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By ELLEN GOLDBAUM
News Services Staff
INVENTORS ON the faculty and staff of UB will be honored during a
reception to be held at 4 p.m. on Monday, Feb. 26, in the Center for
Tomorrow on the North Campus.
UB faculty and staff inventors who are named on 13 U.S. patents issued
to the State University of New York Research Foundation in 1995 will
receive awards, which recognize their achievements as inventors of
patented devices, materials or drugs.
For the first time, video and CD-ROM demonstrations of inventions will
be shown.
Kathleen R. Terry, director of technology transfer at UB, explained that
some of the inventors are being honored this year for patents involving
improvements and modifications on inventions for which they have
previously received patents. "For very valuable inventions, it can be
important to file not only on an original invention, but also on
improvements to that invention," said Terry. "This strengthens our patent
position."
The UB faculty members are:
Deborah D.L. Chung, professor of mechanical and aerospace
engineering, and Yi-Han Kao, professor of physics, inventors of a
fullerene that is superconductive at much higher temperatures than has
been previously shown. Kevin T. Fredette and Liwei Song were
co-inventors.
Wayne A. Anderson, professor of electrical and computer
engineering, inventor of a novel thin-film capacitor with unique
electrical properties that will be of significant interest to
semiconductor manufacturers. Robert S. Hamilton, Quanxi Jia and Zhiquing
Shi were co-inventors.
Jerome J. Schentag, professor of pharmaceutics, and David T.
D'Andrea, co-inventors of a computer-controlled "smart pill" that can be
electronically tracked and instructed to deliver a drug to a
predetermined location in the gastrointestinal tract.
Donald D. Hickey, research assistant professor of physiology,
inventor of the Hickey catheter, a non-invasive method and new apparatus
for measuring blood pressure inside the left atrium of the heart.
Joseph Mollendorf, professor of mechanical and aerospace
engineering, inventor of an elegant, comfortable replacement for the
Philadelphia collar for support of the neck. Robert M. Catipovic and
Lillian A. Pascale were co-inventors.
Robert J. Genco, SUNY Distinguished Professor of Oral Biology; Mary
J. Evans and Steven J. Greenberg, both from Roswell Park Cancer
Institute; Richard T. Evans, associate professor of microbiology and oral
biology, and Howard K. Kuramitsu, professor of oral biology, inventors of
a sensitive new mode of detecting P. gingivalis, a causative
organism of periodontal disease. Genco also is being honored for
inventing a method of inducing regeneration of periodontal
tissue and bone. Moon-Il Cho, associate professor of oral biology, was
co-inventor.
Ralph T. Yang, former chair of the Department of Chemical
Engineering, inventor of two new methods of scrubbing nitrogen oxide from
smokestacks. J. Edward Cichanowicz was co-inventor on one patent; Ning
Chen was co-inventor on the second.
Robert Straubinger, associate professor of pharmaceutics, inventor
of a new formulation of the anticancer agent taxol that seems to be
stable and non-toxic, which may make it applicable to many different
kinds of cancers. Amarnath Sharma and Eric Mayhew, co-inventors.
Abir Mullick, assistant professor of architecture, inventor of a
wheelchair-
accessible drinking fountain. Michael Osadciew, Michael F. LaMonica and
Matthew C. Guthrie were co-inventors.
Bradley P. Fuhrman, professor of pediatrics and anesthesiology,
inventor of anti-inflammatory agents for lung and other tissue made from
fluorocarbons. Lynn J. Hernan, Michele C. Papo, David M. Steinhorn, all
assistant professors of pediatrics and anesthesiology; Stephen F.
Flaim and Frances D. Nesti, co-inventors.
John H. Zaharkin, senior lab equipment designer in the Department
of Physiology, and Michael S. Zaharkin, father-son inventors of a device
that measures the motion characteristics of a human joint.
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