(Press-News.org) This summer marked the Earth’s hottest on record.
The Roanoke Valley was no exception to the heat, with news reports naming 2023 as the region’s second-hottest summer. But the rising temperatures were particularly stifling for some neighborhoods in Roanoke — those impacted by harmful urban planning practices.
Theodore Lim, assistant professor of urban affairs and planning in the School of Public and International Affairs at Virginia Tech, has been working with the City of Roanoke to address the underlying issues that led to the Urban Island Heat Effect. The phenomenon happens in cities when there is a lack of greenery and a surplus of hard, heat-trapping materials, such as concrete. Those areas typically are hotter than surrounding rural areas. According to Lim’s research, certain stressors, such as poverty, housing, and gun violence, already are playing out in these neighborhoods.
Lim and his multidisciplinary team received a Stage 1 National Science Civic Innovation Challenge Planning Grant in 2022 from the National Science Foundation (NSF). It provided them with $50,000 to support rapid implementation of community-driven, research-based pilot projects that address heat resilience priorities.
Now, the team has received a Stage 2 award to further assist with their efforts.
The award, announced in September, gives Lim $1 million to spend over the next year as he implements pilot programs in Roanoke. Lim’s project, “Youth-Centered Civic Technology, Science, and Art for Improving Community Heat Resilience Infrastructure,” is one of 19 university initiatives nationwide to receive the funding.
Why it matters
Lim plans to address rising city temperatures through community awareness and capacity building. His team is designing programs for the city’s youth, with a focus on youth living in areas that are particularly vulnerable to the effects of rising temperatures. The activities will include STEM, arts and spirituality, and a high school workforce development program — all intended to produce data that will inform future planning for neighborhoods experiencing the worst impacts of rising temperatures in Roanoke.
Data will include quantitative information to measure the way people experience temperature in the city. The researchers will gather data from wearable temperature sensors and indoor and outdoor temperature monitoring equipment. How people experience temperature is highly dependent on travel patterns, where they actually spend time, the location and type of housing they reside in, and whether or they have access to air conditioning, Lim said. The group hopes to monitor temperatures at bus stops, for example, using wearable sensors.
Data will also include qualitative experiences of heat, urban nature, history, and civic engagement that individuals will produce through arts and spirituality programs. Qualitative data — such as oral histories, paintings, poetry, and public murals — will reveal community assets, the ways people prioritize neighborhood investment, and how they envision their community’s safety under the stressors of global climate change. The research team will track how collaboration between civic organizations and city agencies shapes how individuals conceptualize the challenge of climate change adaptation, among many other pressing issues in the city.
Dozens of community partners are contributing to the project and are developing the idea of "trauma-informed, healing-centered" urban resilience planning to acknowledge the harmful effects of past urban planning initiatives, including deep distrust of government initiatives in the African American community, Lim said.
“The project seeks to build one pathway toward healing some of those wounds, through deep, authentic community engagement and civic capacity building,” he said.
The grant is an example of how the City of Roanoke continuously seeks opportunities for partnerships to strengthen the community and “target resources in areas affected by historic disinvestment,” said Wayne Leftwich, Roanoke City’s planning manager.
“We believe combining quality data gathering, community engagement, and arts and culture is an innovative approach to develop strategies that help mitigate extreme heat,” Leftwich said.
Goals of the project
Engage youth and families around the issue of urban adaptation to the effects of global climate change, specifically around the issue of rising temperatures
Pilot different practices of urban planning from the communities most vulnerable to the effects of rising temperatures
Increase the community's capacity to deal with the risks of rising temperatures
Improve civic engagement processes and rebuild trust
Who’s involved
Academic researchers: Eric Wiseman, Virginia Tech associate professor of forest resources and environmental conservation; Jake Grohs, Virginia Tech associate professor of engineering education and Malle Schilling, Ph.D. student in engineering education; Naren Ramakrishnan, Virginia Tech professor of engineering; Nathan Self, Virginia Tech research associate of computer science; Julia Gohlke, associate professor of environmental health; Paroma Wagle, assistant professor urban affairs and planning at the School of Public and International Affairs; Jack Carroll, master’s student of urban and regional planning; David Moore, Lara Nagle, Mary Beth Dunkenberger, and Andrea Briceno Mosquera of Virginia Tech Institute for Policy and Governance; and Laura Hartman, Roanoke College associate professor of environmental studies
Government agencies: Roanoke Planning Department and Office of Sustainability, Roanoke Parks and Recreation, Roanoke City Public Schools, Roanoke Public Libraries, Roanoke Department of Stormwater
Community partners: Antwyne Calloway, community leader; Decca Knight, trauma specialist; B.J. Lark, CommUNITY ARTS Roanoke; Darlene Lewis, director of the Hope Center, Jane Gabrielle McCadden, artist; Antonio Stovall, community leader; Roanoke Chapter of the Kiwanis Club; Trees Roanoke; The Foundry; various community churches
Virginia Tech voice
“The premise of the NSF Civic Innovation grant is right in line with VT's Ut Prosim ethic. It is about community-identified need and partnerships between academia and community,” Lim said. “It advances participatory action research – simultaneously meeting the needs of practical social problems while also advancing research and new knowledge creation. Graduate students at VT will also be intimately involved in community-based learning and will partner with high school students in Roanoke to support planning from the bottom up.”
END
Teaming up to beat the heat
A team of researchers, led by Theodore Lim, will use a National Science Foundation grant to work with Roanoke communities to combat the impact of rising temperatures and promote healing among those impacted by harmful urban planning practices
2023-11-14
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Study finds no effect of anti-inflammatory medication on incident frailty
2023-11-14
Frailty is a common condition in older populations that increases the risk of adverse health outcomes and mortality. Inflammation, associated with other aging-related conditions, has been proposed as one possible underlying mechanism for frailty. It was previously unclear if anti-inflammatory medications like canakinumab can also reduce risk of frailty.
Researchers led by a team at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system, tested if canakinumab affected frailty incidence in adults with atherosclerosis.
The investigators performed post-hoc analysis on a dataset from the Canakinumab Anti-Inflammatory Thrombosis Outcomes Study ...
Hope takes root in Uganda
2023-11-14
In front of a mud brick house, a woman started a fire.
Using wood harvested from a grove of nearby acacia and river bushwillow trees, she arranged kindling and then layered over larger pieces culled from the fast-growing trees. When the fire was hot enough, she set a pot over the center to boil water for beans, a vital food source that will take hours to cook.
This daily ritual — enacted by many of the 1.5 million refugees displaced in Uganda — raises critical questions about how countries, communities, and humanitarian actors can efficiently and effectively provide safety and food for ...
TOS past presidents comment on select study results
2023-11-14
ROCKVILLE, Md.— New findings show that the medication known as Wegovy® (semaglutide) can reduce existing heart disease in patients with obesity by 20%, according to a study co-authored by past presidents of The Obesity Society (TOS) and published in The New England Journal of Medicine.
"The SELECT trial is the first study showing that prescription of an anti-obesity medication in people with overweight or obesity and existing cardiovascular disease can be life-saving,” said co-author and TOS Past President Robert F. Kushner, MD, FTOS, professor, Departments ...
HSS presents new reproductive health research at the ACR Convergence 2023
2023-11-14
At this year’s American College of Rheumatology (ACR) annual meeting, Hospital for Special Surgery (HSS) presented a number of important studies focused on reproductive health for patients with systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis, and other rheumatic diseases, including issues related to fertility, sexual function, use of contraception and HPV vaccination.
What follows are some highlights from the meeting:
Association of Menstrual Cycles and Disease Flare Activity in Women with Systemic Lupus Erythematosus and Rheumatoid Arthritis
In this study, researchers surveyed female rheumatology ...
Social factors, rather than biological ones, drive higher numbers of adverse drug events in women
2023-11-14
A new study out this week in the journal Social Science and Medicine proposes that social, gendered variables may better explain observed sex disparities in adverse drug events than sex-based biology.
Adverse drug events refer to harmful side effects resulting from the use of a drug. A 1.5-2 times higher rate of adverse drug events in women compared to men has long been observed, and addressing this disparity has been an enduring priority of women’s health advocates, medical researchers, and institutions such as the National Institutes of Health.
Advocates ...
Franck Marchis of SETI Institute honored as 2023 Fellow by California Academy of Sciences
2023-11-14
November 14, 2023, Mountain View, CA - Dr. Franck Marchis, a senior planetary astronomer at the SETI Institute, was appointed as a 2023 Fellow by the California Academy of Sciences (Cal Academy). Recognized for his exceptional contributions to the natural sciences, Marchis joins a distinguished group of scientists, including other notable SETI Institute Fellows of Cal Academy, such as Dr. Jill Tarter, Dr. Nathalie Cabrol, Dr. Seth Shostak, and Trustee Andrew Fraknoi.
“As an astronomer, I am constantly amazed by the vastness and complexity of the universe,” ...
Allison Institute hosts inaugural scientific symposium
2023-11-14
HOUSTON ― The James P. Allison Institute at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center hosted its inaugural scientific symposium on Nov. 10 at the TMC3 Collaborative Building in the Texas Medical Center’s Helix Park. The event brought together more than 400 leading scientists, including three Nobel laureates, from multiple disciplines to share groundbreaking immunotherapy and immunobiology research.
“Our inaugural symposium is an important milestone representing significant progress for the Allison Institute since we launched last year, and we’re energized by the exceptional science shared by our members and colleagues,” ...
Super speeds for super AI: Frontier sets new pace for artificial intelligence
2023-11-14
The team that built Frontier set out to break the exascale barrier, but the supercomputer’s record-breaking didn’t stop there.
“The exascale number marks a major milestone itself, but it also marks the beginning of a new chapter in high-speed computing,” said Feiyi Wang, an Oak Ridge National Laboratory computer scientist who leads research into artificial intelligence and analytics. “We don’t have to wait for the next generation of computing anymore. We can have it here today.”
Frontier claimed the title of fastest computer in the world by running at ...
How teachers would handle student violence against educators
2023-11-14
COLUMBUS, Ohio – For the first time, teachers in a nationwide study have told researchers what strategies they think work best to deal with student violence against educators.
Teachers rated suspending or expelling students as the least effective way of addressing violence, despite the popularity of “zero tolerance” policies in many school districts.
Instead, teachers rated prevention policies, such as counseling for troubled students and improving school climate, as the best strategy for dealing with violence.
“Teachers ...
New CPU vulnerability makes virtual machine environments vulnerable
2023-11-14
In the area of cloud computing, i.e. on-demand access to IT resources via the internet, so-called trusted execution environments (TEEs) play a major role. They are designed to ensure that the data on the virtual work environments (virtual machines) is secure and cannot be manipulated or stolen. Researchers at the CISPA Helmholtz Centre for Information Security and Graz University of Technology (TU Graz) have now discovered a security vulnerability in AMD processors that allows attackers to penetrate virtual work environments based on the trusted computing technologies AMD SEV-ES and AMD SEV-SNP. This is achieved by resetting data changes in the buffer memory (cache), which gives ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Mysterious ‘Dark Dwarfs’ may be hiding at the heart of the Milky Way
Real-world data shows teclistamab can benefit many multiple myeloma patients who would have been ineligible for pivotal trial
Scientists reveal how a key inflammatory molecule triggers esophageal muscle contraction
Duration of heat waves accelerating faster than global warming
New mathematical insights into Lagrangian turbulence
Clinical trials reveal promising alternatives to high-toxicity tuberculosis drug
Artificial solar eclipses in space could shed light on Sun
Probing the cosmic Dark Ages from the far side of the Moon
UK hopes to bolster space weather forecasts with Europe's first solar storm monitor
Can one video change a teen's mindset? New study says yes - but there’s a catch
How lakes connect to groundwater critical for resilience to climate change, research finds
Youngest basaltic lunar meteorite fills nearly one billion-year gap in Moon’s volcanic history
Cal Poly Chemistry professor among three U.S. faculty to be honored for contributions to chemistry instruction
Stoichiometric crystal shows promise in quantum memory
Study sheds light on why some prostate tumors are resistant to treatment
Tree pollen reveals 150,000 years of monsoon history—and a warning for Australia’s northern rainfall
Best skin care ingredients revealed in thorough, national review
MicroRNA is awarded an Impact Factor Ranking for 2024
From COVID to cancer, new at-home test spots disease with startling accuracy
Now accepting submissions: Special Collection on Cognitive Aging
Young adult literature is not as young as it used to be
Can ChatGPT actually “see” red? New results of Google-funded study are nuanced
Turning quantum bottlenecks into breakthroughs
Cancer-fighting herpes virus shown to be an effective treatment for some advanced melanoma
Eliminating invasive rats may restore the flow of nutrients across food chain networks in Seychelles
World’s first: Lithuanian scientists’ discovery may transform OLED technology and explosives detection
Rice researchers develop superstrong, eco-friendly materials from bacteria
Itani studying translation potential of secure & efficient software updates in industrial internet of things architectures
Elucidating the source process of the 2021 south sandwich islands tsunami earthquake
Zhu studying use of big data in verification of route choice models
[Press-News.org] Teaming up to beat the heatA team of researchers, led by Theodore Lim, will use a National Science Foundation grant to work with Roanoke communities to combat the impact of rising temperatures and promote healing among those impacted by harmful urban planning practices