National Science Foundation awarded a grant on "SemGrid: Semantic Discovery on Adaptive Services Grid," PI: Amit Sheth, Co-PIs: I.B. Arpinar, K. Kochut, J.A. Miller, Award # IIS 0545243, October 15, 2005 - December 31, 2007, $100,000.
LSDIS lab received $32,000 cash gift from the Athens Heart Center and welcomes it as our newest institutional sponsor. ; Dr.Subodh Agrawal 's vision and insight that LSDIS's research in the Semantic Web and ontology-driven integration/analysis can be of significant value to healthcare, including cardiology practices, gets us energized to seek more impact of our research.
LSDIS lab is awarded phase II of project "An Ontological Approach to Financial Analysis & Monitoring" (Amit Sheth, PI; Budak Arpinar, Co-PI). UGA component of this phase award from ARDA (with CTA, Inc. as a partner) is $162,500. Expected total award amount if phase III is awarded is $325,000. Further details from SemDisproject web site.
Dr. Liming Cai has recently been awarded an NIH research grant on his computational biology project "Searching Genomes for Non-Coding RNAs by Their Structure" (co-PIs: Russell Malmberg of Plant Biology and Michael McEachern of Genetics at UGA) with the amount of $232,552 for the first year and total amount of $716,352 for three years.
Profs. Kang Li (PI) and L. Ramaswamy (Co-PI) received a three year grant from NSF for a project titled "Adaptive Attacks and Defenses in Denial of Information". The research will be performed in collaboration with Georgia Tech.
Prof. Doshi received a grant from NIH for the project titled "Semantics and Services enabled Problem Solving Environment for Trypanosoma-cruzi". Prof. Doshi participates in a 4-year, $1.5M grant, which will be shared almost equally between Wright State University, UGA (Prof. Rick Tarleton and Prof. Doshi) and Stanford University.
Congratulations to Prof. Perdisci and Prof. Li for winning a grant from NSF for their project on developing tools for detecting malicious domain names.
UGA, through the efforts of Prof. Taha, is selected by NVidia as a 2011-2012 CUDA Teaching Center. NVidia will donate high-performance GPUs and partially fund a TA for teaching CUDA C/C++ programming.
Prof. Doshi receives supplemental funding from the Army and NSF to recruit several undergraduate students for performing research in supported projects.
Congratulations to Prof. Perdisci and Prof. Liu for winning the NSF CAREER awards. The CAREER award is NSF's most prestigious grant award for young faculty.
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