Skip to main content

ASU, Mayo Clinic collaborate for impact

ASU faculty will spend the summer tackling health care challenges alongside researchers at Mayo Clinic


|
May 22, 2019

For the third year, select Arizona State University faculty will spend their summer advancing research and understanding on a significant health challenge, in partnership with Mayo Clinic.

Through the Mayo Clinic and ASU Alliance for Health Care Faculty Summer Residency Program, six professors from the College of Health Solutions and Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering will spend six weeks working side by side with Mayo Clinic researchers at a Mayo Clinic site in either Rochester, Minnesota, or locally in Phoenix or Scottsdale.

The teams will collaborate on research that seeks to have a direct impact on patient outcomes and experiences. This year’s cohort is tackling questions relating to Alzheimer’s disease, Type 1 diabetes, liver disease and more.

“ASU is committed to advancing the health and well-being of our community, and our partnership with Mayo Clinic allows us to do just that,” said Dr. Susan Pepin, managing director of health and clinical partnerships, senior adviser to the executive vice president and clinical professor in the College of Health Solutions and Edson College of Nursing and Health Innovation at Arizona State University. “The summer residency program will support the creation of innovative new technologies, processes and systems that will improve health outcomes and help people live healthier lives.”

The participating faculty are:

Ayan Banerjee, School of Computing, Informatics, and Decision Systems Engineering, Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering

Project: Advance research focusing on Type 1 diabetes data from the Medtronic 670G artificial pancreas system.
Mayo Clinic Investigator: Yogish Kudva, MB.
Location: Mayo Clinic Rochester.

Murthy Devarakonda, College of Health Solutions

Project: Further develop research approaches and assess preliminary results from the methods regarding current study in artificial intelligence and natural language processing methods to treat opioid addiction.
Mayo Clinic Investigator: Teresa Rummans, MD, and Tyler Oesterle, MD.
Location: Mayo Clinic Rochester.

Erica Forzani, School for Engineering of Matter, Transport and Energy, Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering

Project: Improving quality of life and preventing brain damage in newborns, children and adults with urea cycle and liver disorders.
Mayo Clinic Investigator: Brendan Lanpher, MD.
Location: Mayo Clinic Rochester.

Julianne Holloway, School for Engineering of Matter, Transport and Energy, Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering

Project: Develop new tissue-engineered scaffolds that are capable of spatially controlling cellular behavior to regenerate the complex, heterogeneous tendon to bone interface of the rotator cuff.
Mayo Clinic Investigator: John Tokish, MD.
Location: Mayo Clinic Arizona.

Feng Ju, School of Computing, Informatics, and Decision Systems Engineering, Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering

Project: Creating a framework for innovating disruptive use of new MRI technology.
Mayo Clinic Investigator: James Pipe, PhD.
Location: Mayo Clinic Rochester.

Li Liu, College of Health Solutions

Project: Develop an advanced risk assessment model for Alzheimer’s that integrates new findings with traditional clinical and lifestyle-related parameters.
Mayo Clinic Investigator: Richard Caselli, MD.
Location: Mayo Clinic Arizona.

Top photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now

More Science and technology

 

Three men kneeling next to a stack of cases and smiling.

SPARCS mission spacecraft bus delivered to ASU for final assembly

The Arizona State University team that is building the NASA-funded Star-Planet Activity Research CubeSat, or SPARCS, cleared a major milestone this week — receiving its spacecraft bus at the School…

Tracee Jamison-Hooks stands in front of an ASU-branded sign smiling

Associate professor shares her journey from NASA to ASU

From leading space missions to designing and building spaceflight hardware and training students in space science and engineering, Arizona State University is proving that space is more than a…

A crowd observes G. Don Taylor speak in a classroom

Famed systems engineer inspires ASU to tackle global problems

“Providing great talent with great opportunity can make a great difference.” Such was a key part of the message delivered by G. Don Taylor, executive vice provost and the Charles O. Gordon Professor…