The federal portion of research funding this year grew by $9.8 million, or 2.7 percent, she said.
“Our growth this last fiscal year is a reflection of our talented researchers and their high-quality innovation, scholarship and research activities,” Locascio said. “It is recognition that the University of Maryland is a go-to source for impactful, multidisclipinary research expertise that has the potential to transform lives.”
External funding in the year ending June 30, 2017, was $515 million; 2016's total of $560 million was a record high.
The increase in external funding in 2018 reflects UMD researchers’ strengths in diverse fields ranging from environmental adaptation and sustainability; national and global security; advanced computing, data analytics and visualization; quantum science; transportation analytics; and human health, Locascio said.
Notable research accomplishments in FY2018 included:
- An NIH award to develop an innovative approach for addressing hearing loss and communication challenges that affect millions of older Americans.
- Four Defense University Research Instrumentation Program awards, including an award to develop an ultralow-temperature spectroscopy system to characterize and control quantum materials.
- Ten NSF Faculty Early Career Development Program awarded across four colleges.
- Selection by NASA to lead the Earth Observations for Food Security and Agriculture Consortium, a new multidisciplinary consortium dedicated to enhancing the use of satellite data for improving food security and agriculture around the world.
The first few months of FY2019 have brought additional research news:
- UMD’s growing role in NSF efforts to create the first practical quantum computer.
- An NIH grant for an ongoing research program to understand how the immune responses of ticks contribute to the spread of Lyme disease and other tick-borne illnesses.
- A grant from the NSF to establish a new graduate training and research program aimed at creating innovative and sustainable solutions for global food, energy and water systems.
- A new center designed to improve college and career outcomes for students and youth with disabilities.
- A grant from the Scripps Howard Foundation to establish multidisciplinary, graduate-level programs focused on training the next generation of reporters through hands-on investigative journalism projects.
This story first appeared in the Oct. 4 edition of Maryland Today.