• Three women in green lab coats holding plants and notebooks talk inside a greenhouse. Three women in green lab coats holding plants and notebooks talk inside a greenhouse.

    Division for Research & Economic Development

  • A man in a suit and eyeglasses uses a remote control with a large red button to control two robotic arms. A man in a suit and eyeglasses uses a remote control with a large red button to control two robotic arms.

    Division for Research & Economic Development

  • A man and a woman stand and smile for a camera in front of a huge digital globe showing live weather patterns. A man and a woman stand and smile for a camera in front of a huge digital globe showing live weather patterns.

    Division for Research & Economic Development

  • A woman in a black sweater stands inside an ornately decorated library. A woman in a black sweater stands inside an ornately decorated library.

    Division for Research & Economic Development

Diverse, Relevant & Publicly Engaged Research

From advancing weather forecasting to using AI to predict tumor growth, researchers at the University at Albany are tackling some of society’s biggest challenges. 

The Division is committed to advancing research and scholarship, while training the next generation of scientists — including individuals from underrepresented groups, who make up over 40% of our student body. These efforts place UAlbany at 38th on U.S News & World Report's national social mobility rankings for 2022-23.

The University's total research and development expenditures, investment in graduate scholarships and the number of scientists working on cutting-edge research in state-of-the-art facilities ensures UAlbany’s place among the top-tier Carnegie Research-1 institutions. We are excited to further expand our research capabilities by reunifying UAlbany and CNSE.

 

Upcoming Events

Explore our programming, which includes coffee hours, lightning talks, workshops and more.
 

Partnership Opportunities

Access the talent, resources and expertise your business needs to find greater success.
 

Divisional Transformation

Learn about upcoming growth in the Division for Research & Economic Development.
 


 

Research Highlights

 

A woman with braids wearing a white lab coat, blue gloves and wire frame glasses writes in erasable marker on a clear board.
Health Sciences

UAlbany researchers at the RNA Institute are fighting muscular dystrophy with a $2.5M NIH grant, studying gum disease with a $2.3M NIH grant and won an NSF award for COVID-19 research. The Cancer Research Center has been awarded a $1.7M grant from the National Cancer Institute to study the role of nutrition in breast cancer. And the College of Integrated Health Sciences' decades-long partnership with the New York State Department of Health fosters collaborative, much needed research that benefits local communities.

Five researchers stand on a building roof as they release a white weather balloon into the air.
Climate Sciences

New York’s Division of Science, Technology and Innovation invests $1M annually in the Center of Excellence in Weather and Climate Analytics. The Center and the University partners with industry leaders, including IBM, National Grid and Con Edison, to address extreme weather’s effects on transportation systems. With the Atmospheric Sciences Research Center and NYS Mesonet, UAlbany is home to one of the largest and most prominent coalitions of atmospheric science experts in the country.

A student with black hair and a black sweater sits at a desk typing while looking at two computer monitors, which show a map of New York State and the logo for the New York State Department of Homeland Security and Emergency Services.
Emergency Preparedness & Cybersecurity

The College of Emergency Preparedness, Homeland Security and Cybersecurity is focused on protecting the nation. Since 2020, the U.S. Department of State has awarded $2.1M to our researchers, who are helping government and industry leaders improve their preparation and response to threats involving WMDs. Our researchers co-lead the $1.5M Virtual Institute of Cyber Operation and Research funded by U.S. Department of Defense.

A woman in jeans and a sweater talks to a man in a suit stand talking in a research center hallway.
Artificial Intelligence

UAlbany's AI Plus supercomputing initiative delivers the high-speed computational power needed to design and test the latest generation of microchips, new AI algorithms and machine-learning systems. With the support of a $75 million investment from New York State, UAlbany is significantly expanding the state's artificial intelligence supercomputing resources for STEM, arts and humanities teaching and research.

Research News

 

Sullivan Award Supports CNSE Student Scholarship

Thanks to funding through the John J. Sullivan Professional Development Award, doctoral students Maria Belen Paredes-Espinosa, Shadi Omranpour, Ezra Pasikatan and Jeelka Solanki have been able to take part in prestigious conferences that further their research and scholarship.
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R&E Week Highlights AI, Innovation and Creative Works

UAlbany's second annual Research and Entrepreneurship Week brought together scholars from throughout New York and beyond to put the spotlight on the explosive growth of artificial intelligence in the Capital Region, along with highlighting the substantial scholarly work of UAlbany researchers and inventors.

UAlbany Hosts Prestigious AMS Fall Sectional Meeting

For the first time in 41 years, the University at Albany served as host institution for a meeting of the American Mathematical Society (AMS), the preeminent organization advancing research and mathematics education in the United States.

New Report Examines Barriers to Oral Health Services for New Yorkers

A new Center for Health Workforce Studies report indicates that improving access to oral health services in New York requires a broader understanding of oral health needs and the challenges that underserved populations face.

Anthropology Lecture: "Stalked by the Refuse Wind: Colonialism, Disease, and Structural Violence in New Mexico, 1540-1700 CE" by Dr. Matthew Liebman

Anthropology Department will host this lecture on Friday Nov. 15 at 3:00 PM, Lecture Center 12. Light refreshments to follow in the Department. Debates regarding the magnitude, tempo, and ecological effects of Native American population decline after 1492 constitute some of the most contentious issues in early American history. Was depopulation rapid and catastrophic, with effects extensive enough to change even the earth’s atmosphere? Or was this decline more moderate, with numbers of Native Americans waning slowly after European colonization? The results of recent collaborative research among archaeologists, dendrochronologists, and tribal members from the Pueblo of Jemez in northern New Mexico present unanticipated results, with consequences that extend beyond the borders of the American Southwest to anthropological studies of colonialism more generally.

 

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