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Milne Lecture: "From bits to bots: a mathematical perspective on generative AI"

By College of Science

Artificial intelligence is transforming the world—but how did we get here, and where are we going next?

Together, the College of Science Departments of Mathematics and Statistics, the College of Engineering Computer Science program and the Oregon State Center for Quantitative Life Sciences present the 2025 Milne Lecture.

Join us to hear Rachel Ward, an applied mathematician known for her work on machine learning, optimization and signal processing from the University of Texas at Austin and Microsoft Research, share a talk titled,

“From bits to bots: a mathematical perspective on generative AI.”

Data science and machine learning have undergone profound transformations in recent years, driven by the exponential growth of computational power and available data. In this talk, Ward will discuss the evolution from signal processing over half a century ago to the rise of machine learning and generative AI, highlighting mathematical foundations such as information theory, probability, linear algebra, and optimization. While modern AI research is becoming more empirical in recent years, we finish by highlighting open questions and directions where mathematicians and scientists are crucial for making foundational advancements.

When: Monday, June 2, 4–5 p.m. with a short reception beforehand

Where: OSU Corvallis, Cordley Hall, Room 1316

Whether you're studying STEM, already immersed in the field, curious about AI, or passionate about the future of technology, this lecture offers a compelling look at the science and mathematical principles behind the algorithms—and the opportunities ahead.

View of the Colorado river inside the Grand Canyon.

Transforming river health, ecology, seaweed, and pest control: Revolutionary SciRIS research

By Hannah Ashton

The College of Science Research and Innovation Seed (SciRIS) Program continues to drive groundbreaking research by fostering collaboration and innovation. Founded in 2018, SciRIS funds interdisciplinary research projects that aim to create meaningful societal impact. This year, Stage 2 awardees are working to revolutionize our understanding of river health, ecological communities, sustainable seaweed cultivation and insecticide resistance.

There are two tracks through the program: SciRIS team awards (Stages 1-3) and the SciRIS individual investigator award (SciRIS-ii). SciRIS Stages 1-3 funds teams in three stages to support training, research, and capacity-building, accelerating work toward external funding opportunities. SciRIS-ii funds individual faculty to establish research relationships with external partners, enabling them to demonstrate the feasibility of their ideas and quickening the pace of scientific discovery.

Four teams received SciRIS Stage 2 awards.

Bioinformatics for integrated river health

Biologist David Lytle’s project focuses on understanding the complex interactions between multiple biotic components, including food base, disease landscape and microbiome in the lower Colorado River, including the Grand Canyon. Lytle will be working with three Oregon State colleagues, along with collaborators at the United States Geological Service and the National Parks Service. The project aims to develop diagnostic tools that can identify fish parasites and diseases at a molecular level and provide preliminary data on how these parasite, microbial and invertebrate communities change over time.

Oregon State Collaborators
David A. Lytle, Integrative Biology
Justin Sanders, Microbiology, (College of Science and Carlson College of Veterinary Medicine)
Anna Jolles, Integrative Biology (College of Science and Carlson College of Veterinary Medicine)
Claire Couch, Fisheries, Wildlife and Conservation Sciences (College of Agricultural Sciences and Carlson College of Veterinary Medicine)

Government Collaborators
Ted Kennedy, Kim Dibble, Charles Yackulic, Kate Behn, Jessica Anderson, Bridget Deemer, U.S. Geological Service
Emily Omana, Brandon Holton, National Parks Service

Oregon blackberries

Spotted wing drosophila are an invasive pest that attack several crops essential to Oregon farmers, including ripening blueberries, blackberries, apples and stone fruit. Fruit fly populations evolve rapidly and the Patel and Vrailas-Mortimer group seek to understand the risks of resistance evolution before they adapt to local pesticides.

Insecticide resistance in spotted-winged drosophila

Geneticist Alysia Vrailas-Mortimer's project addresses the significant agricultural threat posed by spotted-winged drosophila (SWD), an invasive pest species. The research aims to advance understanding of the genetic basis and evolution of insecticide resistance in these pest populations through experimental work, genetic techniques and mechanistic mathematical modeling. The project involves collaboration with experts from UC Davis and focuses on developing sustainable control methods. Directly connected to the needs of the Oregon agricultural community, this project is a prime example of OSU’s strong community engagement initiatives as a land grant institution. By learning more about the mechanisms of insecticide resistance in spotted-winged drosophila, growers will be better able to plan and prioritize their insecticide applications to mitigate resistance.

Oregon State Collaborators
Alysia Vrailas Mortimer, Biochemistry & Biophysics
Swati Patel, Mathematics
Serhan Mermer, Environmental and Molecular Toxicology (College of Agricultural Sciences)

Analytical Tools to Understand Ecological Communities

Statistician Yuan Jiang’s SciRIS project aims to create novel analytical tools for assessing how organisms in complex ecological communities like microbes and parasites interact and affect each other over time. The research will leverage long-term community datasets from wild vertebrate host populations with improved data techniques that allow these large complex data sets to be analyzed more efficiently and with environmental conditions factored in. In addition to improve our ecological understanding of these communities, Jiang's project seeks to extend the accessibility of these analytical tools to diverse scientific audiences through summer camps, workshops and online tutorials. The project will also involve collaboration with colleagues and students at the Universidad of San Francisco de Quito in Ecuador to build capacity in data analytics.

Oregon State Collaborators
Yuan Jiang, Statistics
Lan Xue, Statistics
Anna Jolles, Integrative Biology
Claire Couch, Fisheries, Wildlife and Conservation Sciences (College of Agricultural Sciences)

Seaweed on a beach with water.

Seaweed morphology and chemical makeup can vary dramatically depending on environmental factors like seawater composition and sunlight exposure, making it a challenge to nutritionally analyze consistent materials. James Fox and his contributors have developed a system for growing seaweed on land under consistent conditions for analysis.

Unlocking the potential of seaweed

Algal physiologist James Fox’s project explores the chemical composition and potential applications of Pacific Dulse, a protein-rich seaweed native to the Pacific coastline. The team will create a special growth chamber to cultivate seaweed on land under controlled conditions. This allows researchers to maximize the production of important compounds found in Pacific Dulse, which can be used in nutrition and medicine. The project also emphasizes community outreach and inclusive excellence by engaging diverse student populations and partnering with outreach programs. Additionally, the project will investigate the impact of different processing methods on the nutritional quality of seaweed extracts.

Oregon State Collaborators
James Fox, Microbiology
Myriam Cotten, Biochemistry and Biophysics
Ford Evans, Hatfield Marine Science Center
Evan Forsythe, Integrative Biology
Scott Geddes, Chemistry Program Coordinator OSU-Cascades
Jung Jwon, Department of Food Science & Technology (College of Agricultural Sciences)
Christopher Suffridge, Microbiology

These projects highlight the innovative and impactful research being conducted by the 2025 SciRIS awardees. Each project not only advances scientific knowledge by also emphasizes collaboration, community engagement and inclusive excellence.

A closeup of a scientist sorting seeds for a computer to analyze

Helping Oregon farmers thrive with smarter seed testing solutions

By Hannah Ashton

Statistician Yanming Di is working to modernize an outdated system for seed purity analysis.

The Willamette Valley is known as the “grass seed capital of the world.” With its ideal climate and soil conditions for growing high-quality grass seed, the region produces more than 90% of the grass seed used in the United States and a significant portion of the global supply.

Being a hub for 500 million pounds of grass seed annually comes with complex challenges, such as outdated testing methods and cumbersome tools — ones that Oregon State University researchers aim to solve. Addressing these problems means farmers would throw less seeds away and have higher quality seed lots.

A multidisciplinary research group is combining expertise in robotics, artificial intelligence, computer science, statistics and crop science to create a modern solution for an outdated system.

“A land grant university is bringing together people with diverse backgrounds and skills to help the people within Oregon. And that is essentially the entire mission of land grant universities,” said OSU Director of Seed Services and collaborator Dan Curry.

For hundreds of years, farmers and scientists have used the same methods to analyze the purity of seed lots. Determined by the amount of weed seeds, unwanted crops and inert materials, seed lot quality impacts every stage of agriculture. To calculate this value, specialized workers use a magnifying glass or microscope to carefully scrutinize a sample. It’s time-consuming, labor-intensive work that invites a degree of human error.

Supported by $255K of grants from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the Oregon Grass Seed Commissions, and the OSU College of Agricultural Sciences, the group aims to develop a computer vision system for real-time, onsite seed analysis — a tool that could revolutionize farming in Oregon and beyond.

Four people stand in front of a microscope.

Yanming Di (middle, orange shirt) works with the tabletop Ergo Vision to analyze seeds. The researchers take high-quality images of seeds to train the artificial intelligence to differentiate between species.

Eight years ago, members of Oregon State Seed Services envisioned a modern way to inspect seeds. While training an artificial intelligence model to analyze an image is not new, applying this technology to seed purity is. What sounds like a simple task on the surface, actually involves many intricate steps and disciplines.

Before the tool is even developed, understanding the importance of seed testing and the current limitations is crucial, and that’s where Dan Curry stepped in.

When farmers raise a seed lot, they want to ensure customer satisfaction. If weed seeds start growing on someone's newly planted lawn instead of grass, that wouldn’t be good. Or if the seeds aren’t healthy, it directly impacts yield and productivity. Different agencies including the Oregon Department of Agriculture use testing to issue quality tags for seed lots that meet specific quality standards.

Seed growers use giant machines to clean out most of the weeds. This requires constant stopping and analyzing the system to make sure they are cutting enough. In other words, throwing away enough to remove the bad seeds. Because growers don’t want to cut too hard and throw away profits, they are constantly grabbing a sample, shutting their machines off and driving miles to a lab.

Analyzing seeds by hand is hard work. It takes three to five years of training to identify up to 200 different seed species and hundreds of hours spent uncomfortably staring at tiny images. Employees who look at hundreds of thousands of seeds each day will make mistakes.

If the grass seed growers of Oregon not only had a more accurate method of testing, but also a portable version, they would throw less away and have higher quality seed lots.

Building on this understanding, a cross-disciplinary research group formed, combining five faculty members, three graduate students and three undergraduates from the College of Science, College of Agricultural Sciences and College of Engineering.

Pictures of seeds use to train AI model.

The artificial intelligence used by the DeepSeed research team learns to differentiate between seed species by analyzing photos like these that only contain one specific seed.

The first challenge is capturing high-quality images of seeds to train the computer to see the differences. Next, it’s figuring out how to maintain consistent conditions while they’re training and testing because if those conditions change, what’s used for training may not apply to testing.

Statisticians like Di are needed to calculate levels of uncertainty, while computer scientists will provide feedback on the neural networks used by AI to perform tasks that typically require human intelligence. Neural networks are algorithms that mimic the human brain’s structure to recognize patterns and make decisions based on data.

In the 21st century, the boundary between statistics and artificial intelligence has started to blur, with both fields analyzing data and trying to make sense of it.

“I don’t really think too much about which area I’m working on, whether it’s AI or statistics. I believe on this team, we just focus on solving the problem,” Di said.

The goal is to have the entire processes automated, requiring the contributions of robotics engineers. To add to the complexity, the group is developing two different versions, the tabletop lab Ergo Vision and a portable light box.

“The idea is we can send the light box to the farmers so they can analyze seeds onsite so they don’t have to send their sample to the seed lab and wait a couple of hours before they can make a decision,” Di said.

The 3D printed prototype currently sitting in the crop science building was made by Ameyassh Nagarajan, an OSU graduate student in computer science and crop science and Logan Snell, an engineering undergraduate.

“I usually work on a lot of theory and engineering, but this is the first time I’ve been involved in something that’s solving a real-world problem,” Nagarajan said.

In the tabletop version, seeds will rest on a stationary flat platform, whereas the lab model incorporates a conveyor belt to transport seeds through the system seamlessly. The tabletop version is designed for high-throughput analysis in lab settings, while the portable light box provides farmers with an on-site solution.

By the start of this year, the group has trained the AI on five types of common seeds. In reality, the system could see a few hundred different seed types, meaning one of the big tasks is to gather more species and introduce them to the model.

Afterward, Di will be involved in working with the computer science collaborators to improve the AI model itself.

“If the machine has say a one percent error rate, it sounds very low. But in practice, the percentage of true weed seeds is also very low. So that means even if you have only one percent of error, that is still a lot of false positives,” Di said.

By applying cutting-edge science to the needs of local stakeholders, Yanming Di and collaborators are turning a centuries-old challenge into an opportunity for multidisciplinary innovation. This collaborative effort underscores the power of science and highlights the commitment of Oregon State to helping Oregonians thrive.

Two people stand in front of buildings.

Immune systems for cities: Lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic

By Hannah Ashton

Photo by Karl Maasdam

College of Science faculty and PIPP project leaders Katherine McLaughlin and Benjamin Dalziel pose for a picture.

This article originally appeared in the Oregon State University Stater Spring 2024 magazine. Read the full spread highlighting lessons from the pandemic across Oregon State, starting on page 42.

Cities are like organisms — they need immune systems.

Viruses can reproduce rapidly, taking over cells and turning them into viral factories within hours. Individuals' immune systems need to rise to the challenge, but what happens when they can't, and a whole population gets sick?

As the early days of the pandemic demonstrated, cities can struggle to stop the momentum of a spreading disease. Armed with community input and lessons learned over the past four years, a multidisciplinary team of researchers at Oregon State University is designing city-scale feedback loops to act as a kind of immune system for a population as a whole.

"We believe future cities will give people access to real-time local data on infection risk," said ecologist Benjamin Dalziel, project leader. "You'll be able to use that information in your daily life, like how you use a weather report. The more people do that, the slower the spread will be."

The team is supported by $1 million from the National Science Foundation through its Predictive Intelligence for Pandemic Prevention Program (PIPP).

The project began in 2022 with a series of workshops in cities across Oregon. "One key that communities stressed was the importance of sharing timely data between different groups and organizations — much like how different systems in the body communicate to mount an immune response," said team member Katherine McLaughlin, an applied statistician.

The researchers aim to establish a center at OSU that combines mathematical and computational modeling with engineering, public health and public engagement. The Center for Pandemic-Resilient Cities (CPARC; pronounced like "spark") will prototype city-scale feedback loops that link environmental monitoring with epidemic forecasting and communication, so responders won't have to play catchup after an outbreak begins.

Led by the College of Science, the effort capitalizes on OSU's strong tradition of multidisciplinary work and includes six university colleges. In the College of Engineering, Tyler Radniecki and Christine Kelly are developing innovations in wastewater sensing, a low-cost method of monitoring that involves testing sewage samples for disease.

Teams from the College of Health and OSU Extension and Engagement are working to ensure that the science incorporates the characteristics of different communities. For example, responders in cities with a lot of tourism need to know whether infection is spreading locally, such as within schools, or is arriving from other cities, as responses will be different in each case.

Faculty from the College of Liberal Arts (Daniel Faltesek) are researching how to use interactive media to communicate infectious disease forecasts to people in the city, to close the loop between prediction and prevention.

"Human systems, like cities, can be very good at making things 'go viral,'" said project leader Dalziel. "Using mathematics, engineering and community engagement, we can develop systems that make helpful responses go viral, too."

Cancer cells

Innovation in cancer treatment and mathematics: SciRIS awardees lead the way

By Hannah Ashton

SciRIS awards bolster essential research endeavors, such as the investigation of human cancer cells (pictured above).

Collaborative science has the power to change the world. The 2024 College of Science Research and Innovation Seed (SciRIS) award recipients aim to use that power to develop better treatments for cancer and unlock the mysteries of complex mathematical equations.

The SciRIS program funds projects based on collaborative research within the College of Science community and beyond. There are two tracks through the program: SciRIS (Stages 1-3) and the SciRIS individual investigator award (SciRIS-ii).

SciRIS Stages 1-3 funds teams in three stages of increasing funding to support training, research and capacity-building, accelerating work toward external funding opportunities. SciRIS-ii funds individual faculty to establish research relationships with external partners, enabling them to demonstrate the feasibility of their ideas and quickening the pace of scientific discovery.

SciRIS Stage 1

Professor Claudia Maier, alongside a multidisciplinary team including researchers from the Colleges of Engineering and Agricultural Science, received a SciRIS Stage 1 award to study on triple-negative breast cancer.

Maier’s team includes two other College of Science researchers, Yanming Di from the Department of Statistics and Chad Giusti from the Department of Mathematics.

In biology, cells exhibit a range of diverse characteristics known as cellular heterogeneity, regardless if the overall biology appears uniform. This diversity influences disease progression, treatment outcomes and the likelihood of disease recurrence. Single-cell proteomics is an emerging technique that allows researchers to study these differences at the individual cell level.

Collaborating with faculty from the College of Engineering and the College of Agricultural Science, the team aims to refine a single-cell mass spectrometry workflow focusing on triple-negative breast cancer and specifically targeting therapy-induced senescent cells. Senescent cells eventually stop multiplying but don’t die off, leading to the continued release of chemicals that can trigger inflammation and damage healthy cells. This research builds upon previous work and collaboration, moving from technology development to practical application in biomedicine.

By understanding the heterogeneity within breast cancer and the role of senescent cells in treatment resistance, the researchers aim to develop methods for detecting and characterizing TIS cells from tissue samples. This information will be crucial for developing treatments that target these cells, potentially improving outcomes for TNBC patients.

Kyriakos Stylianou smiles for a photo.

Kyriakos Stylianou

SciRIS-ii (Individual Investigator)

The following three scientists received SciRIS-ii awards: Kyriakos Stylianou, Christine Escher and Xueying Yu.

Materials scientist Kyriakos Stylianou will use his SciRISii award to study a new, more efficient way to diagnose and treat cancer using advanced technology that combines imaging and therapy in one tiny package.

Theranostics is a novel cancer approach that uses radiotracers, compounds made of radiation and chemicals that selectively bind to a specific target in the body. The tracers identify and then deliver radioactive drug therapy to the tumor, resulting in better outcomes and personalized treatments.

Stylianou will explore using metal-organic frameworks to build the nanoparticles. His research will also look at utilizing boron neutron capture therapy, a promising approach to cancer treatment that results in minimal consequences to normal cells.

By combining gadolinium for imagining and carborane-based ligands—which include boron—for therapy, the MOF would be able to diagnose and treat cancer after being activated specifically in tumor microenvironments.

The successful demonstration of the theranostic capabilities of the MOFs in lab settings will mark the initial phase towards more complex studies conducted in living organisms.

Christine Escher in front of shrubbery

Christine Escher

Mathematics Professor Christine Escher will use her SciRISii award to delve into Global Riemannian geometry, a field studying the relationship between local and global geometric properties of space. Specifically, the focus is on understanding manifolds with lower curvature bounds by exploring symmetries.

Escher will be continuing to collaborate with Catherine Searle from Wichita State University, to achieve a comprehensive classification of such manifolds, contributing to a deeper understanding of Riemannian geometry.

Escher will be attending a semester-long program at the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute in Berkeley entitled, “New Frontiers in Curvature: Flows, General Relativity, Minimal Submanifolds and Symmetry.” This opportunity facilitates collaboration and provides access to specialized resources. One of Escher’s Ph.D. students, Augustin Bosgraaf, will also participate in the program, further enhancing the mentorship and educational aspects of this research endeavor.

Xueying Yu

Xueying Yu

Assistant Professor of Mathematics Xueying Yu received a SciRISii grant to understand the behavior of dispersive equations, which are fundamental in describing various natural phenomena such as light transmission, charge transport in DNA and particle interaction in atoms. While these equations are widely used across physics and biology, their long-term behavior remains largely unexplored.

Collaborating with researchers at the University of Bologna in Italy, the University of New York at Binghamton and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Yu will focus on equations with variable coefficients which are more complex to analyze. The project aims to develop theories and tools to understand the long-term behavior of these variable coefficient dispersive equations, focusing on aspects like global well-posedness, scattering effects and unique continuation of solutions.

This project will not only contribute to advancing mathematical understanding but also have practical implications in various fields such as numerical simulations, optics, condensed matter, fluid mechanics and biology.

Sharmodeep Bhattacharyya stands in front of water in the background.

The backbone of science: OSU researcher champions the value of statistics

By Luke Nearhood

Statistics often operates behind the scenes. It’s a field whose results are used in the analyses of papers from physics to psychology, yet its power is not widely understood.

Associate Professor Sharmodeep Bhattacharyya wants to change that. He straddles the world of highly theoretical statistics—the foundational mathematics of statistics—and the application of statistics to other areas of science.

"Scientists in different fields should be more mindful of the statistics that they are trying to use because statistics are misrepresented and misused alarmingly often," Bhattacharyya said.

Understanding the brain

With collaborator Kristofer Bouchard, a scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Bhattacharyya is currently examining the statistics of brain data measured using electrodes. The pair looked at data collected from placing electrodes on the exposed brains of lab rats, a process known as electrocorticography.

The data generated from those experiments is very high-dimensional, which in the context of math formalizes the concept of degree of freedom, something that can take on a value. In our everyday experience, we're used to thinking of ourselves as existing in three-dimensional space, where the coordinates–often called x, y and z–are our degrees of freedom. If you were unable to move freely in all three spatial directions and were instead constrained to walking along a rope, you would only have one degree of freedom and move only in one dimension.

In the brain data that Bhattacharyya and his collaborators examine, each dimension corresponds to the state of a specific neuron. Thinking of a neuron like a switch, a state would be whether or not it's on or off. But when a large portion of brain has to be studied the number of neurons present is multiplied, leading to a high-dimensional situation.

Given how many neurons there are in a small piece of rat brain, the experiments Bhattacharyya has looked at have thousands of dimensions.

Additionally, neurons "talk" to each other, forming a network. The activation of neurons also comes in waves and pulses, making the data sparse. These qualities make brain electrode data prime for the application of statistical techniques to find meaningful patterns.

Bhattacharyya's work on this project, and in general, is focused on the building of frameworks and understanding of methods. In the realm of theory, it can be a challenge to prove why a result that appears simple on the surface is true, or why a seemingly simple method works. Theoretical rigor makes a method reliable and allows practitioners from different domains to adapt the method smoothly. It also widens the scope of the method within the Statistics community itself.

When analyzing networks, community detection is important. A community is just what it sounds like; a group of interconnected people. For neurons, communities would be regions of the brain where neurons are tightly connected.

In the world of networks, neurons could be represented by what are known as ‘nodes’, while the connections between nodes are ‘edges’. For example, imagine a street grid, the intersections would be nodes, and the streets between them edges. The concept of communities is then generalized to include any group of nodes that are highly interconnected.

Detecting communities in networks isn't always obvious, especially for sparse networks. However, Bhattacharyya found a surprisingly straightforward method of community detection that works wonders at just this.

"It's a very simple method, but proving that this method works was not easy, so that took me quite a bit of time," he said.

Bhattacharyya has also worked with collaborators on public health policies, social networks and gene regulatory networks. These collaborations have offered him the opportunity to introduce fellow scientists to statistical methods, demystifying the perception of statistics as a black box.

"I'm very much interested in interdisciplinary work, specifically because I get to learn about a new field, as well as try to see how I can contribute to that field."

Every dataset is full of surprises, and that is one of the great wonders of statistics. It is also why all scientists need to understand statistics so they can apply the appropriate methods for their data, or find someone who can.

Guided by the data

Bhattacharyya grew up in the city of Kolkata, India. There, he completed his bachelor's and master's degrees at the Indian Statistical Institute (ISI) in 2006 and 2008 respectively. The ISI was founded in 1931 by statistician Prasanta Chandra Mahalanobis and is India's premier institute of higher education when it comes to the training of statisticians.

He completed his Ph.D. and postdoctoral program at UC Berkeley with statistics professor Peter Bickel. A pioneer of statistical methods, particularly in what are known as semiparametric models, Bickel is still publishing papers despite being semi-retired.

"Last year, we had his 80th birthday celebration conference at Berkeley, and several of his Ph.D. students who are now big shots in statistics attended. It was a very nice conference," Bhattacharyya said.

By the time Bhattacharyya completed his Ph.D. in 2013, Bickel had been in the field for 50 years. Bhattacharyya credits his current success to the wisdom, knowledge and experience his mentor shared with him. Bickel emphasized the importance of statistics always being guided by the data, with research questions informed by what the data says and what would benefit the broader statistics community.

Bhattacharyya’s transition to the Department of Statistics was a welcomed one. Although he grew up in a sprawling metropolis of 14 million people and completed his Ph.D. and postdoc in a city of four million, he always preferred the quiet life of the country and small cities. In part, it was a desire to get away from the hustle and bustle that brought Bhattacharyya to Corvallis.

The Department of Statistics encourages interdisciplinary research alongside more theoretical research, something Bhattacharyya holds in high regard. He also appreciated the incredibly welcoming department culture.

"I'm very much interested in interdisciplinary work, specifically because I get to learn about a new field, as well as try to see how I can contribute to that field," he said.

Outside of academics, Bhattacharyya enjoys listening to classical Indian music, reading fiction and non-fiction, and of course spending time with his wife. She is also a statistician who completed her Ph.D. at Oregon State.

Ben Dalziel

Preparing for the next pandemic: $1M grant to create interdisciplinary research center

By Hannah Ashton

A team of Oregon State University researchers, including population biologist Ben Dalziel and statistician Katherine McLaughlin, have received a $1 million grant from the National Science Foundation to identify, model, predict, track and mitigate the effects of future pandemics.

This grant is part of a new $26M NSF program called Predictive Intelligence for Pandemic Prevention, or PIPP, which aims to support high-risk, high-payoff convergent research to help the world be better prepared for the next pandemic. Phase one PIPP grants are 18-month awards aimed at defining research priorities, developing interdisciplinary teams and pursuing initial research.

“The evidence is overwhelmingly clear that the next pandemic is going to happen in our lifetimes and I think everyone would agree that we would like the next one to go differently, in fact, we would like it to go really differently,” said Benjamin Dalziel, associate professor in the Departments of Integrative Biology and Mathematics and primary investigator. “It’s important to right now, start working as fast as we can on what ‘really differently’ means so that we don’t end up in a Groundhog Day scenario. To avoid that, we need projects like this.”

The goal of the project, entitled “Coupling Predictive Intelligence with Adaptive Response to Create Pandemic-Resilient Cities,” is to establish a multidisciplinary center, combining mathematical and computation modeling with engineering, public health and public engagement. The center will explore the design and prototyping of city-scale feedback loops that could proactively reduce the rates of transmission of pathogens with pandemic potential.

“I see a real opportunity for OSU to lead in this space because of our track record during the pandemic and because of the extraordinary capacities this university has in its community, mission and strengths."

Feedback loops allow emergent, adaptive and rapid responses to changing conditions. Dalziel said the goal is to use the unique characteristics of cities to create something similar to an “immune system.” This would allow for sensing pathogen transmission in real-time and allow the population to collectively respond, both by reducing transmission and increasing the tempo and resolution of monitoring.

“That last part about the speed and equity is critical – existing public health systems are too slow and too biased to stop the spread of pandemic threats,” he said. “During pandemics, many people who are infectious do not have quick enough access to testing and care, particularly people who belong to marginalized populations.”

During the COVID-19 pandemic Dalziel led TRACE, a public health project that gathered timely information about the presence of the novel coronavirus in communities around Oregon and at Oregon State. The TRACE team won the 2020 Beaver Champion Award for their outstanding effort and performance of the highest quality. McLaughlin was appointed TRACE co-principal investigator and is a co-pi on the Pandemic Prevention grant.

“I see a real opportunity for OSU to lead in this space because of our track record during the pandemic and because of the extraordinary capacities this university has in its community, mission and strengths,” Dalziel said.

DNA strands.

Research grants to seed the next great idea

By Grace Peterman

College seed funding supports diverse projects with the power to directly impact human quality of life.

Seed funding from the College of Science Research and Innovation Seed (SciRIS) program continues to bolster ambitious and expansive projects, empowering our scientists to delve into fundamental research discoveries and translate them into revolutionary applications. Founded in 2018, the SciRIS program provides funding for collaborative projects that pursue fundamental discoveries and create societal impact, accelerating the pace of research, discovery and innovation in the College of Science.

Between 2019 and 2021, the SciRIS program provided $763K in seed funding to scientists leading research projects in both basic and applied science and mathematics, with the potential to produce practical solutions for industry, people and the planet.

There are two pathways through this program, the SciRIS Stages 1-3 awards and the SciRIS individual investigator award (SciRIS-ii). The SciRIS Stages 1-3 program funds teams in three stages, ranging from $10K to $125K, to foster team development, build capacity and accelerate project development for procuring larger external grants, while the SciRIS-ii program provides funds ranging from $10K to $20K to individual investigators to establish partnerships, accelerate project development, generate data and manuscripts and foster proposal submissions.

The 2022 Science Research and Innovation Seed Individual Investigator awards (SciRIS-ii) are catalyzing initiatives that will open fresh pathways in science.

Supporting pure and applied mathematics, agriculture, gene therapy, molecular movie technology and quantum mechanics

Radu Dascaliuc, a man with glasses and a beard.

Radu Dascaliuc, associate professor of mathematics

Dascaliuc researches stochastic cascades and energy transfer in equations of fluid dynamics. The mathematics of fluid flows allow us to understand and predict the complexity of behaviors exhibited in fluids. Deeply rooted in questions of applied science and engineering, the proposed research is a part of a larger program aimed at exploring connections between the mathematics of equations of fluid motions and physics of fluids.

Part of the proposal is to organize a two-week summer collaborative research program for graduate and undergraduate students. This program will be devoted to attracting students from backgrounds traditionally underrepresented in STEM and especially in the field of fluid dynamics. The project will be structu­­red so that students without advanced knowledge in differential equations, mathematical analysis and probability can contribute and hopefully become interested and motivated to learn more about the mathematics involved. Funds for Dascaliuc’s SciRIS-ii project titled, “Stochastic Cascades and Energy Transfer in Equations of Fluid Dynamics” are provided by a generous gift made to the Robert W. Lundeen Science Faculty Development Award Fund.

Yanming Di, a man with glasses standing outside.

Yanming Di, associate professor of statistics

In partnership with the Oregon State Seed Lab, Yanming Di innovates seed sampling devices and protocols. Seeding testing — used for determining seed lot quality and establishing seed value — is a fundamental phase of the agricultural marketing system. Getting an accurate subsample of seed depends on the accuracy and precision of the device used.

Devices and protocols developed by the OSU Seed Lab and the USDA in the 1970s are still considered state of art today, leaving ample room for further improvements. With SciRIS funding, Di and collaborators aim to start a new wave of groundbreaking innovations by incorporating recent advances in robotics, computer vision, machine learning and stochastic modeling into seed testing. Funds for Di’s SciRIS-ii project entitled “Innovating Seed Sampling Devices and Protocols” come from the College of Science’s Education & General Funds.

Colin Johnson, a man with a red beard.

Colin Johnson, associate professor of biochemistry and biophysics

Colin Johnson’s research uncovers new connections between the ferlin family of genes and disease. Mutations in dysferlin are linked to muscular dystrophy, while mutations in otoferlin and myoferlin have been linked to deafness and breast cancer, respectively. Previous research led by Johnson uncovered key components of otoferlin gene therapy, moving one step closer to restoring hearing for the congenitally deaf.

In partnership with collaborators from the College of Engineering and College of Agricultural Sciences, Johnson’s new project will focus on ferlin gene Fer1L6, which has been linked to ovarian failure and neural tube development deficiencies. It will be the first study to unpack the effects of Fer1L6 on organismal development and neural tube defects. Funds for Johnson’s SciRIS-ii project, entitled “Establishing a Zebrafish model for the study of the Ferlin gene Fer1L6,” come from the College’s Education & General Funds.

Chong Fang, a man in glasses.

Chong Fang, associate professor of chemistry

SciRIS-ii funding will support a research collaboration between OSU and Stanford University led by Chong Fang. The project will implement state-of-the-art femtosecond laser spectroscopy at the Linus Pauling Science Center. By advancing the mechanistic knowledge and rational design of reversibly photoswitchable fluorescent proteins, this emergent tool for super-resolution microscopy and bioimaging will elevate both labs’ research to new heights while further enhancing the visibility and impact of “molecular movie” technology at OSU.

Funds for Fang’s SciRIS-ii project, entitled “Elucidating primary events of engineered photoswitchable fluorescent proteins with a powerful ultrafast spectroscopy toolset,” are provided by a generous gift made to the Ben and Elaine Whiteley Materials Research Fund.

Man smiling in front of a bush of flowering azaleas

Clay Petsche, associate professor of mathematics

Petsche is working with graduate students Chifan Leung, Chatchai Noytaptim and Peter Oberly to develop new ways to measure the arithmetic complexity of dynamical systems – a mathematical construction which takes input data and feeds it through a repetitive process – and to show that certain families of arithmetic dynamical systems can be divided into the simple and the complex. Using mathematical techniques including Galois theory, which is the study of symmetry in the solutions to polynomial equations; potential theory; and the analytic theory of Berkovich spaces, a fully modern construction that has recently given mathematicians the ability to apply classical analytic techniques toward modern number theory applications.

Funds for Petsche’s SciRIS-ii project, entitled “Exceptional maps in arithmetic dynamical systems,” are provided by a generous gift made to the Robert W. Lundeen Science Faculty Development Award Fund.

 Axel Saenz Rodriguez, a man with dark hair.

Axel Saenz Rodriguez, assistant professor of mathematics

According to quantum mechanics, we can only know the probability for the location of an electron at any given moment. Yet, if the electrons are confined to a one-dimensional space, the system exhibits certain symmetries that may allow one to obtain exact formulas for the statistics of the electrons. Axel Saenz Rodriguez aims to develop the mathematical theory to determine these statistics and to host a conference focused on this research topic. The two-day conference at OSU in Fall 2022 will build a regional network of collaborations; develop research projects suitable for grant proposals; and build research activity and a community on campus for graduate students and faculty. Funds for Saenz Rodriguez’s SciRIS-ii project, entitled “Probability law for 1D quantum electrons,” are provided by a generous gift made to the Robert W. Lundeen Science Faculty Development Award Fund.

Bolstering medicine through interdisciplinary research

As part of the SciRIS program, the College of Science offers other donor-funded awards to bolster research and innovation. The Disease Mechanism and Prevention Fund (DMPF) supports research into the mechanism, diagnosis, treatment and prevention of human disease by the College of Science faculty. These funds are provided by a generous gift from David and Donna Gould. The awardees are Swati Patel, assistant professor of mathematics and Adrian Gombart, professor of biochemistry and biophysics.

Swati Patel, a woman with dark hair.

Swati Patel, assistant professor of mathematics

Swati Patel’s DMPF proposal is titled “Mathematical modeling of Anthelmintic resistance in soil-transmitted Helminths.” Patel’s research addresses soil-transmitted helminths (STH), parasitic worms that infect an estimated 1.5 billion people worldwide, particularly in developing tropical countries that lack adequate sanitation systems. Periodic de-worming is necessary to treat and prevent infection, but STH are developing resistance against the drugs used. Patel develops projects to investigate the mechanisms that lead to resistance and strategies to prevent it through systematic mathematical modeling.

Adrian Gombart, professor of biochemistry and biophysics.

Adrian Gombart, professor of biochemistry and biophysics

Gombart’s DMPF project, “The role of the cathelicidin antimicrobial peptide in the development of Alzheimer’s disease,” continues work from a previous DMPF award, studying the potential use of an antimicrobial peptide called cathelicidin to curtail the development of Alzheimer’s. Vitamin D and other nutrients regulate expression of the peptide. Gombart’s project could lead to further development of effective preventative therapies or treatments of Alzheimer’s disease. Gombart is a principal investigator at the Linus Pauling Institute and is known for his extensive research on the uses and functions of vitamin D, including using it to combat infection via wound dressings and sutures.

Managing an epidemic with a groundbreaking public health project

Managing an epidemic with a groundbreaking public health project

By Srila Nayak

In April, several OSU scientists hailing from different colleges and centers on campus leapt to action to tackle surging coronavirus infections in America. The result was a public health study started in Corvallis called Team-based Rapid Assessment of Community-Level Coronavirus Epidemics, or TRACE-COVID-19.

American life has been irrevocably altered by the deadliest pandemic in a century. Scientists at Oregon State University acted swiftly to the greatest public health emergency of our time, leveraging the College of Science’s unique capabilities in biomedical research and the quantitative sciences to investigate and contain the coronavirus crisis.

In April, several OSU scientists hailing from different colleges and centers on campus leapt to action to tackle surging coronavirus infections in America. They were driven by widespread diagnostic test shortages in America as well as the lack of data on asymptomatic individuals. The result was a public health study started in Corvallis called Team-based Rapid Assessment of Community-Level Coronavirus Epidemics, or TRACE-COVID-19. It was among the first of its kind in the country to test the prevalence of the virus in an entire community through door-to-door sampling in representative sets of neighborhoods.

“The impetus for us was that equipment required to do the laboratory tests to detect the virus is present in a lot of research labs on campus. We started to problem solve and understand how a land grant university that has relationships with communities across the state could help during this crisis,” said Benjamin Dalziel, lead investigator of the TRACE project and an assistant professor of integrative biology and mathematics.

It goes without saying that a massive project like this would typically take shape over the course of several months. However, in a stunning feat, the TRACE team developed the project from scratch in a matter of weeks, and it is now garnering attention nationally as a model for other universities. The public health study is a joint effort by OSU’s Colleges of Science, Public Health and Human Sciences, Agricultural Sciences, Engineering and the Carlson College of Veterinary Medicine. It is co-directed by Jeff Bethel, associate professor in the College of Public Health and Human Sciences.

"TRACE’s primary goal is to mobilize the capacities of the land grant university to help the communities we serve.”

As a project director, Dalziel takes a leading role in data analysis and the design of the study to enable inferences important to understanding the infection rate and transmission patterns. He is at ease working with a wide range of collaborators, something he has done frequently in his academic career.

“I really enjoy working on a team where the expertise is diverse — partly because everybody has a chance to be humble and wear our learner’s hats,” said Dalziel. “We have this wonderful team of 10 co-investigators, and each of us is a non-expert in most of the areas we are working on. I think it brings out the best in TRACE as we learn from each other.”

The study, conducted in partnership with Benton County health officials, was initially funded by OSU and a grant from the David and Lucile Packard Foundation and has been aided by work from the OSU Foundation and the OSU Alumni Association. Funding from PacificSource Health plans has allowed for the project to expand to Bend, Newport and Hermiston in joint efforts with Deschutes, Lincoln and Umatilla counties, as well as increase sampling in Corvallis. Dalziel received $800K from PacificSource Health Plans and two grants from the David and Lucile Packard Foundation for $750K and $400K to aid the expansion of the TRACE-COVID-19 project.

The TRACE-COVID-19 team, comprising 10 scientists and more than 300 volunteers was selected for the prestigious 2020 Beaver Champion Award, which will be presented at a virtual celebration honoring University Day Award Recipients on Monday, September 14. This Oregon State president’s award recognizes an individual or individuals who continually demonstrate outstanding effort and achievement of excellence, extra effort beyond that requested, and performance of the highest quality.

Discovering ecology and mathematics

Dalziel grew up in Ontario, Canada. He spent a good chunk of summer each year in the wilderness of Northern Ontario, which fueled his passion for nature and the environment and led him to study ecology. Dalziel immersed himself in ecology and mathematical sciences as an undergraduate student at the University of Guelph in Ontario. He also obtained a master’s degree in biology at the University of Guelph before earning a Ph.D. in ecology and evolutionary biology at Cornell University.

Ben Dalziel

Assistant professor of biology Ben Dalziel is the lead scientist on the TRACE-COVID-19 project.

blue numbers and code loading on translucent screen with black backdrop

International Bayesian statistics and data science conference comes to Oregon

By OSU College of Science news

Stan 2020, a Bayesian statistics and data science conference, will take place on August 11-14, 2020 at Oregon State University.

The 5th Stan Conference will take place at Oregon State University on August 11-14, 2020. The four-day conference will include two days of tutorials followed by an exciting scientific program comprising talks, posters, open discussions and statistical modeling.

Registration for Stan 2020 is now open. Researchers, students and professionals are encouraged to register for the conference which includes all tutorials. The conference is also soliciting session proposals, contributed talks and posters. Deadlines and other information can be found here.

Stan is a freedom-respecting, open-source software that has had an extensive and far-reaching impact on Bayesian computations for a broad range of applied statistics and data science problems.

The conference typically draws 300 attendees from academia, industry and government agencies. The conference offers a great opportunity for students and other participants to learn about Bayesian computation. Previous Stan Conferences were held at Columbia University, New York, and Cambridge University, U.K., among other places.

Plenary speakers at Stan 2020 are Elizabeth Wolkovich from the University of British Columbia and Adrian Rafftery, a member of the National Academy of Sciences, from the University of Washington, Seattle.

Debashis Mondal, associate professor in the Department of Statistics at OSU, is a co-organizer of Stan 2020. The other organizers of Stan 2020 are Susana Marquez, The Rockefeller Foundation; Eric J. Ward, Northwest Fisheries Science Center (NOAA); Yi Zhang, Metrum Research Group; and Daniel Lee, Generable.

Follow Stan on Twitter.

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