Return to this site's homepage Folder and file tree of everything on this site Search this site, the university or the world Common listings of people, organizations and programs Let us know how we are doing Browsing tips, plug-ins, accounts and more
College of Engineering -- University of Wisconsin-Madison The Fountain
Home : News & Events : Headlines : 2001 :
UW-Madison engineers share in new national technology push

Three UW-Madison College of Engineering faculty will share a role in a new National Science Foundation (NSF) awards program to mold the future of information technology.

David J. Beebe

David J. Beebe (12K JPG)

David Beebe, a professor of biomedical engineering, received an award of $450,000 over three years to develop new nontextual material to improve computer access for people with visual impairments. His strategies include developing tactile electrostatic cues that will help users navigate on the computer.

Mikko H. Lipasti

Mikko H. Lipasti (11K JPG)

With $450,000 over three years, Electrical and Computer Engineering Professors Mikko Lipasti and James Smith hope to develop a better verification system for computations that occur on parallel computing networks, which are numerous processors working in tandem.

Ninety-five institutions will share $90 million in NSF grants for the first year of its new Information Technology Research initiative. A presidential committee created the ITF program, which is intended to fund higher-risk emerging technologies that could have greater payoff in the high-tech economy. The agency chose a total of 210 projects from more than 1,400 proposals.

"This initiative will help strengthen America's leadership in a sector that has accounted for one-third of U.S. economic growth in recent years," President Bill Clinton says in an NSF release.

James E. Smith

James E. Smith (24K JPG)

Terrence Millar, associate dean for the physical sciences in the Graduate School, says UW-Madison's projects reflect the innovative research generated by the Computer Sciences Department and College of Engineering. Strengths at UW-Madison include computer architecture, computer networking and operating systems, parallel computing, database management and improving access for people with disabilities.

"These grants will help the university foster a new generation of research that will have a big impact on developing future tools for scientists, industry and the public," Millar says.

Overall, UW-Madison scientists will be lead investigators on four projects totaling more than $8.1 million over five years, while another UW-Madison researcher is part of a multi-university team that will receive $11.8 million over five years.

Other UW-Madison projects include:



Subscribe to News Notification Service
Search the Headlines
News and events at UW-Madison

Menubar

Main sections: | AccessibilityCollege of Engineering homepageSite mapSearchDirectoriesFeedbackHelp



Copyright 2001 The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System
Date last modified: Monday, 01-Jan-2001 00:00:00 CST
Date created: 01-Jan-2001
Content By: perspective@engr.wisc.edu

Thank you for visiting!