April, 2024 - MSU Innovation Center - Page 3

FRIB creates 5 new isotopes

MSU Today

In creating five new isotopes, an international research team working at the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams, or FRIB, at Michigan State University has brought the stars closer to Earth. The isotopes — known as thulium-182, thulium-183, ytterbium-186, ytterbium-187 and lutetium-190 — were reported Feb. 15 in the journal Physical Review Letters. These represent the …


Med students inspire fun and curiosity of the brain at Reach Out to Youth

College of Human Medicine

This year’s theme “Map Your Mind” gave young learners an opportunity to learn how the brain works through interactive stations, brain games and presentations by the medical students. Parents attended workshops with community leaders and health professionals. Building a pathway to medicine Reach Out to Youth is hosted by the college’s Student National Medical Association …


MSU study: Key mental health services could reduce jail time

MSU Today

A study published by Psychiatric Services, a journal of the American Psychiatric Association, titled Recommended Mental Health Practices for Individuals Interacting With U.S. Police, Court, Jail, Probation, and Parole Systems, identified 59 recommended mental health practices but found that United States counties, on average, offered only a few of them. “The importance of this study …


A Spartan changing the way we fight cancer

College of Engineering

The assistant professor Carolina de Aguiar Ferreira has the resources at Michigan State University to precisely target cancer cells with diagnostics and therapies using radioisotopes produced by what is designed to be the world’s most powerful heavy-ion accelerator. She works in the highly collaborative Institute for Quantitative Health Science and Engineering, or IQ, and the …


Nihar Mahapatra’s HeardAI team secures $5M grant to help people who stutter

College of Engineering

For people who stutter, Siri, Alexa, and other voice-activated artificial intelligence technologies can feel like foes rather than friends.  These technologies — hailed by most for their efficiency and convenience — fail on all counts for people who stutter like Jia Bin, an MSU doctoral student from China who leads the East Lansing chapter of …


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