鶹Ƶ conducts research that goes beyond the desire to know and understand; we want to make a difference. Research is vital to expanding our knowledge, sparking new ideas, and developing innovative techniques that have an impact on society, the economy, and the environment. It’s a critical part of the university’s purpose and mission.

$186M in Sponsored Funding
In 2019, Mason sawfigures increase by $37 million from2018.Our strategic goalis $225 million by 2024.

39 PhD Programs
Mason had 2,098students enrolled in Spring 2019. We also had6,964 master's students enrolled in our 89.

$5.8M for Humanities
Mason is the eighth-highestrecipient of fundingfrom thein the past decade.
Varied Fields Work Together to Find All-Encompassing Solutions
Mason encourages the creation of multidisciplinary teams.We know researchers in different disciplines can collaborate to find solutions more quickly, and open pathways to other possibilities.The university leverages the power of these collaborations insuch areas as:
- Thetakes a multidisciplinary approach to develop technologies to predict, prevent, treat and eradicate disease and improve care.
- Theconducts integrative research in the natural, social, computational, and data sciences, engineering, and humanities.
- Thewill incubate new digital products and services. IDIA will be in a new 400,000-square-foot facility at the Arlington Campus.
- Theunites scientists, engineers, and health care professionals to research ways to improve the quality of life of people with disabilities.
- Thephysicists, engineers, and data scientists use artificial intelligence and machine learning to design new quantum materials.
- Theequips investigators with state-of-the-art expertise, methods, tools, and technologies to combat transnational crime.
- The works to restructure and optimize reciprocal relationships between humans and assistive computing systems.
- The aims to help communities with rebuilding, as well as with preparations to prevent damage.
- The fosters innovative, consequential research in the humanities and humanities-related disciplines, promotes the humanities' value as a public good, and enhances the work's visibility and impact.
Nationally Recognized Experts Lead Cutting-Edge Research
Mason isadvancing knowledge across all disciplines. Our researchers' discoveries change lives and change the world. Some examples:
Detecting and Fighting COVID-19
, co-director,co-founderandmedical directorof the(CAPMM) within Mason’s,and his colleagues areusing an improved COVID-19 antibody test developedas part of a Mason clinicalstudytomeasurethe body’s response to a vaccine.Their study of COVID-19 antibodies in previously infected people reveals the human immune system’s strong ability to fight the virus, even if they showed minimal or no symptoms. Based on months ofstudyof patients who were naturally infected, Liotta and his team were able to verify that patients’ antibodies lasted longer than initially first believed and that theypotentiallyhelped prevent those patients from getting sick again.
Komodo Dragon Blood Could Hold Key to Cures
andcreated a new way to kill antibiotic-resistant bacteria while spurring the body’s cells to heal cuts faster by researching the germ-fighting abilities of.The(DTRA), a federal body, funded the work through a $7.57 million contract. The study's goals were to discover new bacterial infection-defeating compounds in the blood of Komodo dragons and the crocodilian family of reptiles, which includes American alligators. These reptiles eat carrion and live in bacteria-rich environments but rarely fall ill, suggesting they have strong innate immunity. Thein the-partner journal. In August 2019, theyand their collaborators, revealing multiple clusters of antimicrobial peptide genes that could prove instrumental in the.
Improving the Design of Ships
, a professor of computational fluid dynamics in the, leads a research group that has developed a computational tool, SimDShip, to accomplish innovative, simulation-based design of ship hull forms. By enabling hydrodynamic optimization at early stages of ship design, SimDShip allows researchers to efficiently explore and evaluate a wide range of novel hull forms, ultimately shortening the design cycle and saving fuel consumption costs. Designing ships with high energy efficiency is economically desirable because ships that require less power consume less fuel, or they can sail at a faster operating speed with the same fuel consumption. SimDShip, funded by a three-year, $600,000 grant from the U.S. Office of Naval Research (ONR), will be incorporated into the Integrated Hydrodynamics Design Environment (IHDE) within the U.S. Navy’s CREATE-Ships Project.
Getting Guidance from 'Godfather of Biodiversity'
Thomas Lovejoy, "the Godfather of Biodiversity," is a professor in the Environmental Science and Policy Department. Thehouses the, and Lovejoy also serves as scientific director of Mason's.Before coming to Mason, he held the biodiversity chair at the Heinz Center for Science, Economics and the Environment and was president from 2002 to 2008. In 2016, he was selected as a . A trip to the Amazon influenced him to establish a conservation program at the World Wildlife Fund-U.S., which he led from 1973 to 1987. He is founder of the public television series. In 2009, he was appointed conservation fellow by the. He has also served on the science and environmental councils under Presidents Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, and Bill Clinton, and he currently serves as senior fellow at the United Nations Foundation.In September 2019, Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam recognized Lovejoy's work with the
Fighting Crime Across International Borders
, director of the(TraCCC), and, director of research within the, lead multidisciplinary research teams investigating and disruptingillicit supply networks.TraCCC is the first center in the nation devoted to understanding the links among terrorism, transnational crime, and corruption. The center and its international research partners study: human smuggling and trafficking; nuclear proliferation issues; the links between crime and terrorism; money laundering and other financial crimes; the impact of organized crime and terrorism on legitimate business; and environmental crimes.
Leading a Division of the Smithsonian
worked behind the scenes as a guest curator for six years to bringat theto life, and in June 2019, he was named. He created one of the three history exhibitions for the facility, all of which chronologically tell the story of blacks in the United States — from the Middle Passage to the election of former President Barack Obama. Crew became a guest curator for the museum largely because of his past experience as a curator, historian, and director at the. He created an exhibit about African American migration calledwhich was displayed for more than 20 years. His part of the exhibit at the African American History and Culture museum,covers the post-Reconstruction period to the assassination of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Studying T-Cells to Target HIV
's is the lead scientist on a research team that helped identify a T cell marker that could help lead topatients.The research focuses on cofilin, a protein that regulates cells to fight infection. In an HIV-infected patient, cofilin dysfunction is a key factor in helper T cell defects, according to thein the journal. Helper T cells augment the body’s immune response by recognizing the presence of a foreign antigen, then helping the immune system mount a response. Wu and his team found that patients with HIV have “significantly lower” levels of cofilin phosphorylation than healthy patients. Their findings suggest that a lasting immune control to HIV isn’t likely to come from antiretroviral therapy alone.
Uncovering a History of the Maya
’s team isunraveling the secrets of an ancient document, the, translating it from the Mayan language of K’iche’ to English and Spanish. Their research,funded by the, sheds light on how the first Spanish missionaries shared their faith in the New World in the 1500s. The Spanish explorers who spread through the West Indies and the mainland of the Americas were accompanied by Franciscan and Dominican missionaries equipped with sermons, catechisms, and songbooks. They translated their lessons to the languages of the people they encountered. But theTheologia Indorum, written in the 1550s by Dominican friar Domingo de Vico, goes beyond a simple translated catechism. It was initially composed in K’iche’, an indigenous language still spoken by more than a million Guatemalans, then translated into other related Mayan languages. Reading it in the context of Mayawritings indicates not only how Christianity was transmitted to the native population, but how those populations received it.
Increasing Flight Safety
Thereceived two grants fromto studya. The grants have led to the research and creation of technology that would advise pilots of potential accident situations., director of the center, andare the primary investigators. The team developed technology that uses machine-learning algorithms to process massive amounts of flight and weather data collected about anomalies that occur during flights across the country. These data are then used to create tips or advisories for pilots to prevent them from encountering potential accident scenarios. The team is also applying these ideas to autonomous vehicles.
Developing Technology for More Effective Police Work
andconduct research in such areas as technology, evidence-based crime policy, translational criminology, and assessingfederal agencies' security efforts. They developed the(with PhD studentCody Telep) and the, tools to help police incorporate research into their strategic and tactical skills. The Matrix organizes moderate to very rigorous evaluations of police interventions visually, allowing agencies and researchers to view the field of research in this area. It's updated withall qualifying studieseach year. Drs. Lum and Koper have also written a book about their work,, published by.On Sept. 17, 2019, Drs. Lum and Koper led thepresentation,“Countering Mass Shootings in the United States,” to.