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Welcome to the
WVU EPSCoR Site!
West
Virginia University
strives to enhance its competitive and synergistic research enterprise.
To this end, the EPSCoR program at WVU targets multidisciplinary
research in areas defined by the interfaces of the triad formed
by molecular/life sciences, micro/nano science and technology, and
information science and technology. In addition, the program builds
the High Performance Computing (HPC) infrastructure to support these
and other areas.
Development
of the research infrastructure at the bio-molecular sciences - engineering
Intersection capitalizes on the comprehensive physical and computer
sciences, engineering, and health sciences resources available at
West Virginia University. The University seeks to address breakthroughs
at this intersection in niche areas and to develop new educational
tools to help produce the future workforce supporting systems based
on molecular design.
The EPSCoR
program provides foundation support enabling the research of crosscutting
faculty groups and providing key instrumentation and equipment.
The program also provides support for the collaboration between
West Virginia University and Marshall University in the area of
molecular/life sciences.
The focus on
Identification Science and Technology is based on the growing synergy
between molecular science and engineering applications. Automated
biometric identification systems measure a biological signature,
and compare it to a database to render an application-dependent
decision. New classes of biometric systems have the potential to
exploit a wide range of physiological signals, basic metabolic pathways,
and molecular signatures.
The new systems
will provide innovative technologies for use in the War on Terrorism,
and in other applications related to personal and national security.
These systems also promise a revolutionary impact on health care
and forensics as they can enable
- rapid identification
of specific human conditions;
- automated
administration of life-saving medical therapies;
- enhanced
detection of environmental pollutants
The long-term
research goals are to develop the fundamental science for identifying
and quantifying biological and physiological signatures and to research
innovative device, processing, and performance approaches for new
integrated automated biometric systems.
To reach these
goals WVU is building a research infrastructure in Molecular/Life
Sciences to develop scientific understanding of life signatures
at the most fundamental level, and in Micro/Nano Science and Engineering
to design and use new devices to acquire biometric information.
Research in Information Science and Engineering is proposed to develop
data analysis and interpretation of the large volume of spatial
and temporal biometric information.
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