PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

DOE’s Office of Science is now accepting applications for summer 2024 visiting faculty program

Faculty and their students will collaborate with national laboratory researchers

2023-10-17
(Press-News.org) WASHINGTON, DC – Applications are currently being accepted for the Summer 2024 term of the DOE Office of Science’s Visiting Faculty Program (VFP). The application deadline is January 9, 2024, at 5:00 p.m. ET.

Two application assistance workshops will be held for all faculty interested in applying to VFP:

November 17, 2023, at 12:00 p.m. ET (register here) December 1, 2023, at 12:00 p.m. ET (register here) In addition, prospective VFP applicants can engage with recruiters and scientists from the DOE national laboratories at a summer internship fair sponsored by the Office of Workforce Development for Teachers and Scientists (WDTS) and hosted by the Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education. The fair will take place on November 8, 2023, from 1:00 – 5:00 pm EST (register here).

VFP is offered in two tracks: (1) VFP Research Collaboration and (2) the VFP Teaching Initiative Track (available for returning VFP participants). The program seeks to enhance both the research competitiveness and STEM teaching capacities for faculty members at institutions historically underrepresented in the STEM research enterprise to expand the workforce vital to DOE mission areas. Given this focus, VFP strongly supports faculty members from minority serving institutions (MSIs), including Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs). Typically, about 50% of the participants are from MSIs, one-third of which are HBCUs. Selected college and university faculty members collaborate with DOE laboratory scientific research staff on research projects of mutual interest. 

VFP is managed by the Office of Workforce Development for Teachers and Scientists (WDTS) in the Office of Science. More information can be found at https://science.osti.gov/wdts.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Q&A: Researchers aim to improve accessibility with augmented reality

Q&A: Researchers aim to improve accessibility with augmented reality
2023-10-17
Big Tech’s race into augmented reality (AR) grows more competitive by the day. This month, Meta released the latest iteration of its headset, the Quest 3. Early next year, Apple plans to drop its first headset, the Vision Pro. The announcements for each platform emphasize games and entertainment that merge the virtual and physical worlds: a digital board game imposed on a coffee table, a movie screen projected above airplane seats. Some researchers, though, are more curious about other uses for AR. The University of Washington’s Makeability Lab is applying these budding technologies to assist people with disabilities. This month, ...

SEC Insider Trading Rule Has Loopholes

2023-10-17
AUSTIN, Texas -- A rule to limit trading based on nonpublic stock information has limited effectiveness, according to a recent study by Texas McCombs Finance Professor Robert Parrino. Issued in 2000 by the Securities & Exchange Commission, Rule 10b5–1 requires corporate insiders to schedule the purchase or sale of a predetermined number of shares through a third-party broker up to two years in advance. Because the trades under these “plan” sales are scheduled in advance of their execution, insiders are presumed less likely to be acting on inside information. But ...

Smart brain-wave cap recognizes stroke before the patient reaches the hospital

Smart brain-wave cap recognizes stroke before the patient reaches the hospital
2023-10-17
A special brain-wave cap can diagnose stroke in the ambulance, allowing the patient to receive appropriate treatment faster. Jonathan Coutinho, neurologist at Amsterdam UMC, is one of the inventors the swimming cap: "Our research shows that the brain-wave cap can recognize patients with large ischemic stroke with great accuracy. This is very good news, because the cap can ultimately save lives by routing these patients directly to the right hospital." The research is published today in Neurology.  Every year, millions of people worldwide suffer an ischemic stroke, the most common type of stroke. An ischemic stroke occurs ...

Researchers receive $423,500 for study to improve outcomes from fungal infections

Researchers receive $423,500 for study to improve outcomes from fungal infections
2023-10-17
Aspergillus fumigatus is the major airborne fungus present indoors and outdoors that causes various diseases, the severity of which are dependent on an individual’s immune status.  Researchers in the College of Pharmacy at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center have received a $423,500 grant from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) of the National Institutes of Health for research aimed at reducing disease and mortality rates associated with Aspergillus infections ...

Air pollution and breast cancer risk - a link that calls for political action

2023-10-17
Lugano, Switzerland, 17 October 2023 – Women living and working in places with higher levels of fine particle air pollution are more likely to get breast cancer than those living and working in less polluted areas. Results of the first study to take account of the effects of both residential and workplace exposure to air pollution on breast cancer risk are presented at the ESMO Congress 2023 in Madrid, Spain (1).   “Our data showed a statistically significant association between long term exposure to fine particle air pollution, at home and at work, and risk of breast cancer. This contrasts with previous research which looked only at fine particle exposure ...

Thermosensation is critical for the survival of animals, but the mechanisms by which this is modulated by nutritional status remain unclear

Thermosensation is critical for the survival of animals, but the mechanisms by which this is modulated by nutritional status remain unclear
2023-10-17
Thermosensation is critical for the survival of animals, but the mechanisms by which this is modulated by nutritional status remain unclear; here, behavioral and live brain imaging studies reveal why food-sated fruit flies prefer to stay at relatively higher temperatures compared to hungry flies. ##### In your coverage, please use this URL to provide access to the freely available paper in PLOS Biology: http://journals.plos.org/plosbiology/article?id=10.1371/journal.pbio.3002332 Article Title: Independent insulin signaling modulators govern hot avoidance ...

Multi-drug resistant strain of E.coli battles bacteria in healthy gut

2023-10-17
Different strains of E.coli can outcompete one another to take over the gut, a new study reveals. Publishing their findings today in PLOS Biology, scientists reveal that a particular strain, known as MDR ST131, can readily colonise new hosts, even if those hosts are already have E.coli in their healthy gut. The international team, led by experts at the University of Birmingham, used a mouse model to help understand why strains of E.coli that live in a healthy gut are rapidly overtaken of when challenged with a multi-drug resistant strain. Lead author Professor Alan McNally, from ...

Sleep and stress give clues to understanding epileptic seizures - study

2023-10-17
Sleeping patterns and stress hormones could be the key to understanding how and when people with epilepsy are likely to experience seizures, a new study reveals.  Researchers used mathematical modelling to understand the impact of different physiological processes, such as sleep and changes in concentration of the stress-hormone cortisol, on key signatures of epilepsy – known as epileptiform discharges (ED). Epilepsy is a serious neurological disorder characterised by a tendency to have recurrent, spontaneous seizures. Classically, seizures were assumed to occur at random, until the discovery of ED activity with timescales that vary from hours and days through to months. The scientists ...

The Dompé Foundation launches 16 scholarships for neuroscience and neurobiology students in the US

The Dompé Foundation launches 16 scholarships for neuroscience and neurobiology students in the US
2023-10-17
The Dompé Foundation is offering 16 scholarships to support neuroscience and neurobiology students enrolled at US universities for the academic year 2023/2024. This funding opportunity, which honors the legacy of the only female Italian Nobel laureate in Medicine, is intended for promising candidates from any nationality that have already been admitted to a Master’s, PhD or post-doc program. With a total budget of up to about 1 million USD, the Foundation has doubled from the previous two years its funding for the US project, ...

NASA September 2023 temperature data shows continued record warming

2023-10-17
Continuing the temperature trend from this summer, September 2023 was the hottest September on record, according to scientists at NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS). The month also set the record for the highest temperature anomaly – the largest difference from the long-term average. This visualization shows global temperature anomalies along with the underlying seasonal cycle. Temperatures advance from January through December left to right, rising during warmer months and falling during cooler months. The color of each line represents the year, with colder purples for the 1960s and warmer oranges and yellows for more recent ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

UC Irvine researchers are first to reveal role of ophthalmic acid in motor function control

Moffitt study unveils the role of gamma-delta T cells in cancer immunology

Drier winter habitat impacts songbirds’ ability to survive migration

Donors enable 445 TPDA awards to Neuroscience 2024

Gut bacteria engineered to act as tumor GPS for immunotherapies

Are auditory magic tricks possible for a blind audience?

Research points to potential new treatment for aggressive prostate cancer subtype

Studies examine growing US mental health safety net

Social risk factor domains and preventive care services in US adults

Online medication abortion direct-to-patient fulfillment before and after the Dobbs v Jackson decision

Black, Hispanic, and American Indian adolescents likelier than white adolescents to be tested for drugs, alcohol at pediatric trauma centers

Pterosaurs needed feet on the ground to become giants

Scientists uncover auditory “sixth sense” in geckos

Almost half of persons who inject drugs (PWID) with endocarditis will die within five years; women are disproportionately affected

Experimental blood test improves early detection of pancreatic cancer

Groundbreaking wastewater treatment research led by Oxford Brookes targets global challenge of toxic ‘forever chemicals’

Jefferson Health awarded $2.4 million in PCORI funding

Cilta-cel found highly effective in first real-world study

Unleashing the power of generative AI on smart collaborative innovation network platform to empower research and technology innovation

Revolutionizing cardiovascular risk assessment with AI

Antarctic ‘greening’ at dramatic rate

Winds of change: James Webb Space Telescope reveals elusive details in young star systems

UC Merced co-leads initiative to combat promotion and tenure bias against Black and Hispanic faculty

Addressing climate change and inequality: A win-win policy solution

Innovative catalyst produces methane using electricity

Liver X receptor beta: a new frontier in treating depression and anxiety

Improving fumaric acid production efficiency through a ‘more haste, less speed’ strategy

How future heatwaves at sea could devastate UK marine ecosystems and fisheries

Glimmers of antimatter to explain the "dark" part of the universe

Kids miss out on learning to swim during pandemic, widening racial and ethnic disparities

[Press-News.org] DOE’s Office of Science is now accepting applications for summer 2024 visiting faculty program
Faculty and their students will collaborate with national laboratory researchers