(L-R) Interim Vice President for Research K. Ken Redda,
President Elmira Mangum, Dr. Huijun Li, Dr. John Steven Cooperwood, and Interim
Provost Rodner Wright. |
FAMU President Elmira Mangum and Interim Vice President for
Research K. Ken Redda announced the winners during the university’s annual
researchers’ luncheon.
The honors are awarded in conjunction with the FAMU Division
of Research (DoR) and the FAMU Faculty Senate, and presented to FAMU
researchers who have made a profound impact both on and off campus through
their discoveries and contributions.
"Your hard work and commitment to excellence is a
fitting representation of what we're capable of here at this university,"
said Mangum, congratulating the honorees. "You are the caretakers of what
is necessary to keep the university's shining light burning each day."
“We're doing
cutting-edge research here and not just in my lab, but in the many labs of
FAMU’s researcher facilities, including high-level research in such areas as
Parkinson’s and schizophrenia," Cooperwood said.
Li, a professor in the department of psychology, said that
receiving the recognition has inspired her to go even further in her research.
“I want the world to know that FAMU has great research
support and has a strong research team,” Li said. “I feel very humbled and
honored to receive this recognition, and I take it as my stepping stone to the
next level. I am inspired to do more in terms of research, grants and
collaborating with more faculty members."
Li previously served as a full-time researcher at the Harvard
University Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, where she conducted
multicultural competence training seminars and clinical studies that promote
diversity in health-related research. She also served as a psychiatry
instructor at the Harvard Medical School. Today, her time is split between
teaching two classes as an assistant professor of psychology and conducting new
research at FAMU under a grant funded by the National Institute of Mental
Health.
In addition to acknowledging the profound works of FAMU’s
research community, Mangum and Redda also announced their goals to take FAMU’s
research programs to higher heights.
“FAMU’s research community generated more than $42 million
dollars within the last fiscal year,” said Redda."We are determined to
move steadily and surely toward generating $100 million dollars annually in the
coming years.”
Mangum explained her plans to ensure that FAMU’s research
community continues to flourish and that research dollars come in from both
public and private sector opportunities.
“We have a first-class research program here at FAMU,”
Mangum said. “My vision for the university is to significantly increase
research funding by 2019.We will pursue companies, corporate relationships, and
other avenues that will help us to continue to grow.”
Cooperwood and Li were honored amongst their peers at the
Fifth Annual Principal Investigators’ Appreciation and 2014 Researchers of the
Year Awards Luncheon held on April 18 at FAMU’s Foster-Tanner Band Rehearsal
Hall. The event, themed: “In Recognition of Research ‘Excellence with Caring,’”
paid tribute to more than 150 of FAMU’s principal investigators and
co-principal investigators.