As part of the new MSU Scholars tool, faculty will now have the option to receive customized emails containing targeted funding opportunities keyed to their research interests, alerts as to when someone was searching for them or a research topic of theirs, and collaboration opportunities.
Ten Michigan State University professors have been named University Distinguished Professors in recognition of their achievements in the classroom, laboratory and community. Those selected for the title have been recognized nationally and internationally for the importance of their teaching, research and outreach achievements.
MSU's Institute for Public Policy and Social Research (IPPSR) is now accepting proposals through the Michigan Applied Public Policy Research grant program (MAPPR) for applied research on a current policy-relevant issue in Michigan.
The MSU Office of Research and Innovation is pleased to announce Manifold, a new podcast series that aims to take a hard look at today’s intellectual issues and controversies from varying points of view.
To use the Ability system effectively, we are encouraging supervisors to learn about subject tracks in addition to specific courses. Adding tracks to your new employees’ Ability accounts helps them start training quickly and with confidence. Using tracks ensures email reminders are sent and can improve compliance inspection results.
The 2018 BRIMR Rankings of NIH Funding reveal which medical schools secured the most competitive NIH awards — and which departments dominated by discipline.
"MSU Scholars" is a new public-facing site showcasing MSU faculty scholarly activity at scholars.msu.edu. "Faculty Insight" is an internal site, accessible via MSU Net ID, and displays grant funding opportunities from federal, corporate, and foundation sources, along with experts at MSU for collaboration possibilities at insight.discovery.academicanalytics.com/msu.
Mammalian embryos are unlike those of any other organism as they must grow within the mother’s body. Mammalian embryos must first choose between forming the placenta or creating the baby. New research at Michigan State University and published in the journal eLife has pinpointed two proteins that are the keys to this decision making.