Dayton Daily News

MRI scanner will spark WSU-Air Force collaborat­ion

$1.8 million machine can be a tool for both university and military.

- By Thomas Gnau Staff Writer

Wright State University is boasting what it calls the Dayton region’s sole advanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanner dedicated to research — and university leaders see the machine as a way to spark collaborat­ions with Air Force scientists.

The $1.78 million 3 Tesla MRI scanner is positioned for neuroscien­ce research, exploring high altitude and G-forces on the human brain, the university said.

The machine will boost regional research infrastruc­ture, said Dr. Matthew Sherwood, director of Wright State’s Center of Neuroimagi­ng and Neuro-Evaluation of Cognitive Technologi­es and a research professor in WSU’s Department of Neuroscien­ce, Cell Biology and Physiology.

Some of the first evaluation­s and trial runs will start soon, and work with humans is slated to begin this summer, said Dr. Andy McKinley, a biomedical engineer and research lead in applied neuroscien­ce for the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.

Previously, Air Force researcher­s had been forced to rely on hospital MRIs on nights and weekends, “a tougher logistical challenge,” McKinley said.

The Wright State MRI will be a welcome change.

“This is something we’ve been wanting for quite a number of years,” McKinley said.

MRI uses strong magnetic fields and radio waves to create detailed images of organs and tissues within the body.

Researcher­s will employ the MRI in research on hypoxia, a condition in which the brain is deprived of oxygen. The condition can happen in high altitudes

or underwater diving.

“We’re also interested in high G-forces and how that affects the brain,” Sherwood said in a Wright State release. “Is there a potential for neuro inflammati­on? Does it change how blood flows?”

This is some of the work that will bring Air Force scientists to Wright State’s Fair- born campus.

Dr. Claude Grigsby, the medical and operationa­l bio- sciences core technical lead at AFRL’s 711th Human Performanc­e Wing, said physically having the MRI in place at Wright State’s Neurosci- ence Engineerin­g Collaborat­ion fulfills a longtime dream.

Research there will help answer questions on “brain-machine interfaces” and other emerging fields, Grigsby said. The possibili- ties stretch to new ways to control planes or “autono- mous teammates,” and protecting the brain from stress and fatigue — keeping the warfighter in the fight longer. “I don’t see the U.S. moving

from having a human in the loop, at least for certain key decision-making func- tions,” Grigsby said.

Wright State says Sher- wood has already led nearly $3.5 million in Department of Defense-funded proj- ects. Continuing work with researcher­s at Wright-Patter- son is a distinct goal.

“We’re hoping they’re able to bring some of their research here,” he said. “We are committed to partnering with them.”

In a sense, the teamwork has already started. It took efforts by Wright State, AFRL’s 711th Human Performanc­e Wing (based at Wright-Patterson), the Air Force Office of Scientific Research and Ohio government to put scanner on the Fairborn campus.

Getting the scanner required $1.32 million from the Air Force of Scientific

Research’s Defense University Research Instrument­ation Program, $200,000 from the state and $258,643 from Wright State.

The DOD provided a grant for the scanner in 2020, with the device arriving at Wright State in March this year.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Matthew Sherwood of Wright State’s Center of Neuroimagi­ng and Neuro-Evaluation of Cognitive Technologi­es says a new MRI scanner promises to lead to new collaborat­ion between Wright State, the Air Force and researcher­s at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
CONTRIBUTE­D Matthew Sherwood of Wright State’s Center of Neuroimagi­ng and Neuro-Evaluation of Cognitive Technologi­es says a new MRI scanner promises to lead to new collaborat­ion between Wright State, the Air Force and researcher­s at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.

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