VOLUME 33, NUMBER 26 |
THURSDAY,
April 25, 2002 |
Reception
to honor UB inventors
Individuals named on 15 U.S. patents for inventions
developed at UB to be recognized
By
LORRAINE O. WAPPMAN
Reporter Contributor
Fifteen
individuals named on 15 United States patents issued to The Research
Foundation of the State of New York in 2001, as well as 64 faculty members
who will be recognized for their research achievements, will be honored
by UB at a reception from 4-6 p.m. on May 2 in the Center for Tomorrow,
North Campus.
The
annual reception honoring UB's faculty inventors will take on a new
dimension this year as 41 faculty members will be presented a Sustained
Achievement Award and 23 others will be presented a Young Investigator
Award.
The
reception will be co-hosted by President William R. Greiner and Provost
Elizabeth D. Capaldi. Jaylan S. Turkkan, vice president for research,
and Robert Genco, SUNY Distinguished Professor who is a vice provost
and head of the university's Office of Science, Technology Transfer
and Economic Outreach (STOR), will assist with the award presentations.
Two
of the patented technologies to be recognized at the ceremony already
have been licensed by STOR's Intellectual Property Division, which works
with faculty to disclose, patent and license university-developed technology.
They are:
- Licensed
to Jarret, S.A., is a patent issued to Stuart S. Chen, associate professor
of civil engineering. Chen, along with collaborators, developed an
apparatus for mitigating the seismic load effects of earthquakes and
windstorms on a structure, using a dual system of tension cables and
dampers that is less intrusive than conventional systems. Co-inventors
are John B. Mander and Gokhan Peckan, both formerly of the Department
of Civil Engineering.
- Licensed
to Varian, Inc., is a patent issued to Andrew Joshua Wand and Peter
F. Flynn, both formerly of the Department of Chemistry. This technology
is a novel method and apparatus for Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectroscopy
of molecules, particularly larger proteins and macromolecules. The
method reduces the effective tumbling time of molecules during NMR
measurement by providing a low viscosity environment for them. Co-inventor
is Mark R. Ehrhardt.
Additionally,
another patented technology developed at UB was recognized at the 2001
Inventor of the Year annual patent awards of the Niagara Frontier Intellectual
Property Law Association. The inventors are:
- Joseph
A. Gardella, Jr., professor of chemistry; Wesley Hicks, Jr., associate
professor of otolaryngology; Timothy Koloski, research assistant in
the Department of Chemistry, and Terrence G. Vargo, research assistant
in the Department of Chemistry, who developed a method for providing
novel surface modified biodegradable polyester polymers that allow
small amounts of surface modifiers to be situated on the surface.
An intended application of this technology is the development of wound-healing
membranes. Co-inventors are Won-Ki Lee, formerly of the Department
of Chemistry, and Ilario Losito.
Other
inventors to be honored are:
- Paul
J. Kostyniak, professor of pharmacology and toxicology; Rossman F.
Giese, Jr., professor of geology, and Joseph A. Syracuse, co-director
of the Toxicology Research Center, who developed an antimicrobial
composition that can impart antimicrobial properties both in, and
on, the surface of various household, industrial and medical products.
Co-inventor is Patricia M. Costanzo, formerly of the Department of
Geology.
- D.
Jeffery Higginbotham, associate professor of communicative disorders
and sciences, who was issued three patents on a system, method and
database for selecting utterance constructions used for interpersonal
communication by impaired individuals. The invention provides improvements
in communication speeds, selection efficiency and ease of use, all
of which currently are unavailable in augmentative communication technologies.
Frame-based communication uses preset utterances relating to a particular
communication event, such as a meal. Co-inventor is David Parker Wilkins.
- Wesley
L. Hicks, Jr., who invented the first model of a tracheal lumen that
combines epithelial and mesenchymal elements in a manner that mimics
the tracheal lumen surface. The research team's goal is to develop
a wound-healing membrane for the trachea and other trauma sites.
- Donald
D. Hickey, research assistant professor of physiology and biophysics
and clinical assistant professor of neurosurgery, who invented a novel
device and method to provide a non-invasive estimate of cardiac performance
parameters by inserting a catheter and balloon into the esophagus,
adjacent to the aortic arch, to sense aortic pressure. Part of the
previously patented Hickey Cardiac Monitoring System.
- Frank
V. Bright, professor of chemistry, who invented a small portable sensing
system for quantifying gaseous species or an analyte in a sample using
a light-emitting diode and detector. The invention builds on a patented
sol-gel processing technique that is used to stabilize the protein
sensor in a porous xerogel material deposited on the surface of the
LED. Co-inventors are Jeffrey D. Jordan, A. Neal Watkins, and Brett
R. Wenner, all formerly of the Department of Chemistry.
- Stephen
Rudin, professor of radiology and co-director of Radiation Physics
Laboratory and Toshiba Stroke Research Center, and Daniel R. Bednarek,
professor of radiology, developed a radiographic image apparatus and
method for vascular interventions for acquiring very-high-resolution
radiographic digital images over a small region of interest using
a digital solid-state x-ray image detector for the medical imaging
application of angiography. Co-inventors include Ajay Kumar Wakhloo,
formerly of the Department of Neurosurgery, and Baruch B. Lieber,
formerly of the Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering.
- Eli
Ruckenstein, SUNY Distinguished Professor in the Department of Chemical
Engineering, who invented a method for the purification of wheat germ
agglutinin using chitin microporous or macroporous affinity filtration
membranes for application in the areas of biochemistry and medical
compound research. Co-inventor is Xianfang Zeng, formerly of the Department
of Chemical Engineering.
Ruckenstein
also will be honored for inventing a method for the preparation
of novel crosslinkers and their application to star-shaped or branched
polymer and polymer gels used in drug delivery and controlled drug
releases. Co-inventor is Hongmin Zhang, formerly of the Department
of Chemical Engineering.
-
Donald Henderson, professor of communicative disorders and sciences,
who developed a method for the prevention and/or reversal of inner-ear
damage due to noise or toxins through systematically applying agents
such as R-PIA to round window membranes of the inner ear. The agents
can be applied before, during or after the noise trauma or toxin
exposure. This invention is co-assigned to the Navy, which has taken
the lead in commercialization efforts. Co-inventors are Michael
E. Hoffer and Richard D. Kopke.
-
Linda M. Hall, Xiao-Feng Ren and Wei Zheng, all formerly of the
Department of Biochemical Pharmaceuticals, who invented a method
of isolation and characterization of an invertebrate calcium channel
subunit gene used in the design of insect-specific pesticides. Co-inventor
is Manuel Marcel Paul Dubald.
|