An AI-enabled digital imaging platform for treating cancer, a software tool for leveraging the capabilities of UF’s HiPerGator supercomputer, an initiative to improve healthcare in Jacksonville and statewide, and a program to enhance funding for the arts are among seven new projects receiving strategic funding at the University of Florida, President Ben Sasse announced today. The funding initiative is designed to advance the student experience and interdisciplinary scholarship.
“These proposals will help take UF to the next level. Each of these bold initiatives will enhance the future of Florida and the world,” Sasse said. “We’re committed to being both elite and practical. I couldn’t be prouder of the way our incredible units at UF are putting this strategic funding to good use. We want to tackle big challenges and these projects are the kind of ambitious, interdisciplinary, and collaborative work that only a large, comprehensive, land-grant university like ours can do.”
After UF received $130 million in new funding from the Florida Legislature this year, Sasse established that, for the first time, more than half of the funds would be used for strategic purposes. A total of $24 million was directly delivered to deans to report back on their strategic uses of funds, and another $50 million was made available across all colleges and administrative units to submit proposals for how the money could best be spent. UF received more than 250 submissions.
In October, the first round of awardees received $9.2 million in funding. The second round of awards is being announced in three tranches on November 13, December 4, and December 18.
Receiving a total of $5,352,990, the following winners were selected based on their impact on student experience and research productivity:
- UF/IFAS: Innovation Hub for Urban Pest Management, $985,000 over three years – Funding will support the $2.2-billion industry in Florida through workforce development, expanding industry partnerships, and innovating new control technologies for invasive pests.
- College of Veterinary Medicine, UF Health: Creating an AI-Enabled Digital Imaging Platform for Veterinary Medicine and One Health, $750,000 over three years – An investment in an AI-enabled digital imaging platform will address bottlenecks in the pathway to implementing personalized cancer diagnoses and treatments, including the scarcity of veterinary pathologists and the heterogeneous nature of cancer disorders.
- College of the Arts, supported by UF/IFAS: Arts Impact Engine, $1,005,790 over four years – Support for a research team-building initiative will help faculty and students write competitive proposals for external funding opportunities, advancing UF’s fast-growing and highly grant-funded arts program.
- College of the Arts, Center for Arts in Medicine, UF Health: Journal of Arts in Health, $79,500 over three years – As the Center for Arts in Medicine creates the global field of Arts in Public Health, this initiative will launch a new open-access journal for the industry that will cement UF’s place as a leader in integrating arts and public health.
- College of Medicine, Jacksonville: Center for Convening Transformative Care, $1,098,700 over three years – Funding for the center will help enhance personalized patient care, increase patient safety, foster population health data research and grant procurement, and strengthen local and state partnerships that will lead to more sustainable population health interventions.
- Fixel Institute (supported by the Herbert Wertheim College of Engineering, the College of Public Health & Health Professions, the College of Nursing, the College of Medicine, the College of Health and Human Performance, and the College of the Arts): Research & Technology Innovation Incubator, $960,000 for one year – An investment in the Fixel Institute will transform 20,000 square feet of unrenovated space into a state-of-the-art hub for interdisciplinary work, positioning the campus as an international destination for cutting-edge science collaborations.
- Herbert Wertheim College of Engineering, supported by the College of Education and the College of Design, Construction, and Planning: Leveraging the Power of Large Language Models, $474,000 over two years – Support for the project will help develop a large language model-based software tool to leverage the computing-intensive capabilities of HiPerGator, collecting beneficial data for instructors and administrators about student performance.
The awardees have expressed gratitude for the funding, which will bring visibility to their groundbreaking visions and initiatives.
“We are thrilled to receive these strategic funds that will enhance our great faculty entomology programs for the benefit of Florida’s citizens,” Robert Gilbert, the UF/IFAS dean for research, said about the Innovation Hub for Urban Pest Management project.
Forrest Masters, the interim dean for the Herbert Wertheim College of Engineering, echoed this thankful sentiment, championing the Leveraging the Power of Large Language Models initiative.
“We’re thrilled to harness the power of large language models and the formidable computing power of our NVIDIA AI supercomputer to help our students become better programmers,” Masters said.
For Onye Ozuzu, the dean of the College of the Arts, the funding presents an opportunity to showcase and expand on the unit’s exponential growth through the Arts Impact Engine.
“President Sasse’s call for strategic innovation, along with the resources to support the strengths of our faculty and students, is a perfectly placed boost at the exact moment that the College of the Arts is ready for it,” Ozuzu said. “Our potential is brimming.”
There is also powerful potential for the AI-Enabled Digital Imaging Platform, designed to help treat and diagnose cancer.
“This endeavor will allow us to reimagine the research enterprise to transform the practice of veterinary medicine,” said Dana Zimmel, dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine. “It will position our college as a national leader in the use of AI to advance research in animal health.”
Dr. Michael S. Okun, the director of the Norman Fixel Institute for Neurological Diseases, looks forward to the investment in the Research & Technology Innovation Incubator.
“This will be transformative for the University of Florida and for the nation. We must rise to meet the growing challenges of neurodegenerative diseases such as Parkinson’s, ALS, Alzheimer’s, Dystonia, concussion, and many others, and the Fixel Institute is the ideal place to do this and to do it now,” Okun said. “There is urgency to collect the best minds and to create next-generation solutions. Fixel and Gator Nation are poised to lead the way.”
Dr. Kelly D. Foote, co-director of the Fixel Institute, shared Okun’s enthusiasm.
“Imagine a collaborative research space designed to bring together clinicians, engineers, scientists, industry partners, and patients drawn from every college and every clinic at the University of Florida and UF Health,” Foote said. “It will be a tremendous collection of talent to drive the most innovative solutions to impact this generation and the next. We believe this investment will produce practical, accessible solutions to improve the lives of millions of people impacted by neurodegenerative diseases.”
A third group of submissions, identified as potentially worthy of funding, is currently undergoing a preliminary feasibility study. Proposals to support UF’s partnerships with businesses, use longitudinal data to support K-12 students, and expand the university’s prowess in space science are among the projects that will move forward with the study.