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People and Collaborators

AT Research Services Staff

AT Research Services has full-time staff who are available to consult with researchers on a number of topics. We also manage graduate students who often work directly on faculty projects.

 

Collaborators

NNI@UI

The Nanoscience and Nanotechnology Institute at The University of Iowa (NNI@UI) was established by The University of Iowa Office of the Vice President for Research in 2006. NNI@UI focuses on issues related to applications and implications of nanoscience and nanotechnology in environmental processes and human health, as well as the fundamental properties of nanomaterials.

 

IIHR

IIHR - Hydroscience and Engineering. One of our nation's oldest and most preeminent hydraulic research and teaching laboratories.

 

CBCB

The Center for Bioinformatics and Computational Biology aims to catalyze the development of new areas of study and expanded research opportunities in informatics areas related to the basic biological science, and applied medical research.

 

MIHI

Laboratory of Medical Image High Performance Computing (HPC) & Informatics (MiHi Lab) is a research unit within the Department of Radiology in the Carver College of Medicine at the University of Iowa. The lab's research focuses on cyberinfrastructure-enabled high performance computing (HPC) and data intensive computing (DIC) for medical imaging, medical image informatics, and radiology informatics. The laboratory is operated by a group of faculty in the Department of Radiology at UI. The laboratory's current research projects are sponsored by the University of Iowa, National Institutes of Health (NIH/NIBIB), Intel, Microsoft, Microsoft, NSF, etc.

 

CITL

The mission of the Center for Teaching, as approved during the process of its creation, is to "promote and support efforts to enhance instruction at The University of Iowa." In pursuit of this mission, the Center has established four overlapping goals. We strive to:
1. Support and promote the development of teaching skills.
2. Strengthen the culture of teaching.
3. Serve as a symbol of the University's commitment to teaching.
4. Influence policy discussions in ways that support the development of an excellent teaching and learning environment.

 

CTSA

The Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) is a five-year, $33.8 million award granted by the National Institutes of Health to an elite group of biomedical research institutions to improve the efficiency, speed and volume of clinical and translational research across the United States. The NIH established these grants as part of its "Roadmap for Medical Research" to help develop new treatments more efficiently.