Innovation New Jersey
  • Home
  • Our Coalition
    • Contact Us
  • News
  • Resources
    • State Supports
    • Federal Supports
    • Higher Ed Supports
  • Join Us

Innovation News

Everything Innovation. Everything New Jersey.
Follow us and stay connected.

Princeton’s Schmidt Fund Transformative Technology Awards Go to Neuroscience, 3-D Cellular Imaging

3/4/2016

0 Comments

 
Princeton, NJ ― A technology to uncover how the infant brain learns language and a microscope that can image and manipulate the inner workings of a functioning cell have been awarded funding through Princeton University’s Eric and Wendy Schmidt Transformative Technology Fund.
 
The fund, endowed in 2009 by Eric Schmidt, executive chairman of Google parent company Alphabet Inc., and his wife, Wendy, supports research projects at Princeton University that have the potential to make a major impact in a field of science or technology. Eric Schmidt is a 1976 graduate of Princeton and a former trustee of the University.
 
“Through the generosity of Eric and Wendy Schmidt, Princeton is able to support truly innovative and promising projects from our faculty members,” said Dean for Research Pablo Debenedetti, the Class of 1950 Professor in Engineering and Applied Science and professor of chemical and biological engineering.  “These are projects that have tremendous potential but may be too new or untested to obtain funding from traditional sources.”

​​Each year the Schmidt Fund awards the grants through a competitive process. The two winning projects are:
 A Technology to Study How the Infant Brain Learns Language
 
Interactions with caregivers are an important part of language development in infants and young children, yet traditional MRI-based brain scanners can record only one person at a time and don’t permit movement, a problem when studies involve infants.
 
The Schmidt funding will enable researchers to develop a new brain-scanning technology to study the neural underpinnings of human interaction, with a focus on finding out what goes on in the brains of infants and their caregivers during communication in natural settings.
 
Led by Elise Piazza, an associate research scholar in the Princeton Neuroscience Institute, the project will receive $577,000 to develop a safe and portable imaging system that can measure neural activity in two brains simultaneously.
 
Instead of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), the system will use functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS), which measures neural activity using low-intensity light delivered via a cap worn on the head, allowing participants to sit up and move naturally during communication.
 
“The ability to study communication in a natural setting could revolutionize the study of how infants develop language and shed light on what goes wrong in communication disorders such as autism,” Piazza said.  “The recording of two brains at the same time is crucial to this understanding, and this project would not be possible without the Schmidt Fund.”
 
Piazza’s co-investigators are Uri Hasson, associate professor of psychology and the Princeton Neuroscience Institute, and assistant professors of psychology and co-directors of the Princeton Baby Lab Lauren Emberson and Casey Lew-Williams.
 
Previous work by Hasson has demonstrated that when two people are communicating, their brain activity begins to work in synchrony. The researchers want to find out if a similar type of brain-to-brain coupling happens during infant-to-caregiver interactions. “We’ll be able to see how this coupling between infant and caregiver plays a role in the development of communication,” Hasson said.
 
The new scanner could be used to image the brain-to-brain communication that happens when a parent reads to a young child, for example. The portable and comfortable nature of the scanner means that it could be used in doctors’ offices and classrooms.
 
A Microscope that Can Image and Manipulate the Inner Workings of a Functioning Cell
 
In the second project, researchers are designing and building a new type of microscope that can view a living cell’s interior in 3-D while simultaneously allowing investigators to manipulate chromosomes and other internal structures in ways that were previously impossible.
 
The microscope will enable researchers to address key mechanistic questions about how cells function, which could make possible new discoveries about the cellular missteps that lead to cancer, birth defects and other disorders.
 
The project will receive $723,000 and bring together the expertise of faculty members in biology, chemistry and physics. It is led by Assistant Professor of Molecular Biology Sabine Petry with Professor of Chemistry Haw Yang as well as Joshua Shaevitz, associate professor of physics and the Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics.
 
Current technologies for 3-D high-resolution imaging typically require that cells be killed and fixed in place. Methods for examining molecular activities inside the cell tend to be conducted using large numbers of molecules.  
 
The new microscope would fill a much-needed gap: an instrument that can view the molecules and structures inside the cell in real time.  The new technology will also enable investigators to push or pull on these structures using light in form of a laser, or using a new technology, developed by Yang with funding from a 2012 Schmidt Fund award, called photon nudging.
 
This ability to manipulate structures inside a cell while viewing the results with the microscope is entirely new, said Shaevitz.  “This technology would enable researchers to explore the mechanical forces that we know operate inside the cell but that we haven’t been able to study directly,” he said.  These mechanical forces are important in cellular division, a highly orchestrated process that when it goes wrong can lead to cancer and birth defects.
 
“The ability to bring together our different perspectives is what makes this project so promising,” said Petry.  “The Schmidt Fund award is critical for supporting interdisciplinary work, which enables us as scientists to be our most creative and leads to new directions in research.”

0 Comments



Leave a Reply.

    Do not miss a single innovative moment and sign up for our newsletter!
    Weekly updates


    Categories

    All
    3D Printing
    Academia
    Acquisitions
    Aerospace
    Agriculture
    AIDS
    Algae
    Alumni
    Animals
    Architecture
    Astrophysics
    Autism
    Awards
    Big Data
    Bioethics
    Biofuel
    Biomedical
    BioNJ
    Bioterrorism
    Bit Coins
    Brain Health
    Business
    Camden
    Cancer
    CCollege
    Cellular
    Centenary
    Chemistry
    ChooseNJ
    Climate Change
    Clinical Trials
    Cloud Tech
    Collaboration
    Computing
    Congress
    Coriell
    Council On Innovation
    Crowdfunding
    Cybersecurity
    DARPA
    Defense
    Degree
    Dementia
    Dental Health
    DOC
    DOD
    DOE
    Drew
    Drones
    Drug Creation
    Einstein's Alley
    Electricity
    Energy
    Engineering
    Entrepreneurship
    Environmental
    FAA
    Fairleigh Dickinson
    FDA
    Federal Budget
    Federal Government
    Federal Labs
    Federal Program
    Finance
    Food Science
    Fort Monmouth
    Fuel Cells
    Funding
    Genome
    Geography
    Geology
    Global Competition
    Google
    Governor Christie
    Grant
    Hackensack
    HackensackUMC
    Health Care
    Healthcare
    HHS
    HINJ
    Hospitals
    Immigration
    Incubator
    Infrastructure
    International
    Internet
    Investor
    IoT
    IP
    IT
    Jobs
    Johnson & Johnson
    K-12
    Kean
    Kessler
    Legislation
    Logistics
    Manufacturing
    Medical Devices
    Med School
    Mental Health
    Mentor
    Microorganisms
    Molecular Biology
    Montclair
    NAS
    Neuroscience
    Newark
    New Jersey
    NIFA
    NIH
    NIST
    NJBDA
    NJBIA
    NJ Chemistry Council
    NJCU
    NJDOLWD
    NJEDA
    NJEDge
    NJHF
    NJII
    NJIT
    NJMEP
    NJPAC
    NJPRO
    NJTC
    Nonprofit
    NSF
    OpEd
    Open Data
    OSHE
    OSTP
    Parasite
    Patents
    Paterson
    Patients
    Perth Amboy
    Pharma
    POTUS
    PPPL
    Princeton
    Prosthetics
    Ranking
    Rare Disease
    R&D Council
    Report
    Resiliency
    Rider
    Robotics
    Rowan
    Rutgers
    SBA
    Seton Hall
    Siemens
    Smart Car
    Smart Cities
    Software
    Solar
    Space
    SSTI
    Startup
    State Government
    STEM
    Stevens
    Stockton
    Subatomic
    Supports
    Sustainability
    Taxes
    TCNJ
    Teachers
    Telecom
    Therapy
    Thermodynamics
    Transportation
    Undergraduate
    USEDA
    Verizon
    Video Game
    Virtual Reality
    Water
    WHO
    William Paterson
    Women In STEM
    Workforce Development

Home   Coalition   News   Resources   Events   Join Us
Picture
Innovation New Jersey Coalition
10 West Lafayette Street
Trenton, NJ 08608
732-729-9619