You searched for news/ Automation | Syracuse University Today / Wed, 15 Oct 2025 18:36:42 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 /wp-content/uploads/2025/08/cropped-apple-touch-icon-120x120.png You searched for news/ Automation | Syracuse University Today / 32 32 2025 Is a Strong Year for NSF Proposal Funding, Early-Career Faculty Awards /2025/09/04/2025-is-a-strong-year-for-nsf-proposal-funding-early-career-faculty-awards/ Thu, 04 Sep 2025 16:04:29 +0000 https://syracuse-news.ddev.site/2025/09/04/2025-is-a-strong-year-for-nsf-proposal-funding-early-career-faculty-awards/ Faculty across five schools and colleges earned major National Science Foundation grants to support cutting-edge research in AI, physics, chemistry and engineering.

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2025 Is a Strong Year for NSF Proposal Funding, Early-Career Faculty Awards

Faculty across five schools and colleges earned major National Science Foundation grants to support cutting-edge research in AI, physics, chemistry and engineering.
Diane Stirling Sept. 4, 2025

National Science Foundation (NSF) funding for Syracuse University faculty research projects totaled $19.7 million in fiscal year 2025, an increase of $5.8 million over last year’s total, according to the .

NSF also recognized four faculty members with prestigious.

Duncan Brown, vice president for research, says expanded NSF funding and the selection of four faculty for CAREER recognition is a testament to the strength, quality and innovativeness of research taking place across campus. “Such positive outcomes show how important it is that our researchers continue to apply for federal grants. Doing so helps assure that continuing projects can maintain their momentum without interruption and that new research ideas have the support they need to realize societal impact,” says Brown.

CAREER Awards

CAREER Awards are NSF’s highest recognition for early-career academic professionals. The awards are designed to help recipients build the foundation for a lifetime of leadership and integration of education and research. Receiving the awards this year are:

  • , assistant professor of chemistry in the
  • , assistant professor of electrical engineering in the
  • , assistant professor of physics in the
  • , Maxwell Dean Associate Professor of the Politics of AI in the
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Xiaoran Hu

Hu works on that are super sensitive to mechanical forces and that can show visible signs, like changing color, when they are deformed or damaged. This helps materials report damage on their own and makes it possible to study how subtle force moves through complex systems, such as synthetic plastics and biological materials. He also designs smart materials that adapt their behavior or properties in response to other triggers, such as ultrasound, light or chemicals.

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Bryan Kim

Kim aims to bridge the information gap between software systems and hardware devices by embedding implicit hints between systems and devices. The research helps improve data storage performance and data retrieval reliability while maintaining compatibility. It supports complex, large-scale computing needs of modern businesses and technologies such as artificial intelligence and big-data analytics.

Mansell builds and fine tunes , the tools that detect the tiny ripples in space caused by cosmic events such as black hole mergers. She also works with a special kind of light called “squeezed light” that helps make the detectors more precise.

Zhang uses quantitative methods to study how the interests of citizens and technical experts could shape the. She explores the politics of digital technologies regarding AI governance; the international political economy in the age of advanced automation and quantitative social science methods.

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Georgia Mansell

Record Year for NSF Funding

The $19.7 million in awards is the highest amount since 2022, according to Chetna Chianese, senior director in the (ORD). She says the success highlights the faculty’s continued striving for research success regardless of a shifting federal funding landscape.

The NSF funding supports dozens of projects across five schools and colleges in multiple research areas, including:

  • An for doctoral students in emergent intelligence biological and bio-inspired systems for the
  • A cluster of three projects to support the Center for Gravitational Wave Astronomy and Astrophysics
  • One new and two renewed Research Experiences for Undergraduates projects
  • A project to further explore new physics at the LHCb experiment at , the European center for nuclear research
  • A training program for upskilling photonics technicians in advanced optics and quantum research-enabled technologies
  • A project to explore the science of social-psychological processes and AI companionship
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Baobao Zhang

Support for Proposals

The Office of Research offers broad support for faculty pursuing sponsored funding, including through , departmental research administrators and ORD. Faculty beginning to pursue external funding and resources to support their research and creative activities can start by working with , who bring deep knowledge of external funders and stakeholders to provide strategic consultations. The Office of Research additionally supports faculty through the , which helps them plan, draft and complete their proposals. That program will resume in the spring semester ahead of the summer 2026 deadline.

ORD also provides guidance regarding the ongoing changes to federal funding, the changing federal funding landscape, updates on new executive orders and adjusted administrative policies and regulatory requirements. “We are keeping faculty updated via email and an internal SharePoint, but our team can also provide project-specific guidance to principal investigators who reach out to us,” Chianese says.

Faculty interested in applying for NSF and other grants can contact the ORD staff at resdev@syr.edu.

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Public Voices Fellowship Supports Maxwell Professor’s AI Research /2023/10/13/baobao-zhang-public-voices/ Fri, 13 Oct 2023 17:34:28 +0000 /blog/2023/10/13/baobao-zhang-public-voices/ Baobao Zhang, assistant professor of political science in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, has received the 2023-24 Public Voices Fellowship on Technology in the Public Interest to explore attitudes and policy related to artificial intelligence (AI) technology.
Baobao Zhang (Photo by Jeremy Brinn)
Zhang is one of 20 fellows chosen for the one-year program that supports women a...

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Public Voices Fellowship Supports Maxwell Professor's AI Research

, assistant professor of political science in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, has received the 2023-24 Public Voices Fellowship on Technology in the Public Interest to explore attitudes and policy related to artificial intelligence (AI) technology.

Studio
Baobao Zhang (Photo by Jeremy Brinn)

Zhang is one of 20 fellows chosen for the one-year program that supports women and underrepresented thought leaders in producing public writing, conducting live experiments and networking with scholars, experts and journalists.

Zhang plans to use the fellowship to publish op-eds and engage in public communication about the uses and risks of artificial intelligence. She will hold an eight-day, virtual public assembly in October with 40 randomly selected participants that explores public perceptions of AI across applications in public administration, health, online search and face recognition. The workshop is based on her research that public knowledge about AI affects whether citizens, consumers and stakeholders can make informed decisions about policy, accountability or potential benefits or harms.

The 2023-24 Public Voices Fellowship on Technology in the Public Interest is supported by The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation in partnership with the OpEd Project. The fellowship program is partnered with 35 universities and foundations, including the Ford Foundation and Yale, Stanford and Princeton universities. The program is designed to support underrepresented scholars who advance public conversations on gender, racial, health, climate and media justice issues.

Zhang’s October workshop is supported by a she received as one of 15 AI2050 Early Career fellows. Those fellowships were funded by the philanthropic organization Schmidt Futures. For the workshop, she will partner with the Center for New Democratic Processes, a nonpartisan nonprofit that will hold eight workshop sessions that analyze public engagement with AI governance and applications.

Zhang is a senior research associate in the and the . Her broader work focuses on public and elite opinion of AI, policy and ethics of AI technology, and how the American welfare state can adapt to increasing automation.

Story by Michael Kelly

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Public Voices Fellowship Supports Maxwell Professor’s AI Research