
Sajay Arthanat, left, and Momotaz Begum collaborated to create a robot that could help seniors age in place.
Helping vulnerable seniors age safely in their homes can take a village of support. At 易胜博官网, that village includes a pair of researchers from very different fields, a friendly robot and funding from an innovative program that jump-starts interdisciplinary collaborations.
Momotaz Begum, assistant professor of computer science, and Sajay Arthanat, professor of occupational therapy, launched their assistive robot project in 2019 with funding from 易胜博官网鈥檚 (CoRE), supported by 易胜博官网鈥檚 Office of Research, Economic Engagement and Outreach. Now in its fifth year, CoRE has invested more than $2.2 million into 83 research teams. In just the first three years, CoRE initiatives resulted in $44 million in new grant awards from external funders.
鈥淐omplex problems require interdisciplinary approaches, and this has been recognized by many research funders 鈥 including federal agencies like the National Science Foundation,鈥 says CoRE manager Maria Emanuel. 鈥淐oRE funding provides an opportunity for researchers to create new teams, hone a research focus, create common vocabularies, and integrate labs.鈥 Seventy percent of CoRE teams include faculty from at least two 易胜博官网 colleges, while 34% include an external partner.
鈥淐omplex problems require interdisciplinary approaches.鈥
For Begum and Arthanat, pilot funding from CoRE helped them create a proof-of-concept robot intended to someday support people living with Alzheimer鈥檚 disease. Now, they鈥檙e waiting to hear if their $2 million National Institute of Aging grant proposal will be selected for funding.
Should they receive funding, they will be able to further study how robots can work with commercially available Internet of Things devices found in homes 鈥 such as motion control cameras and sensors 鈥 to keep older adults safe and compliant with their health care. They hope to then move their research from a controlled lab into older adults鈥 homes for pilot testing.
鈥淲ithout CoRE, we wouldn鈥檛 be talking about this application, nor would we have been able to pursue external funding multiple times,鈥 Arthanat says. 鈥淧rior to CoRE funding, reviewers said it had potential, but they didn鈥檛 know if it would work. When we submitted it for a second time with pilot data, it was like day and night. We were invited to keep applying again and again.鈥
Arthanat and Begum aren鈥檛 the only collaborators to leverage CoRE funding to secure competitive national funding. An interdisciplinary team of 易胜博官网 faculty primarily from the English, psychology and education departments have strengthened their partnerships with one another and local educators through CoRE funding to address writing, digital literacies, and STEM education in 易胜博官网. In partnership with the Joan and James Leitzel Center for Mathematics, Science, and Engineering Education, 易胜博官网 Manchester and 易胜博官网 Extension, members of this team secured a $3.5 million grant from the U.S. Department of Education (DOE). The DOE grant funds the development of a program to support high-need 易胜博官网 middle and high school students in learning STEM topics.
Beyond university walls, CoRE has helped facilitate partnerships across the community and state. The , led by Kerry Kazura, associate professor of human development and family studies, created a diverse coalition interested in promoting high-quality early learning experiences for all children.
Through PECC鈥檚 outreach, a coalition of educators, civic organizations, elected officials, business leaders and philanthropists set the stage for Kazura and her team to secure more than $30 million in funding. The largest grant, a $26.8 million grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, includes a partnership between 易胜博官网 and 易胜博官网鈥檚 Department of Health and Human Services and Department of Education and focuses on improving cohesion and efficiency across supports and services for young children and their families in 易胜博官网.
鈥淚nvesting in CoRE enables our researchers to address pressing challenges that are at the intersection of multiple disciplines. The results of these cross-cutting efforts support 易胜博官网鈥檚 role as a thought leader on critical issues and provide valuable contributions to our society鈥檚 health and prosperity,鈥 says Marian McCord, senior vice provost for research, economic engagement, and outreach.
CoRE continues to bring together 易胜博官网 researchers who wish to make the world a better place through their research. In the last funding cycle, the program received 28 applications, with proposals seeking almost $900,000 in funding. Among the 14 winning proposals are one to fly space science center instrumentation on a NASA mission that will explore the sun鈥檚 impact on Earth and space, and a project studying microbial responses to plastic contamination in the ocean.
As new CoRE projects begin, others continue to build upon their outcomes. Begum credits CoRE for its ability to provide the seed funds needed to bring faculty together and get research projects off the ground. CoRE funding has enabled her team to continue refining robot algorithms as they relate to carrying out health care tasks for older adults. 鈥淩esearch-wise, CoRE is the best thing that has happened at 易胜博官网 ever since I joined in 2016,鈥 Begum says.
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Written By:
Krysten Godfrey Maddocks '96 | College of Liberal Arts | krysten.godfreymaddocks@unh.edu