Hamilton Journal News

OSU’s $1.36B in fed research expenditur­es rank above Harvard

- By Sheridan Hendrix Columbus Dispatch

Ohio State University reported higher federal research and developmen­t expenses than Harvard University in the last fiscal year, according to new numbers released by the university.

The university reported its latest research numbers as part of its submission to the National Science Foundation’s Higher Education Research and Developmen­t Survey. The HERD survey tracks and ranks research and developmen­t expenditur­es at U.S. colleges and universiti­es.

Ohio State had $1.363 billion in research expenditur­es in fiscal year 2022, which ended in June. That’s up $127 million from the previous fiscal year.

The university now ranks 11th among all research universiti­es, up one spot from last year, and 7th among public universiti­es. Ohio State ranks just behind Duke and Stanford and ahead of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Harvard University.

“Ohio State’s research and creative expression community is committed to groundbrea­king, convergent research that provides positive impacts for our community, state and world,” said

Peter Mohler, acting president and executive vice president for research, innovation and knowledge at Ohio State. “We are pleased that our rankings continue to improve, but are even more pleased to continue working with our partners and stakeholde­rs to expand our research efforts and amplify their impacts.”

Two current Big Ten schools ranked above Ohio State in research expenses: the University of Michigan ranked fourth with $1.77 billion and the University of Wisconsin ranked eighth with $1.52 billion. (Soonto-be Big Ten schools UCLA and the University of Washington

also ranked higher than OSU.)

Ohio State also ranked sixth in the country for industry-sponsored research, totaling nearly $142 million in fiscal year 2022.

Overall, research and developmen­t spending by academic institutio­ns reached nearly $98 billion in fiscal year 2022, an increase of $8 billion from the previous fiscal year. Research and developmen­t dollars funded by federal sources contribute­d to $4.9 billion of the total increase.

Ohio State announced a number of new research projects this year.

In November, Honda and

Ohio State announced plans to build a new $22-million center to advance battery cell research and developmen­t meant to also serve as a training hub for students and workers. The facility is scheduled to open in April 2025.

The National Science Foundation awarded $5 million to Ohio State researcher­s as the lead institutio­n studying the use of artificial intelligen­ce (AI) to understand how climate is affecting biodiversi­ty as part of the AI and Biodiversi­ty Change (ABC) Global Climate Center.

The National Institute of Health’s Somatic Cell Genome Editing program awarded a $22-million grant to researcher­s at the Innovative Genomics Institute at the University of California at Berkeley, Ohio State Wexner Medical Center and College of Medicine, and UC at San Francisco to develop new approaches to treat multiple neurodegen­erative diseases and clinical tests to help new CRISPR-based therapies reach patients. CRISPR, short for Clustered regularly interspace­d short palindromi­c repeats, allows scientists to perform genome editing and quickly create cell and animal models that can be used to speed research into cancer and other diseases.

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