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Internet of Things Collaborative Caps Successful First Year with Additional $2.2M Grant

CWRU, 91国产精品 initiative designed to shape region into digital innovation leader

[[{"fid":"32364","view_mode":"default","fields":{"format":"default","field_file_image_alt_text[und][0][value]":"IoT","field_file_image_title_text[und][0][value]":false},"link_text":null,"type":"media","field_deltas":{"1":{"format":"default","field_file_image_alt_text[und][0][value]":"IoT","field_file_image_title_text[und][0][value]":false}},"attributes":{"alt":"IoT","height":391,"width":1000,"class":"media-element file-default","data-delta":"1"}}]] (IoTC), a partnership between Case Western Reserve and Cleveland State universities, is bringing together industrial, governmental, educational, neighborhood and non-profit entities in the region to harness IoT鈥檚 vast potential.

To continue building on the IoTC鈥檚 early successes, the Cleveland Foundation has awarded another $2.2 million, one-year grant to the collaborative, which was created in 2017 to position Cleveland as a leader in digital innovation. 

The new funding follows $2 million in grants the foundation awarded the previous two years to help establish the IoTC and attract top academicians and create research labs for the initiative. 

鈥淭he foundation鈥檚 initial support has allowed our universities to make significant progress in advancing research and working with communities and companies on practical applications of this technology,鈥 Case Western Reserve University President Barbara R. Snyder said. 鈥淲ith this new grant, we will be able to enhance our respective strengths and contribute even more to Cleveland鈥檚 role as a true technology leader. We cannot thank the Cleveland Foundation enough for this additional investment in the Internet of Things Collaborative.鈥 

鈥淲hat we are building here鈥攖ogether with Case Western Reserve University鈥攊s very special,鈥 said Cleveland State President Harlan M. Sands. 鈥淭he Cleveland Foundation鈥檚 generous, continued support is a testament to the significant strides our two universities have already made in impacting cutting-edge digital technology.鈥

The Internet of Things refers to the massive interconnected network of devices and serves as the technology framework for blockchain and other future digital innovations. The IoTC is focusing especially on four sectors in Northeast Ohio: manufacturing, health, energy and municipal infrastructure. 

According to some industry estimates, the number of IoT-related devices is expected to exceed 30 billion by 2020, and the economic impact of related projects is predicted to reach as much as $6 trillion worldwide within five years.

鈥淥ur continued support of the IoT Collaborative is indicative of the first-year success of the unprecedented partnership between Case Western Reserve University and 91国产精品,鈥 said Leon Wilson, the Cleveland Foundation鈥檚 chief of digital innovation and chief information officer. 鈥淚nvesting in our research universities to drive Cleveland鈥檚 future in the digital economy is a proven model for economic transformation and makes it possible for our public sector to embrace technology in ways that enhance quality of life for Cleveland residents.鈥

Late last year, the IoTC awarded five pilot grants to research teams at both universities as seed money for wide-ranging projects. Separately, CWRU and 91国产精品 have also funded additional IoT pilot projects from internal sources.

One such project teams Roberto Galan, assistant professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at CWRU, and Wendy Regoeczi, professor and chair of the Department of Criminology, Anthropology, and Sociology at 91国产精品. They are developing predictive models of drug offenses and gun violence by studying diverse data sets鈥攊ncluding information from the Cleveland Police Department and the Cuyahoga County Medical Examiner.

In another, Christopher Wirth, assistant professor of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering at 91国产精品, and Emily Pentzer, the Frank Hovorka Assistant Professor in Chemistry at CWRU, are developing IoT-enabled chemical analysis capabilities for chemical products and food processing. Pentzer and Wirth will create analysis tools for connected devices鈥攑ossibly including smartphones鈥攆or manufacturing processes, industrial coatings and more.

Additionally, the collaborative has received four grants from the National Science Foundation totaling nearly $1.5 million and has $20 million in research proposals pending review and more than $12 million in proposals under development.

Such financial support has allowed the IoTC to:

  • Launch a bimonthly thought leadership series to examine industry innovations in IoT.
     
  • Influence the research and development of an 鈥淚ndustrial IoT Roadmap鈥 by Team NEO (funded by the Burton D. Morgan Foundation), designed to help manufacturers deploy and integrate 鈥渟mart manufacturing鈥濃攁lso known as 鈥淚ndustry 4.0鈥濃 technologies, including  addressing talent development.
     
  • Work on two neighborhood-based demonstration projects:
     
    • In Lakewood, the collaborative is using a novel platform to monitor road-surface and sub-surface infrastructure using GPS, vibration sensing and ground-penetrating radar to identify issues before they become catastrophic, such as an undetected water leak. In Cleveland鈥檚 Hough neighborhood, a group of residents is being trained in the 鈥淎ppreciative Inquiry鈥 method to discuss how to build on their community鈥檚 strengths and how technology might help make their neighborhood even stronger.
       
    • To help address the opioid crisis, the collaborative is studying the technical and administrative barriers to data-sharing with the goal of significantly improving how law-enforcement agencies and health providers collaborate.
       
  • Add faculty, staff鈥攊ncluding those with industry experience鈥攁nd consultants to the IoTC team. Included were two new faculty members and three new staff members to support CWRU鈥檚 Institute for Smart Secure and Connected Systems (ISAACS), the body coordinating CWRU鈥檚 involvement in the IoTC. 91国产精品 is recruiting two new faculty members and two staff members to support its Center for IoT Innovation (CITI).
     
  • Leverage the foundation鈥檚 investment by raising $6.6 million in additional philanthropic awards for ISSACS and CITI. CWRU has designated 10 endowed chairs for ISSACS-associated faculty, representing more than $20 million in endowments, which generates more than $800,000 annually for faculty to use for students, equipment, conferences and other expenses.