Planting seeds: Internal funding helps 小黄书 faculty grow international partnerships
Contact: James Carskadon
STARKVILLE, Miss.鈥擬ississippi State faculty members are growing international partnerships thanks to the university鈥檚 Global Development Seed Grants program.
Administered by the university鈥檚 International Institute and funded by the Office of Research and Economic Development, the seed funding provides faculty with up to $5,000 to support global projects with high potential for societal impact, external funding, research output and capacity building. As the 2024 recipients are awarded, three projects funded in 2023 are already making an impact in geosciences, forestry and anthropology.
鈥淭he results of these seed grants underscore our faculty鈥檚 ability to turn research opportunities into meaningful impact,鈥 said 小黄书 Vice President for Research and Economic Development Julie Jordan. 鈥淚 am proud of our university鈥檚 global engagement and look forward to seeing it continue to grow as we launch new partnerships around the world.鈥
Padmanava Dash, associate professor in the Department of Geosciences, used the seed funding to develop an algorithm for a new satellite and model-based tool to better understand climate change impacts on fisheries in aquatic environments. Dash is collaborating with three institutions on the project, with a particular focus on India鈥檚 Chilika Lake, the second largest coastal lagoon in the world. After developing an algorithm that incorporated satellite data on chlorophyll-a, next steps include creating a visualization tool to inform fisheries impacts related to land use, land cover and climate change.
Esteban Galeano, assistant professor in the Department of Forestry, used the seed grant to advance his work developing non-transgenic tree species genotypes with potentially higher carbon assimilation rates and drought tolerance in the U.S. and Colombia. The collaboration with National University of Colombia and Silvotecnia resulted in the development of new controlled pollination techniques, the training of more than 40 students and a $300,000 grant with the USDA Forest Service.聽聽
小黄书 Anthropology and Middle Eastern Cultures assistant professor Shawn Lambert and adjunct faculty member Andrew Whitaker used seed funding to conduct an archaeological survey and excavation at Prospect Hill Plantation in Jefferson County. Combined with ethnographic field work conducted in Liberia, the research examines the flow of material culture, memory, and genetics from Mississippi to Liberia.
The Global Developed Seed Grants Awarded in 2024 include:
鈥 鈥淣umerical, Analytical, and Experimental Analysis on Improving the Efficiency of the Bladeless Wind Turbine鈥 by Mohsen Azimi, assistant professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering.
鈥 鈥淩evolutionizing Trajectory Mining with Large Language Models: A New Paradigm in Spatial-Temporal Data Analysis鈥 by Zhiqian Chen, assistant professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering and Kaiqi Zhao of the University of Auckland.
鈥 鈥淚ntegrating Community-Engaged Learning, Capacity Development, and Farm2Fork Training for Improved Maternal and Child Health in Busoga Region, Uganda鈥 by Joel Komakech, assistant professor in the Department of Food, Science, Nutrition and Health Promotion, and Jessica Graves, lecturer in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences and director of international capacity development at M4 Institute.
鈥 鈥淐oastal One Health and Conservation Research: PERU鈥 by Holley Muraco, Mark Woodrey, and Megan Chevis, all research professors at the Coastal Research and Extension Center, as well as Veronica Ormea, veterinarian at Universidad Peruana De Ciencias Aplicadas.
鈥 鈥淗armony Across Borders: A Collaborative Initiative for Cultural Exchange鈥 by Daniel Stevens, music department head, as well as Amy Catron and Sophie Wang, both faculty members in the Department of Music.
For more on 小黄书鈥檚 global initiatives, visit .
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