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Find similar grantsScientific Collaboration Grant (< $250k) is sponsored by Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. Supports multidisciplinary research on human-AI interaction and prototyping of novel uses of AI systems to move these insights into practice, with a focus on recent developments in generative AI and its applications to science.
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SOU computer science professor awarded $250K grant for AI research - Ashland News - Community-Supported, NonProfit News SOU computer science professor awarded $250K grant for AI research Bernadette Boscoe, an assistant professor in the Computer Science Department at Southern Oregon University Grant to fund artificial intelligence research tools for SOU, UCLA, Cornell Ashland.
news staff reports A Southern Oregon University professor has been awarded a $250,000 grant for research in artificial intelligence that’s slated to benefit not only SOU, but UCLA and Cornell University.
Bernadette Boscoe, an assistant professor in the Computer Science Department at SOU, recognizes a shared need in a wide range of fields, from astronomy to environmental science to violin acoustics, and the new grant will pay for research that may benefit those and other academic disciplines.
The grant will fund the development of AquiLLM tools to be used at SOU, UCLA and Cornell, so that each research team can store and query its own tacit knowledge over time. It will also provide funding to students who are participating in the research projects at the three universities. The $250,000 grant from the Alfred P.
Sloan Foundation will fund her study of tacit knowledge in research settings — gathering, storing and retrieving the unspoken practices of academic teams that sometimes are lost when a project is disrupted or ends, according to a news release.
Boscoe will use a Large Language Model (LLM) of artificial intelligence to archive the protocols of scientific groups researching environmental science at SOU, astronomy at UCLA and violin acoustics at Cornell University. “When students, postdocs, researchers or even professors leave a project or lab, much of the tacit, hands-on training practices are lost, because they are not documented,” Boscoe said in a news release.
“With the rapid advances of LLMs in AI, we now have more computational capabilities to keep track of tacit knowledge, as well as query it in a natural language form. ” Boscoe said mentorships are the main training method to transfer knowledge within most academic research groups — professors and researchers onboard new members to their groups, and train them to do research.
“AI can be used to have researchers rethink how they onboard newcomers, and consider how important tacit knowledge is in continuing collaborations and research over time,” Boscoe said. She is using Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG), an AI framework that pairs an LLM with an information retrieval system to improve accuracy and relevance of resulting data.
She is working with SOU computer science graduate Chandler Campbell to build the project’s RAG-LLM tool, called AquiLLM — named after the constellation Aquila. Boscoe is a computer and information scientist who builds and researches infrastructures and tools to help domain scientists do their work.
She earned a bachelor of fine arts degree in painting from the Pratt Institute in New York, an associate degree in computer science from Northampton Community College in Pennsylvania, a master’s degree in mathematics from California State University-Northridge, and a doctoral degree in information science from UCLA.
The research that will be funded over the next year by the Sloan Foundation grant is an extension of her previous work, with the addition of artificial intelligence frameworks. The Sloan Foundation is a not-for-profit, mission-driven, grant-making institution dedicated to improving the welfare of all through the advancement of scientific knowledge.
It was established in 1934 by Alfred Pritchard Sloan Jr., then-president and chief executive officer of the General Motors Corporation.
It provides grants in four broad areas: direct support of research in science, technology, engineering, mathematics and economics; initiatives to increase the quality, equity, diversity and inclusiveness of scientific institutions and the science workforce; projects to develop or leverage technology to empower research; and efforts to enhance and deepen public engagement with science and scientists.
Information obtained from an SOU news release . Email Ashland. news at [email protected] .
Bert Etling is the executive editor of Ashland. news. Email him at [email protected] .
Unprepared: The broken pipeline teaching Oregon’s teachers For years, Oregon education groups fought mandates on literacy testing and phonics instruction, and they won. Now one of their former leaders says those victories helped fuel the state’s literacy crisis.
Jim Green is calling on the governor to begin reversing course through an executive order that would require aspiring elementary school teachers to pass a standalone science-of-reading exam. Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek’s order requiring union work on state projects is ruled illegal A controversial order by Gov. Kotek requiring union labor on many state construction projects is unconstitutional, a Marion County judge found Thursday.
Ruling from the bench, Marion County Judge Thomas Hart found that Kotek had overstepped her authority when issuing EO 24-31, which critics argued would hike the cost of state projects.
AIFF to hold preview night for upcoming spring film festival Film lovers will get a first look at this year’s Ashland Independent Film Festival during a free preview event, where organizers will reveal a lineup of films and special anniversary programming.
New Ashland mural to highlight Native American history and culture World-renowned muralist John Pugh offered an up-close look at his latest work-in-progress before it takes its place above a downtown Ashland building. “Where the Crow Lights” weaves together the area’s Native American heritage and the city’s deep theater roots, shaped in close collaboration with local tribal elders to honor both the land and its history.
Unprepared: The broken pipeline teaching Oregon’s teachers For years, Oregon education groups fought mandates on literacy testing and phonics instruction, and they won. Now one of their former leaders says those victories helped fuel the state’s literacy crisis.
Jim Green is calling on the governor to begin reversing course through an executive order that would require aspiring elementary school teachers to pass a standalone science-of-reading exam. Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek’s order requiring union work on state projects is ruled illegal A controversial order by Gov. Kotek requiring union labor on many state construction projects is unconstitutional, a Marion County judge found Thursday.
Ruling from the bench, Marion County Judge Thomas Hart found that Kotek had overstepped her authority when issuing EO 24-31, which critics argued would hike the cost of state projects.
AIFF to hold preview night for upcoming spring film festival Film lovers will get a first look at this year’s Ashland Independent Film Festival during a free preview event, where organizers will reveal a lineup of films and special anniversary programming.
Letter: Get pickleball out of Lithia Park Charles McWhorter: As a longtime Ashland resident and a fan of Lithia Park in all of its peaceful beauty, I have always been saddened by the Ashland Parks decision to put the Lithia Park pickleball courts in their current location. Letter: Make No Kings march an antiwar protest too Benjamin Ben-Baruch: The March 28 demonstration in Medford needs to go beyond “No Kings!
” The demonstration must be not only peaceful but a peace demonstration opposing the current war in Iran. Letter: A tribute to the legacy, service and heart of Ashland Orthopedics Cindy Powell: The closing of Ashland Orthopedics leaves a space in our hearts and in our town that cannot be filled. Yet their legacy remains in every healed knee, every strong stride, every grateful patient and every life touched by their care.
Unprepared: The broken pipeline teaching Oregon’s teachers For years, Oregon education groups fought mandates on literacy testing and phonics instruction, and they won. Now one of their former leaders says those victories helped fuel the state’s literacy crisis.
Jim Green is calling on the governor to begin reversing course through an executive order that would require aspiring elementary school teachers to pass a standalone science-of-reading exam. Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek’s order requiring union work on state projects is ruled illegal A controversial order by Gov. Kotek requiring union labor on many state construction projects is unconstitutional, a Marion County judge found Thursday.
Ruling from the bench, Marion County Judge Thomas Hart found that Kotek had overstepped her authority when issuing EO 24-31, which critics argued would hike the cost of state projects.
AIFF to hold preview night for upcoming spring film festival Film lovers will get a first look at this year’s Ashland Independent Film Festival during a free preview event, where organizers will reveal a lineup of films and special anniversary programming.
Letter: Get pickleball out of Lithia Park Charles McWhorter: As a longtime Ashland resident and a fan of Lithia Park in all of its peaceful beauty, I have always been saddened by the Ashland Parks decision to put the Lithia Park pickleball courts in their current location. Letter: Make No Kings march an antiwar protest too Benjamin Ben-Baruch: The March 28 demonstration in Medford needs to go beyond “No Kings!
” The demonstration must be not only peaceful but a peace demonstration opposing the current war in Iran. Don't Miss Our Top Stories Get our newsletter delivered to your inbox three times a week. It’s FREE and you can cancel anytime.
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Research on Circular Economy, Smart Manufacturing, and Energy-Efficient Microelectronics is sponsored by U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Advanced Materials & Manufacturing Technologies Office (AMMTO). This funding opportunity supports innovative technology R&D across the manufacturing sector with a focus on circular economy, smart manufacturing, and energy-efficient microelectronics. While the stated deadline for full applications has passed, AMMTO frequently issues similar solicitations, and this highlights a relevant area of interest for the DOE.
NIST Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Phase II Program - Quantum Information Science is sponsored by National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). This program allocates funding to small businesses for prototyping innovative technologies in areas including quantum information science, artificial intelligence, and semiconductors. These Phase II awards follow successful Phase I feasibility studies.