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RIT recognizes faculty-researchers for innovative projects and funding milestones

Individuals reaching or surpassing $1 million in funding honored as PI Millionaires

Traci Wescott/RIT">

"A group of nine people pose with awards at the PI Millionaires event, standing in front of a screen displaying the event’s name and a tiger mascot. The attendees are dressed in business or smart casual attire, holding glass trophies, and smiling.

Traci Wescott/RIT

Ten faculty members were honored at a campus ceremony and recognized for innovative research: From left to right are John Whelen, Lishibanya Mohapatra, Christy Tyler, Qian Xue, Agamemnon Crassidis, Xumin Liu, Steve Weinstein, Lu Sun and Ryne Raffaelle. (Missing Corey Crane and Parsian Mohseni.)

Faculty members from across RIT’s colleges are leading research initiatives on broad topics, including mental health, cell functions, smart city technologies, gravitational waves, and more. As a result, researchers who contributed to RIT receiving nearly $103 million in sponsored research awards during the past fiscal year, including 10 faculty members who reached or surpassed $1 million this past fiscal year, were praised by Ryne Raffaelle, RIT vice president for Research and associate provost, and inducted into the yearly classes of PI Millionaires. 

 “There were over 800 proposals submitted, that was also a highwater mark, and we are on a record pace to beat the achievements of this past fiscal year,” Raffaelle said. 

Since 2001, more than 350 principal investigators— faculty-researchers working on multidisciplinary projects at the university—have been honored. 

The 10 RIT faculty members recognized this year are:

  • Corey Crane, associate professor, College of Health Sciences and Technology, works in the area of behavioral health developing and evaluating interventions that meet individualized needs to increase treatment compliance and reduce recidivism rates.
  • Agamemnon Crassidis, professor, Kate Gleason College of Engineering, has been at the forefront of drone and UAV aircraft technology development, including advanced all attitude/orientation devices, and next-generation inertial navigation and orientation sensing systems.
  • Parsian Katal Mohseni, associate professor, Kate Gleason College of Engineering, has an extensive background in the manipulation of material properties at the nanometer scale to enable next-generation device technologies in optoelectronics, photonics, nanoelectronics, and photovoltaic energy conversion. His most recent award is for the development of workforce initiatives for the semiconductor industry.
  • Xumin Liu, professor, Golisano College of Computing and Information Sciences, an expert in data science, machine learning, artificial intelligence, service computing, and computing education, is expanding a project to overcome programming barriers for non-computing majors in learning and practicing data science.
  • Lishibanya Mohapatra, assistant professor, College of Science, studies key principles required to assemble structures inside cells. Her team uses mathematical modeling in collaboration with experimentalists to investigate how intracellular structures attain their distinctive shapes and sizes, and how these properties are connected to their specific functions.
  • Lu Sun, professor, College of Engineering Technology, focuses on multiple aspects of smart city technologies such as asset management, intelligent transportation systems, connected and autonomous vehicles, transportation infrastructure inspection, nanomaterials for pavement construction, cognitive and behavioral neuroscience in transportation safety and construction safety, and advancing scalable and quality workforce development for infrastructure jobs.
  • Anna Christina (Christy) Tyler, professor, College of Science, has extensive expertise in ecology and biogeochemistry of freshwater and marine environments, and focuses her research on ecosystem restoration and emerging contaminants, especially plastic pollution. She serves as co-director of the RIT Collaborative for Plastics and the Environment and the Lake Ontario Center for Microplastics and Human Health.
  • Steven Weinstein, the Harvey J. Palmer Professor in Chemical Engineering, Kate Gleason College of Engineering, is an expert in thin film flows, liquid film coating, flow stability, and asymptotic/power series methodologies; recent work includes the advancement of two-dimensional polymer science and applications, and employing self-assembly processes to create materials for next generation photonics applications.
  • John Whelan, professor, College of Science, an expert in gravitational waves and statistical signal processing, is part of RIT’s Center for Computational Relativity and Gravitation.  He is one of the leaders of the international team searching for continuous gravitational waves from spinning neutron stars in the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA collaboration, co-chair of the LVK Continuous Waves Observational Group, and leads RIT’s group in the LIGO Scientific Collaboration.
  • Qian Xue, associate professor, Kate Gleason College of Engineering, centers her research on machine-learning-aided computational modeling for simulating complex multi-physics processes for biological and biomedical applications. She also uses computer modeling to understand neuromuscular control of flow-structure-acoustics interaction in human and animal airway, with application on voice production, speech generation, and sleep health.

Several Seed Funding awardees— new researchers who submitted proposals as part of RIT Sponsored Research Services’ Grant Writers’ Boot Camp—were also recognized at the reception.

“This funding is provided to kick-start their research efforts. This is the future crop of PIs that will help RIT achieve future research success,” said Raffaelle.

The newest Seed Funding awardees are: Jun Han Bae, Sathwika Bavikadi, Carole Woodlock, Krittika Goyal, Mohammad Javad Khojasteh, Andrew Sonntag, MD Ahasan Habib, Frances Cooley, Ali Baheri, Ji Hwan Park, Sriniwas Mahapatro, Elliot Emadian, and Mihloti Williams.

RIT received record funding last fiscal year from the National Science Foundation (NSF) ($20 million), the National Institutes of Health ($10 million), the Department of Defense (DOD) ($23 million), and New York State ($17 million). According to the most recent NSF Higher Education Research Development Survey, a national repository to detail awards and expenditures, RIT’s research expenditures rank among the Top 50 private universities, and the Top 15 private research universities without medical schools.

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