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Friday, March 3 2023

  • Iowa State University undergraduates will showcase research March 6 at the Statehouse

    ISU undergraduate students will present research posters detailing their work on 20 projects spanning a huge range of topics, from bioengineering to bumblebee hair, at the Iowa Capitol on Monday. The 2023 Research in the Capitol event offers university students a chance to interact with legislators, state officials and university administrators to show how their innovative work has the potential to impact the state, nation and beyond.

  • SoilTech industry-university center to develop technology to measure, track soil health

    The research groups led by Iowa State's Carmen Gomes and Jonathan Claussen will be part of a new coast-to-coast, industry-university research hub called the Center for Soil Technologies, or SoilTech. Researchers from four universities just launched the center with a $3 million grant from the National Science Foundation.

  • Ames National Laboratory director to step down

    Adam Schwartz has announced his intention to step down as the director of U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Ames National Laboratory. Schwartz, who took leadership of the laboratory in 2014, will continue as director until a successor is named, and then transition into a part-time role helping to support business development for critical materials research at the lab and with its partners.

  • Classes virtual, remote work for Feb. 23

    Due to the icy conditions yesterday that continued overnight, classes will be held virtually, when possible, and employees should work remotely on Thursday, Feb. 23.

  • Iowa State delivers $5 billion impact to state economy

    Iowa State added $5 billion in income to Iowa’s economy or approximately 2.4% of the state’s total gross state product, according to a new economic analysis. ISU’s impact supported 57,142 jobs or one out of every 36 jobs in Iowa.

  • Researchers turn to quantum computing power to simulate, study atomic nuclei

    Iowa State's James Vary and his collaborators are developing quantum-computing tools to model and study the forces within the nucleus of an atom. A three-year, $1 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy is supporting the project.

     

  • Are digital humans the employees of the future?

    Researchers who’ve studied the emergence of digital humans say “AI with a face” will become more prevalent within the decade. They wrote an article aimed at industry leaders to highlight four types of digital humans and offer guidance.

  • ISU researchers to study growing crops in solar farm’s footprint

    A new Iowa State University research project will explore how to grow crops and keep bees amid solar panels. Funded by a grant from the U.S. Department of Energy, most of the research will be conducted a few miles south of Ames, where Alliant Energy plans to begin construction in April on a 1.35 megawatt solar farm.

  • New funding proposal aims to reduce bottlenecks on Upper Mississippi River

    New research proposes a funding model for a major rehabilitation of the 27 locks and dams on the Upper Mississippi. It relies on a collective investment from all – or at least most – of the shippers, along with government funding. The researcher’s model shows the public-private partnership would pay off in the long run.

  • Better eyewitness lineup improves accuracy, detecting innocence

    Iowa State researchers have developed and repeatedly tested a procedure that captures more information from eyewitnesses and improves the accuracy of lineups in police investigations.

  • Relying on customer surveys alone may mask poor service

    New research demonstrates perceptions of customer service do not always align with the actual service provided. Results from three studies found consumers belonging to underrepresented racial and ethnic groups rated poorer quality service less negatively compared to white consumers.