $).
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The University of Iowa External Funding 2004-2005
The Numbers • The People • The Impact
Total External Awards2004-2005 The Numbers $359.6 million Total Federal: $249.7 million Total Non-Federal: $109.9 million
The University of Iowa External Funding FY 1968-2005 (Millions $)
Total Awards By Source 2004-2005 (Millions $) • Most recent NSF survey, UI ranks 15th among public universities in terms of Federally-financed expenditures for research and development. UI ranks 12th in NIH awards among all public universities in NIH’s 2004 report. DHHS=Department of Health and Human Services, DOD=Department of Defense, ED=Department of Education, NASA=National Aeronautics and Space Administration, NSF=National Science Foundation ‘States’ and ‘Universities’ totals represent funds primarily from federal pass-through sources. ‘Other’ includes other federal and other non-federal funds.
Total Awards By College 2004-2005 (Millions $)
Technology Transfer & Economic Development Royalty Revenue and Licensure Earnings $20,000,000.00 $17,500,000.00 $15,000,000.00 $12,500,000.00 $10,000,000.00 $7,500,000.00 $5,000,000.00 $2,500,000.00 $0.00 FY2004 FY2005
Selected Awards in the Biological Sciences The People Barry Carter, College of Pharmacy, Clinical Hospital Pharmacy, $643,448, DHHS-National Institutes of Health, Improving Adherenceto Blood Pressure Guidelines, 8/1/2004-7/31/2005 Daniel Eberl, College of Liberal Arts & Sciences, Biological Sciences, $302,084, DHHS-National Institutes of Health, Drosophila Deafness Genes: Analysis of Chordotonal Organ, 4/1/2005-3/31/2006 Paul Mulhausen, College of Medicine, Internal Medicine, $333,723, DHHS-Health Resources & Services Administration, Geriatric Training: Meeting Needs of Rural Iowans,07/01/2004-06/30/2005
Selected Awards in the Arts and Humanities The People Stephen Bloom, College of Liberal Arts & Sciences, Journalism & Mass Communication, $1,500, National Endowment for the Arts/Iowa Arts Council, Shoedog Meets Iowa Countryside, 8/16/2004-11/30/2004 and $1,000, Hometown Perry, Iowa Museum, 9/01/2004-12/31/2005 William Davies, College of Liberal Arts & Sciences, Linguistics, $ 32,805, U.S. Department of Education, Fulbright-Hays Faculty Research Abroad: Madurese Oral Narratives, 6/15/2005-12/31/2006 Joan Kjaer Kirkman, Other Administrative Units, Broadcasting Services, $8,000, National Endowment for the Arts, Documentary on Donald Justice, 11/01/2004-10/31/2005
Selected Awards in thePhysical and Mathematical Sciences The People Allen Bradley, College of Engineering, IIHR-Hydroscience & Engineering, $99,544, Iowa Department of Transportation, Evaluation of Design-Flood Frequency Methods for Iowa Streams, 3/1/2005-2/28/2007 Mary Hall Reno, College of Liberal Arts & Sciences, Physics & Astronomy, $77,295, US National Science Foundation, REU Site: Undergraduate Research in Physics and Astronomy at the University of Iowa, 4/1/2005-3/31/2006 Kasturi Varadarajan, College of Liberal Arts & Sciences, Computer Science, $98,747, US National Science Foundation, CAREER Award: Algorithms for Fitting, Matching, and Simplifying Shapes, 8/1/2005-7/31/2006
Selected Awards in theSocial Sciences The People Jennifer Glass, College of Liberal Arts & Sciences, Sociology, $170,069, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, Workplace Flexibility Policies and Wage Growth: Are the Penalties Equal for All Workers?, 1/05/2005-12/31/2006 John Knutson, College of Liberal Arts & Sciences, Psychology, $662,443 DHHS-National Institutes of Health, Domestic Violence and Parenting of Young Children, 6/1/2005-5/31/2006 Larissa Samuelson, College of Liberal Arts & Sciences, Psychology, $165,938, DHHS-National Institutes of Health, Learning to Learn Words: Tests of a Four-Step Process, 5/1/2005-4/30/2006
The People – The Impact Through funding from the NIH, gene therapy may someday reverse the effects of mental retardation, and humanity may owe thanks at least in part to researchers like Dr. Beverly Davidson at The University of Iowa. Using gene therapy to switch off genes instead of adding new ones could slow down or prevent the fatal brain disorder, Huntington's disease. Beverly Davidson, Ph.D. Professor of Internal Medicine, Physiology and Biophysics, and Neurology.
The People – The Impact Through studies funded by the NIH and the Department of Defense,researchers like Professor Greg Gray at the Center for Emerging Infectious Diseasesseek to understand why some people experience animal-to-human transmission of influenza virus. Identifying people at the greatest risk of zoonotic infection is a first step in providing them with special vaccines to prevent such infections and epidemics. Gregory C. Gray, MD, MPH Professor, Department of Epidemiology Director, Center for Emerging Infectious Diseases
The People – The Impact Steve’s project “Iowa Stories” from the Year of the Arts and Humanities set up “story swaps” around the state. The focus of Steve’s work along the Iowa Route is to create a broadcast of these community stories of Iowa life and culture. Steve Thunder-McGuire, Professor and Program Coordinator, Art Education Department, and School of Art and Art History, and Teaching and Learning
The People – The Impact University of Iowa space researchers Don Gurnett and Bill Kurth are leaders of a team recently selected by NASA to carry out the Juno mission to Jupiter scheduled for launch no later than June 30, 2010. The focus of The University of Iowa’s participation will be a NASA-funded $12 million radio and plasma wave instrument. Iowa space physicists Donald Gurnett and Bill Kurth Department of Physics and Astronomy.
The People – The Impact Through studies funded by the National Institute for Nursing Research (NINR), researchers at University of Iowa’s College of Nursing, such as Dr. Marita Titler, study the management of pain in older adults with hip fractures, a population that is likely to have acute pain. This interdisciplinary endeavor brings together experts from The University of Iowa Colleges of Nursing, Pharmacy, Medicine, and Public Health and from The University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics. University of Iowa College of Nursing is the #2 gerontological nursing program in the country, as ranked by U.S. News and World Report. Dr. Marita Titler, PhD, RN, FAAN
The People – The Impact Applying Engineering to Improving Human Health • David Wilder, associate professor of biomedical engineering, wants to make sure that farmers have their bodies cushioned in the best possible way to avoid back injury when their tractors take an unforeseen bump.
The Numbers • The People • The Impact