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Updated 1:00 PM September 22, 2003
 

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Research funding up 14.3%; largest increase since 1987


Research funding at U-M reached $749 million in fiscal year 2003, an increase of 14.3 percent, the largest percentage increase since 1987. Research funding from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the primary source of life sciences funding, totaled $351 million. Increased support for life sciences accounted for $47 million of the growth, or more than 50 percent of the overall increase.

A selection of the highest-funded research projects

Drug use and lifestyles of American youth

NIH grant, five years, $27.9 million

Lloyd Johnston , ISR, principal investigator

Ongoing study of the behaviors, attitudes and values of high school and college students, and young adults.

Recent findings:

• Student drug testing not effective in reducing drug use

• Ecstasy use among American teens dropping

• Teen smoking declined sharply in 2002, offsetting the increases of the 1990s

• Party animals are a rare breed after college, as drinking and drug use decline

Truck and bus safety

U.S. Department of Transportation, $10.2 million

Daniel Blower , U-M Transportation Research Institute, principal investigator

• Data analysis of trucks and buses involved in fatal accidents

• Evaluation of efforts to reduce fatal crashes by 50 percent over the next decade

Digital Image Processing Laboratory

NIH, $7.7 million

Charles Meyer , DIPL director, principal investigator

• Automatic three-dimensional registration of cancer tumors

• Tools to improve the usability of imaging data that is already available, but is so advanced and copious that doctors cannot analyze it efficiently

• Advances will permit doctors to detect even very small changes in tumors

"The campus investment in the life sciences is yielding excellent returns," Fawwaz Ulaby, vice president for research, said to the Board of Regents Sept. 18. "And with two major research facilities coming on line soon, the Life Sciences Institute and the Biomedical Science Research Building, the University is in a strong position to increase life sciences research activities further, and at a faster pace than ever."

In another indicator of improvement in this field of research, the University's life sciences technology transfer program was listed among the nation's top 10 for "impact" of its patents, Ulaby said. This ranking, published by The Scientist magazine in July, is the first time U-M has been included on this list, he said.

Research at the University has increased in each of the last 10 years, with the exception of one year that was essentially flat. The percentage increase in research expenditures at U-M also continued to outpace the percentage increase in federal research and development. The University's funding from federal sources increased by 16 percent from FY02 to FY03, compared to a 10.3 percent increase in federal R&D expenditures, Ulaby said.

Of the 10 largest new research awards, the Medical Center was responsible for seven awards that totaled more than $55 million. The Institute for Social Research (ISR), the Transportation Research Institute and the School of Education also received research awards that were among the largest 10.

Ulaby cited the depth and excellence of the U-M faculty as the ultimate engine for continued research growth. "In addition to supporting our life sciences work, research receiving awards last year included $28 million for the ISR's longstanding study of drug use among American youth, $6.7 million from a philanthropic organization to study instructional improvement, and $10 million to study the safety of commercial motor vehicles," he said. "The breadth of our intellectual inquiry and our ability to mount and sustain large scale projects is a hallmark of research at Michigan."

 

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