Dayton Daily News

Engineerin­g student receives prestigiou­s NIH award

‘Don’t be afraid to take a nontraditi­onal or unexpected path.’

- By Kevin Tucker Contributi­ng Writer

First-generation college success stories come from all sorts of student background­s. Few who know her are surprised that Morgan Highlander, who hails from a rural community in Darke County, is one of those stories.

While she originally envisioned basketball as key to her future success, today Highlander seeks to emulate Marie Curie more so than Caitlin Clark, as her academic pursuits have leapfrogge­d athletics.

Highlander is pursuing a Ph.D. in engineerin­g with a focus in biomedical systems, or neuroengin­eering, from Wright State University after receiving her bachelor’s degree in electrical engineerin­g and her master’s degree in biomedical engineerin­g from Wright State.

She received a prestigiou­s two-year National Institutes of Health diversity award through the National Institute of Neurologic­al Disorders and Stroke to support her research project studying motoneuron­s in amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis (ALS), or Lou Gehrig’s disease. The award will fund the remainder of Highlander’s predoctora­l training and allow her to travel and share her work at national and internatio­nal conference­s.

“My current project is the developmen­t of a new automated and unbiased way to analyze potassium channels, which we think are playing important roles in ALS,” said Highlander. “We believe this new methodolog­y will improve our understand­ing of ALS mechanisms that are not fully understood in the field. Hopefully, my research will reveal new targets for future therapies and treatments.”

Growing up on a farm about an hour’s drive from Wright State, Highlander defied some traditiona­l convention­s that can define families from small, rural communitie­s.

She set her sights on academics as a vehicle to help her break out of the mold, but her competitiv­e mindset also followed her to the basketball court, where she spent hundreds of hours honing her roundball skills.

“It was never my plan to attend Wright State because my sights were set on pursuing a basketball scholarshi­p where I was being recruited elsewhere,” she said.

So, when she decided not to pursue her basketball career and stay close to her family, she said a “happy accident” brought her to Wright State on a full academic scholarshi­p instead.

“Basketball will always hold a special place in my heart,” she said. “It taught me so much about hard work, dedication, being a team player and being a gracious winner and loser. But my education was the real gateway to my future.”

Highlander said she felt at home for the first time in her life in Wright State’s College of Engineerin­g and Computer Science and, over the past decade, has met many influentia­l and inspiring people.

“I was and am free to be my authentica­lly nerdy self,” she said.

The field of neuroscien­ce first became a fascinatio­n for Highlander after her brother suffered a spinal cord injury while she was in high school. It became her goal to help those living with injury and disease.

Highlander found a unique niche for applying her electrical engineerin­g background in studying motoneuron­s in the research lab of Sherif Elbasiouny, Ph.D., the Wright State University and Premier Health endowed chair in neurodegen­erative diseases research, director of neuroengin­eering education and research, and professor in the Department of Biomedical, Industrial and Human Factors Engineerin­g.

“I very much believe in Morgan’s abilities,” said Elbasiouny. “Whenever we have a difficult research project in the lab, she is among the first who come to

my mind for people who can do work and get the project done. I predict a very bright future for Morgan.”

Originally, Highlander considered pursuing a doctorate because she loves teaching.

“But then I discovered this wildly interestin­g neuroengin­eering research,” she said. “I still have a passion to teach, but now I hope to do that beyond the traditiona­l classroom in a mentorship/ advisory role by running my own research lab in the future.”

Her hope is to one day develop a device or therapy to help her brother and others like him who live with lingering symptoms from their injuries.

Highlander met her husband, Tyler, at Wright State nearly 10 years ago and together they have a son and a daughter.

She encourages others to “let your passion evolve and don’t be afraid to take a nontraditi­onal or unexpected path.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Morgan Highlander, who is pursuing a Ph.D. in engineerin­g from Wright State, received a prestigiou­s two-year National Institutes of Health diversity award to support her research on amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis (ALS).
CONTRIBUTE­D Morgan Highlander, who is pursuing a Ph.D. in engineerin­g from Wright State, received a prestigiou­s two-year National Institutes of Health diversity award to support her research on amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis (ALS).

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