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News and features

Innovative cup designed to save babies

Experts from the ÌÇÐÄÔ­´´ and have invented a special low-cost cup for feeding special needs babies. Each year in the developing world, millions of babies are born with health challenges that impair feeding and can lead to starvation. The $1 NIFTY cup provides a new solution.

US-India collaboration finds molecular signatures of severe malaria

The ÌÇÐÄÔ­´´â€™s International Center of Excellence for Malaria Research in South Asia — along with partners at the (CIDR) and Goa Medical College (GMC) of India — have discovered that specific types of parasite proteins, when combined with high parasite biomass, strongly predict severe malaria disease in adults. The discovery, published May 16 in the journal , is a significant advancement in understanding the causes of severe malaria. Quantitative characterization of disease presentations and biotechnology capabilities at the ICEMR lab at Goa Medical College combined with specialized assays for molecular host-parasite interactions and machine learning tools at the CIDR helped unlock the mysteries of what leads to the development of severe malaria disease.

A world of strength: international students and cultural resilience

International students will share stories of stamina, strength and ultimately success in the face of adversity from their home cultures and at the UW. There will also be opportunities for participants to reflect on the theme of resilience in their own story and context.

Wednesday, May 18, 5-7 p.m. in Alder Auditorium

Free and open to the UW community

Co-presented by International and English Language Programs, Housing and Food Services and FIUTS.

Myanmar goes mobile, with UW’s help

A reformist government sped up Myanmar’s transition to democracy three years ago, dramatically increasing access to information. In 2011, just four percent of the population had mobile phones. Now the figure is closer to eighty percent, with many people owning smartphones. But navigating the flood of online information can be problematic for new users with no experience assessing the trustworthiness of sites and sources. An initiative launched by UW faculty aims to change that.

The initiative, (ISST), is designed to build digital literacy, information literacy, and data literacy across Myanmar. Professors Mary Callahan and Sara Curran in the Jackson School of International Studies, Chris Coward, director of the Technology & Social Change Group in the Information School, and Michael Crandall, a principal research scientist in the Information School, lead the project in collaboration with USAID, Microsoft, and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

Board of Regents approves first UW master’s program through Global Innovation Exchange

The UW Board of Regents has approved the (MSTI) degree, a 60-credit interdisciplinary program developed by the Global Innovation Exchange (GIX), in collaboration with the UW departments of Computer Science & Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Human Centered Design & Engineering, the Foster School of Business, the Information School and the School of Law.

 

The MSTI degree will be the first U.S.-based program offered through the , a partnership between the ÌÇÐÄÔ­´´ and Tsinghua University, with foundational support from Microsoft.