A new antibody test being developed by SMU researchers has the potential to detect the presence of antibodies generated in response to COVID-19 faster and with more accuracy than current antibody testing.
Antibody tests are key to helping determine how many coronavirus cases have gone undetected and whether people who have had the virus might now be immune – measurements that can help the healthcare community manage the COVID-19 pandemic and plan for the future. But conventional immunosensor antibody tests tend to be slow to show results and frequently inaccurate.
Researchers estimate the “Lab on a Chip” test could detect immune responses to coronavirus in two to three minutes, with just a drop of blood. The materials used to create the test are inexpensive, which should result in low-cost mass production.
Ali Beskok and J.-C. Chiao are the lead researchers behind the “Lab on a Chip” test. Beskok is The Brown Foundation, Inc. Professor of Engineering at SMU’s Lyle School of Engineering. Chiao is The Mary and Richard Templeton Centennial Chair and professor in Lyle’s Department of Electrical and Computing Engineering. Together, they have more than 50 years of combined expertise on microfluidics technology and biotechnology.
Read more at SMU Research.
Category: February 2021
Understanding the psychology of vaccine acceptance is key to convincing the majority of Americans to take the COVID-19 vaccine when it becomes available, says SMU health behavior researcher Austin Baldwin.Research shows that individuals make health decisions based on their perceptions – the process of interpreting information and turning it into meaningful knowledge – and their beliefs – the process of acceptance of the truth or validity of something. To choose to take a COVID-19 vaccine, individuals must have a perception of the severity of the virus and that a vaccine will be effective as well as a belief that they are at risk of contracting the disease, Baldwin says. Anticipated regret is also a robust predictor of how health decisions are made, he says. Humans can imagine how they would feel if they chose not to be vaccinated, then became infected with COVID-19 or infected someone dear to them.
Read more at SMU Research.
Eight Dallas ISD elementary school teachers have been selected to receive the first Kathryne and Gene Bishop Endowed Scholarships. They are pursuing master’s degrees with dual specialization in special education and bilingual/ELL studies at SMU’s Simmons School of Education and Human Development. Their scholarships cover 94 percent of the tuition costs.
“Simmons faculty members, who excel in scholarship and teaching, can equip teachers with proven research-based practices to increase learning in the classroom. For teachers, acquiring new knowledge matters, especially if they can build on skills the district needs,” says Stephanie L. Knight, Leon Simmons Endowed Dean.
The scholarships reflect the longtime support by the Bishops of children’s education and health, among other philanthropies.
Read more at the Simmons School.
Luck of the draw
When they first met as SMU roommates, Jaime Noble Gassmann ’02 (on the left in the photo above) and Beth McKeon ’02 weren’t sure they would be close friends. Flash forward to 2020, and they’re revolutionizing the startup ecosystem together.
Beth is the co-founder and CEO of Fluent, a Denver-based data technology company that developed the Fluency Score, which works like a FICO score for startups. Jaime serves as the company’s COO.
Since graduation, their paths have diverged for long periods but intersected at crucial points. The connection that took root in their campus home has kept them close through the years. That’s something they didn’t always see coming.
Read more.
SMU volleyball, the defending American Athletic Conference West Division champions, is the favorite to win the division again in the 2020-21 season. The Mustangs earned seven first-place votes for the division. So far this season, the team is undefeated.
SMU had three players elected to the American Athletic Conference Preseason All-Conference team, which featured 13 players from seven of the league’s 11 members. Lily Heim and Rachel Woulfe were unanimous selections after earning first-team accolades last season. Hannah Jacobs was also voted to the team after a second-team award in 2019.
Heim was also selected as a team captain by her teammates, along with Meryn Kennedy, the lone senior on the squad.
Read more at SMU Athletics.
ICYMI: In Case You Missed It
Check out these links to stories, photos and more about the latest people, projects and events making news on the Hilltop.
- ‘After 2020, Who Are We?’ Join the conversation.
- SMU Libraries shares the love from its archives
- This is cool: SMU’s subzero fridge helps Dallas’ vaccination efforts
- Symposium to explore emerging intellectual property issues
- February 16: ‘Informing Women, Transforming News’
- Photos: Honoring lives lost to COVID-19
- See Texas through the eyes of DeForrest Judd