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By Judy Purdy
University of Georgia



Athens, Ga. — The University of
Georgia’s external research funding grew 6.8 percent during the
2004 fiscal year, totaling a record $159.9 million. The figure
was $10.1 million higher than the $149.8 million received in 2003.



Research support at UGA has increased 56.8 percent during the
past five years, said Gordhan L. Patel, vice president for
research and associate provost. This funding is composed of
contracts, grants and agreements from federal, state and
corporate sources as well as from private funding agencies.



Patel credits UGA faculty for the continuous growth in research
funding. He cites a strong record of research, collaboration and
innovation. This solid record, he says, makes faculty proposals
highly competitive with those of other scholars at state,
national and international levels.



“The research capacity of the University of Georgia continues to
grow in both quantity and quality. And that is very good news for
this institution and the state of Georgia,” said President
Michael F. Adams.


‘Extraordinary’



“Given the impact of budget cuts and vacant faculty positions,
it’s extraordinary that we have seen another increase in research
funding,” Adams said. “This good news is a testament to the
quality of the proposals generated by UGA faculty and the hard
work of the research administrative team.”



While research figures are up, UGA’s total external funding,
which includes research, instruction, public service and
outreach, fell 1.2 percent, ending the year at $227.8 million,
said Regina A. Smith, associate vice president for research.



“We’re pleased that external awards from federal agencies grew
6.6 percent and funds from industry and corporations grew 23.3
percent,” Smith said. “Growth in these two areas helped offset
significant decreases in state and private foundation funding.”



The university, which receives a substantial share of external
funding from federal agencies, had double-digit increases from
the National Science Foundation (up 22.6 percent to $27.2
million) and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (up 30.5 percent
to $20.4 million).


Big bucks



Here’s a sampling of FY 2004 grants and contracts:


  • A $6.7 million, five-year grant from the National Center for
    Research Resources at the National Institutes of Health and
    co-sponsored by the NIH National Cancer Institute. The grant is
    to create a federal center for studying a class of complex
    carbohydrates found in cell surface molecules that may lead to
    treatments for cancer and Parkinson’s disease. J. Michael Pierce,
    a faculty member in the Complex Carbohydrate Research Center, is
    the principal investigator.

  • A $5.3 million, five-year NSF grant (of $34.6 million awarded
    statewide) for the Partnership for Reform in Science and
    Mathematics (PRISM) to improve student achievement in northeast
    Georgia for grades P-12. Michael Padilla, director of the College
    of Education’s educational partnerships, is the PI.

  • A $3.9 million, four-year NSF grant to study genes involved
    in growth and differentiation of plant tissue. Plant biologist
    Michael Scanlon is the PI.

  • A $1.5 million grant from the Georgia Department of Human
    Resources to train family independence case managers who work
    with such programs as Medicaid and food stamps. Lettie Lockhart
    in the School of Social Work is the PI.

  • A $1 million, four-year NSF grant to expand nanofabrication
    technology for applications in biosensing. The PIs are Yiping
    Zhao, physics and astronomy department, and William Kisaalita and
    Guigen Zhang, both of the biological and agricultural engineering
    department.

  • $1.2 million total for two NIH grants to enhance the Center
    for Family Research, which develops and implements effective
    preventive intervention programs for rural African-American
    families. Gene Brody and Velma Murry, both of the Institute for
    Behavioral Research, are the PIs.

  • A $0.96 million, one-year award from the Governor’s Office of
    Highway Safety for the Georgia Traffic Injury and Prevention
    Institute. Don Bower, a professor in family and consumer
    sciences, is the PI.

  • Still big



    Grants in areas such as humanities, fine arts and student
    training can be considerably less in dollar amounts, but are
    equally competitive and prestigious.


  • Zolinda Stoneman, who directs the Institute on Human
    Development and Disability, received a two-year, $250,774 grant
    from the U.S. Department of Justice to provide training for
    judicial system personnel in recognizing and prosecuting crimes
    against people who are elderly or disabled.

  • Paul Sutter, a history professor, received a one-year,
    $34,900 grant from the Joseph W. Jones Ecological Research Center
    to prepare an oral history of the Stoddard-Neel method of
    managing the longleaf pine ecosystem of the Southern Coastal
    Plain.

  • Microbiologist Daniel Colley, who directs the Center for
    Tropical and Emerging Global Diseases, received a $275,400
    Ellison Medical Foundation grant that enables students and
    postdoctoral scholars to take part in international research
    training.



  • Research funding is an important benchmark among the nation’s
    major research universities, Patel said. UGA continues to rank
    among the top 100 public and private research universities for
    federal research and development expenditures. It placed 89th in
    the most recent NSF rankings, based on figures from FY 2002.



    (Judy Purdy is the director of communications with the
    University of Georgia Office of the Vice President for Research
    and associate provost.)