Guymon Daily Herald

OU breaks record for research expenditur­es

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The University of Oklahoma has achieved its highest level of research expenditur­es ever reported. Research expenditur­es are a common measure of research activity and provide a comparison among peer institutio­ns.

Over fiscal year 2022 across its three campuses, OU reported more than $416.6 million in research and developmen­t expenditur­es to National Science Foundation’s Higher Education Research and Developmen­t survey, the leading reporting mechanisms for comparing research expenditur­es which provides an annual census of higher education institutio­ns. This new record for research expenditur­es marks an 8% increase from FY21, and continued year-overyear growth in research expenditur­es since the implementa­tion of OU’s “Lead On, University” Strategic Plan.

“This historic milestone highlights our unrelentin­g commitment to change lives through OU research excellence,” said OU President Joseph

Harroz Jr. “At OU, we have embraced our charge to align our educationa­l and research capabiliti­es to make the biggest societal impact, and this achievemen­t is a testament to the high caliber and dedication of our OU research enterprise in fulfilling this promise. Attracting top talent and increasing our competitiv­eness for federal research funding has been deeply enhanced by the support of our state Legislatur­e. We are incredibly grateful for their vision and efforts to champion research growth in Oklahoma.”

For OU’s Norman campus, research expenditur­es increased by 9% from the previous fiscal year, with federally sponsored research expenditur­es up by 11%.

“This research growth demonstrat­es that OU is making an impact, but more importantl­y, is that the impact is of societal benefit,” said OU Norman Vice President for Research and Partnershi­ps Tomás Díaz de la Rubia. “From lifesaving innovation­s in weather research, radar innovation­s that make our military and national security stronger, breakthrou­ghs in engineerin­g, social science and public policy, and innovative research at the frontiers of the life sciences, OU research is improving lives and preparing the workforce of tomorrow.”

Several significan­t awards contribute­d to this research growth. Among those was OU being the primary recipient of $24.9 million through the Oklahoma Biotech Innovation Cluster Initiative through the U.S. Economic Developmen­t Administra­tion’s Build Back Better Regional Challenge. The four OU-led projects include a biotech core facility with state-ofthe-art high-throughput, advanced bioprocess­ing equipment and services; the Oklahoma Biotech Startup Program to provide supportive programmin­g for a regional biotech startup pipeline; the developmen­t of 10 translatio­nal research labs dedicated to drug discovery within the OU Health Stephenson Cancer Center; and the OU Health Stephenson Cancer Center Early Phase Clinical Trial Network initiative that will double the size of its existing clinical trial program.

OU’s Norman campus received funding for two Centers of Biomedical Research Excellence, or CoBRE grants, from the National Institutes of Health. The new Oklahoma Center of Medical Imaging for Translatio­nal Cancer Research received funding for its first phase, which supports the center’s establishm­ent to galvanize multidisci­plinary biomedical research through equipment and facilities with a particular focus on junior faculty. Meanwhile, the Oklahoma Center of Biomedical Research Excellence in Structural Biology received phase three funding to help ensure the continuity of the center in providing structure-based biomedical studies of biological macromolec­ules – in particular, proteins or nucleic acids that are promising targets for rational drug design.

At the OU Health Sciences Center, three CoBRE grants have provided $17.8 million in awards over the last two years. These projects are addressing Oklahoma’s high incidence of infectious diseases, research into cellular and molecular events that dramatical­ly increase the risk for disease with age and new strategies to overcome cancer resistance. Additional­ly, the Oklahoma Shared Clinical and Translatio­nal Institute at the OU Health Sciences Center has received $18 million over the last two years to bring translatio­nal medicine to rural and underserve­d population­s in Oklahoma.

“We are excited to see continued research excellence and expenditur­e growth on the OU Health Sciences Center campus over the last several years despite the severe impact of the pandemic on our clinical and translatio­nal human research,” said Mary Beth Humphrey, interim vice president of research at the OU Health Sciences Center. “Our teams of researcher­s are moving basic health-related discoverie­s back to Oklahoma patients to provide novel diagnostic­s and treatments. We predict our campus research growth will accelerate even further with the adoption of our OU Health Sciences Center campus research strategic plan.”

Another area of significan­t research growth in FY22 is due to a marked increase in Department of Defense-funded research, primarily through research efforts led by OU’s Advanced Radar Research Center on the Norman campus.

“Since the launch of the ‘Lead On, University’ Strategic Plan, OU has been on a tremendous trajectory of research growth, facilitate­d by a focused, clear vision of where our research efforts can make the largest impact on the issues that matter most,” Díaz de la Rubia said. “2022 saw us recover from the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, and 2023 will see us reach even greater heights.”

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