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MD2K Awarded $2 Million in Grants from NSF and NIH

The Center of Excellence for Mobile Sensor Data-to-Knowledge (MD2K), now in its fifth year, has landed two grants totaling $2 million that will enable the center to enhance its software infrastructure, and also join the effort to curb opioid abuse.

The larger of the two grants (mResearch), for $1.75 million from the National Science Foundation (NSF), will support significant new enhancements to the MD2K's mobile sensor big data software infrastructure so as to accelerate research in sensor design, mobile computing, privacy, analytics and visualization. The enhanced MD2K software will facilitate reproducible and extensible computing research with high-frequency mobile sensor data. The mResearch project is a collaboration among five universities: the UofM, Georgia Tech, Ohio State, UCLA and UMass Amherst.

The second grant, for $313,357 from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), enlists MD2K in the fight against the nation's opioids problem. Researchers from MD2K and Johns Hopkins University will investigate whether stress measurements obtained via mobile sensors can predict the day-to-day fluctuations in prescription opioid use among patients with sickle cell disease (SCD). NIH earlier this year announced the HEAL initiative to "speed scientific solutions" for the opioid crisis.

For more information about the NSF grant, click here.  Learn more about the NIH grant here

MD2K was originally funded by a $10.8 million grant from NIH as part of its Big Data-to-Knowledge initiative.