IU received $772M in sponsored research awards in 2023
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As a subscriber you can listen to articles at work, in the car, or while you work out. Subscribe NowIndiana University faculty and researchers secured $772 million in total sponsored research awards in 2023, the university announced Tuesday.
The total marks a $42 million increase over the previous year and includes research funding for health initiatives, drug treatments and efforts to enhance civics education.
A sponsored research award is funding from an external entity such as a private foundation, corporation or governmental agency for a specific research project with defined parameters.
IU President Pamela Whitten is expected to release more details on Tuesday in an announcement to staff, faculty and students.
The announcement comes as the state’s flagship university prepares to officially transition IUPUI to IU Indianapolis in July. Nearly one-third of the $772 million secured in research funding went to IUPUI staff and faculty, the university said.
Among the funding IU researchers received last year included $38 million to research ways to improve positive health outcomes in Indiana, $2.4 million from the National Institutes of Health and the National Endowment for the Arts to research music-based treatments for chronic pain, and nearly $7 million from the National Institute on Drug Abuse to establish the Center for Cannabis, Cannabinoids and Addiction with the goal of finding new therapies to treat drug addiction.
Other projects included:
— Two U.S. Department of Defense awards totaling $11.7 million to fund Indianapolis research on discovering a drug treatment for hydrocephalus, a condition commonly associated with complications from traumatic brain injury that causes cerebrospinal fluid to accumulate in the brain.
— A three-year, $5.7 million grant from the Department of Defense for the Center on Representative Government to enhance civics education and expand student interest in public service careers.
— National Endowment for the Humanities funding for Music Unwound, a national consortium that includes the Jacobs School of Music. The consortium promotes humanities-infused public programming in American classical music, with the goal of strengthening student and audience engagement.
The increase in funding in 2023 aligns with goals in the university’s IU 2030 strategic plan, which called for increasing the university’s research enterprise.
University officials announced plans in October to invest $111 million in new faculty, facilities, equipment and strategic initiatives focused on advancements in microelectronics and nanotechnology. The university is also committing $250 million to invest in biosciences that includes two new research institutes at IU Indianapolis.