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Year in Review - Top 5 Stories of 2022
As we close out this year and welcome a new one, we’re pleased to share the top five most read SUNY Research Forward stories of 2022. From rejuvenating the U.S. semiconductor industry to pioneering new approaches to treating diseases and repairing damage to the environment, the top five captures how SUNY research is solving problems and improving our world. Thank you for your readership.
SUNY POLY CITED AS KEY SEMICONDUCTOR RESEARCH ORGANIZATION
The Center for Strategic & International Studies Report noted that no other educational and research facility in the United States has assets comparable to the College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering. Read the report.
OVERCOMING TRADITIONAL TREATMENT OBSTACLES
University at Buffalo researchers developed a new technology that teaches the immune system not to attack life-saving drugs. The reverse vaccination approach could be applied to a broad range of autoimmune disorders and genetic conditions, including hemophilia and Pompe disease. Find out more about this novel treatment.
SUSTAINABLE ARCHAEOLOGY ADDRESSES WATER SCARCITY
From sea level rise to less predictable rainfall patterns, climate change is impacting the availability of fresh water on Pacific islands. Binghamton University researchers are looking at how past civilizations managed this limited resource. Learn how ancient techniques may be applied to solve today's problems.
ADVANCING DRUG DISCOVERY
A new biomedical research tool developed at Stony Brook University that enables scientists to measure hundreds of functional proteins in a single cell could offer new insights into cell machinery. Learn more about this exciting new technology.
EXAMINING EXTREME LAKE-EFFECT PHENOMENA
Lightning strikes on wind turbines are a problem across the country. New York’s Tug Hill region and its wind farms provide a natural laboratory to study this phenomenon. Learn more about a $1M SUNY Oswego research project that will take the first-ever measurements of the electrical structure of lake-effect snow clouds.
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