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Technology Transfer, Innovation and Economic Impact

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Read about UO progress in transferring new knowledge and technology for the benefit of the public. While the Office of Technology Transfer handles the mechanics of creating spinoffs, managing intellectual property and formalizing relationships between industry and the university, this section is a place to find news about new developments, as well as background material on university successes.

Technology transfer at the University of Oregon is about developing connections that link researchers and their discoveries to the outside world. These connections speed discoveries into real applications not only in the life and physical sciences but also in fields such as the social sciences and education. The general public, private industry and regional economies all benefit, as does the university through the resulting connections.


And now, the latest news:

Oregon BEST makes 1st investment in state sustainability research

Oregon BEST makes 1st investment in state sustainability research

Five UO researchers in three projects get funding from Oregon BEST to use in work focusing on sustainability that has potential for creating new companies and jobs for the state

Read More…

UO chooses first projects funded by new tax credit program

UO chooses first projects funded by new tax credit program

Awards will advance power-saving lighting and a technique to assess hearing capability in young or ill

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MitoSciences Inc. and University of Oregon complete biotechnology deal

Agreement strengthens the sharing of monoclonal antibodies with life-science researchers around the world, brings financial returns to the university

Read More…


 


Isaac Asimov"There is a single light of science and to brighten it anywhere is to brighten it everywhere."

-- Isaac Asimov

This section remains under construction. Come back soon for a look for a summary of activity that occurred during the 2006-2007 academic year and a overview of some of the many success stories.

CAMCOR's microscopes

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UO researchers and private industry have access to high-tech microcopes through the Center for Advanced Materials Characterization in ORegon (CAMCOR).

Office of Tech Transfer

Find out how technology transfer works at the UO, whether you are a researcher or in search of technology your company can use.

Corp. Partners Welcome

Grow your company in partnership with the University of Oregon. Find out more.

Riverfront Research

Technology-based companies can collaborate with UO researchers and have a home, too, in the Riverfront Research Park, a state-owned site on the south bank of the Willamette River and adjacent to campus.

Science/Research Blog

Jim Barlow -- blog art photoVisit Jim's  SciBlog, an informal look at research news.

Newest Additions:

Sept. 23 -- Check out the Fall 2008 Cascade! You won't be disappointed.

Sept. 22 -- Presidential politics have centered on the Iraq war and the U.S. economy. Now the two candidates discuss science in their responses to 14 questions.

Science in the Northwest now has central Web showcase

Logo for Science Northwest, a collaborative regional news site for leading academic research institutions

Looking for the latest research news in the Northwest? Collaborating science writers at the leading Northwest research institutions now have a clearinghouse dedicated to the region's major institutions. The Pacific Northwest National Laboratory now hosts Science Northwest. Check it out!

Integrated Marketing and Strategic Communications

                                                          "O"

What makes the University of Oregon a special and unique place? How do we share this information with the rest of the world?

These are the questions the university’s Integrated Marketing and Strategic Communications Task Force (IMSC) has been charged with answering. Read more about the effort HERE.

 
Legacy Award to Vignola

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Physics professor Frank Vignola is the first winner of the “Legacy Award” given by the Oregon Solar Energy Industries Association. Read more.
UO physicist Dave Soper to share a top 2009 APS prize

UO physics professor Dave Soper is a 2009 winner of the J.J. Sakurai Prize for Theoretical Physics. He will share the prize with John Collins (Penn State) and Keith Ellis (Fermilab) when presented formally in May during the American Physical Society's annual meeting in Denver. Soper was cited for his "work in perturbative quantum chromodynamics, including applications to problems pivotal to the interpretation of high-energy particle collisions." Quantum chromodynamics is a theory of strong nuclear interactions among quarks -- fundamental constituents of matter.

The prize honors J.J. Sakarai, a Japanese-American particle physicist who authored leading textbooks on quantum mechanics and the principles of elementary particles during a career at the University of Chicago and UCLA. This year's winners bring the total numbers of honorees to 36, including three who later won the Nobel Prize.

UO's Hutchison is part of ACS's touting of global sustainability via chemistry

Face shot of Jim HutchisonCheck out Jim Hutchison's participation in an American Chemical Society production of its "Global Challenges/Chemistry Solutions" Podcast, in which the society says: "Faced with concerns about dwindling petroleum supplies and environmental pollution, we must begin to consume in a new and more sustainable way." (Listen in)

Also, still available is a report featuring Hutchison by ScienCentral: Some are calling it a revolution in manufacturing technology. But, will nanotechnology be a "green" industry? It’s a question that some scientists are saying needs to be answered now, before nanotech goes big-time. (Check it out)

Sense of entitlement? Not in faces at military base, writes UO's Tom Bivins

Tom Bivins UO journalism professor Tom Bivins, sipping coffee and watching youthful faces at San Antonio's Fort Sam Houston, says the often-discussed "sense of entitlement" thought to exist in today's college-aged students was absent among like-aged faces wearing U.S. Army uniforms. His comments appear in a commentary in The Oregonian. (Read it)

Investors worried, tuned into news reports, UO psychologists tell Wall Street Journal writer

Paul Slovic mug shot    Two with University of Oregon ties named to new FDA risk advisory panel

Since 2001, investors’ comfort zone with their stocks has nose-dived from little worry about negative returns to growing worry about their stocks going nowhere for maybe a decade, reports UO psychologist Paul Slovic in an interview with Wall Street Journal columnist Jason Zweig about today’s economy. In same article, UO psychologist Ellen Peters notes that American investors are spending a lot of time following, especially on TV news, the economic turmoil. Zweig’s column, however, carries the message that those who have some cash and can conquer their stock-phobia may be a good position, likening their potential investments to a venture in emerging markets. (Read story – may require paid subscription)

 


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