Research for Lunch Presentation with Dr. Bing Yu

 

Quantitative Optical Spectroscopy and Imaging: Noninvasive Tools for Cancer Research

 Dr. Bing Yu, Biomedical Engineering

ASEC 377 on Friday, April 22, from 12-1 pm

During cancer development, progression and therapy, tissues undergo enormous changes in their physiological and morphological properties, including angiogenesis, hypoxia, alterations in cell nuclear size and density, and denaturation. The ability to measure these biomarkers noninvasively has great clinical values in early detection of cancer and treatment evaluation. Quantitative optical spectroscopy and imaging are noninvasive techniques that are highly sensitive to the biochemical alterations in tissue compositions through the interaction between photons and endogenous molecules in tissues. In this seminar I will present three optical spectroscopy and imaging tools being developed in the Biophotonics Laboratory in the Department of Biomedical Engineering for cancer detection and therapeutic monitoring. The first technique, called VIS-DRS, acquires diffuse reflectance spectra in the visible band and employs a Monte Carlo inverse model to extract the tissue contents and scattering properties. The VIS-DRS are employed for oral and cervical cancer detection, monitoring of thermal ablation of solid tumors and intraoperative imaging of breast tumor margins during breast conserving surgery. The second technique, called FD-NIRS, detects intensity-modulated diffuse reflectance in the near-infrared region, through a side-firing fiber optic sensor. The FD-NIRS is an ideal in vivo tool for longitudinal monitoring of tumor hypoxia and its response to chemo- and radiotherapy. The third tool is a microendoscope system, named SmartME, which integrates VIS-DRS and high resolution fluorescence imaging into a smartphone platform. The SmatME creates an affordable, easy-to-use and globally-connected solution for oral and cervical cancer screening in low-resource settings.

Biography

Dr. Bing Yu is an assistant professor in Biomedical Engineering at The University of Akron since 2012. His prior experiences include seven years in the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Duke University, as a postdoc, senior research scientist and research assistant professor, as well as various academic and industrial positions in China and Singapore. Dr. Yu has cofounded Zenalux Biomedical, Inc., a biomedical device company in North Carolina. Dr. Yu has developed a number of noninvasive or minimally invasive optical techniques for cancer diagnosis and treatment evaluation. His research has attracted multi-million dollar funding from the National Institute of Health and National Science Foundation. Dr. Yu received his Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from Virginia Tech in 2005. He has published over 50 technical papers or conference abstracts. He is also the inventor of 10 US/international patents or patent applications. His current research interests include endoscopic imaging, optical spectroscopy, spectral imaging, cancer detection and treatment monitoring, miniature and cost-effective optical devices for global health, and fiber-optic sensors and instrumentation. Dr. Yu is a member of OSA, SPIE and ASLMS.

Arts & Humanities Grants

Arts Writers Grants Program from Creative Capital

Deadline: May 18, 2016

The Creative Capital / Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant Program supports writers whose work addresses contemporary visual art through project-based grants issued directly to individual authors. The Arts Writers Grant Program aims to support the broad spectrum of writing on contemporary visual art, from general-audience criticism to academic scholarship.

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Ohio Arts Council, Building Cultural Diversity Initiative

Deadline: June 1, 2016

The Building Cultural Diversity program supports new and emerging organizations whose mission, programs, staff, and board represent culturally diverse communities. Awards support arts programming and projects that celebrate communities’ unique arts and culture or preserve a culturally significant artistic tradition or practice. These awards help ensure a vibrant range of arts and cultural experiences are shared with residents, visitors, and communities, both today and in the future.

Applicants may request between $1,000 and $3,000. All awards require a 50 percent match, up to half of which may come from allowable in-kind donations. Applicants planning to use in-kind donations to supplement a match should consult OAC staff prior to submitting an application.

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Henkel (Gerda) Foundation, Research Projects

Deadline: June 15, 2016

The Gerda Henkel Foundation provides funding and support for historical humanities research projects in connection with the Foundation’s research grant programme. Support is primarily provided for the historical humanities, in particular to support research projects in the fields of: archaeology, art history, historical Islamic studies, history, history of law, history of science, prehistory and early history.

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Research on Autism Spectrum Disorders

Deadline: May 7, 2016

The sponsors invite applications to support research designed to elucidate the etiology, epidemiology, diagnosis, treatment, and optimal means of service delivery in relation to autism spectrum disorders (ASD). Basic, clinical, and applied studies are encouraged. This FOA will use the NIH Exploratory/Developmental (R21) grant mechanism.

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Upcoming Grants for Psychoanalytic Research

Fund for Psychoanalytic Research- Grants for Specific Projects

Deadline: May 1, 2016

Grants of one year duration at a maximum of $20,000 for grants beginning in 2016 for a specific project building upon psychoanalytic principles or directly investigating the process and/or outcome of psychoanalytically informed treatments will be made.

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Fund for Psychoanalytic Research – Beginning Scholar Pilot Grant

Deadline: May 1, 2016

The American Psychoanalytic Association (APsaA) awards small grants of less than $5,000 for one year to permit a beginning scholar to gather pilot data in preparation for the submission of a full grant to the Fund or to another agency.

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Fund for Psychoanalytic Research – Small Grants for Consultation Travel

Deadline: May 1, 2016

Grants of up to $3,000 will be made to permit a beginning scholar to spend time visiting and consulting with a more experienced, senior investigator who has agreed to help the junior investigator begin their investigative work. Typically these awards are made to permit the beginning scholar the funds to travel and/or to reimburse the senior investigator for travel and consultation. These grants may also be used to support travel to a research training seminar in the US or abroad that is a relevant to the applicant’s career plans.

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Fund for Psychoanalytic Research – Grants for a Beginning Career

Deadline: May 1, 2016

The American Psychoanalytic Association (APsaA) awards grants of up to $15,000 annually for one year to support the beginning career of a psychoanalytic investigator. These mini-career awards are intended, for example, to “buy time” for a junior faculty member or clinician just starting a practice so that they may consult with other investigators, join an investigative team, or attend seminars on research methodology or specific methods relevant to their research.

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New Funding Source for NIH Applicants

“Last year, U.S. researchers received about 42,500 pieces of bad news from the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Their grant proposal had been rejected; they wouldn’t be receiving a piece of the agency’s roughly $30 billion federal funding pie. For many, the next step is to cast around for slices of smaller pies—grants from nonprofit disease foundations or investments from private companies that might keep their projects alive.

Now, a new program aims to play matchmaker between these researchers and second-chance funders. The Online Partnership to Accelerate Research (OnPAR), a collaboration between NIH and the defense, engineering, and health contractor Leidos, lets researchers upload rejected NIH proposals to an online portal where potential funders can review the scores received from reviewers, and decide whether to put up cash.”

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