22 Empire Innovation Program Award to Develop Translational Research Center SUNY Optometry was awarded $750,000 through the SUNY Empire Innovation Program (EIP) to recruit an investigator with expertise in molecular genetic vision research focusing on eye disease. EIP is a state-funded competitive grant program dedicated to recruiting and retaining world-class faculty at SUNY. The new position is part of a larger effort at the College to establish a Center for Translational Vision Research. Translational studies, defined as the translation of basic research findings to clinical applications, will form a comprehensive research platform at the College as an incubator for new therapies and technologies that will eventually be tested at the Clinical Vision Research Center. “Translational research fills the gap between our basic and clinical research programs and informs them both,” says Dr. David Troilo, vice president and dean for academic affairs. “This grant will provide an important element to research efforts at the College and will help us advance the profession of optometry as we help more patients.” Current translational research at the College focuses on neurodegenerative diseases of the eye, glaucoma, refractive errors (myopia), amblyopia, corneal disease, angiogenesis, traumatic brain injury and cataract. Dr. Stewart Bloomfield, associate dean for research and graduate studies, led the College’s effort to secure the EIP grant and serves as director of the College’s Graduate Center for Vision Research. “[This award] will significantly increase the College’s competitiveness for federal research and training funding,” he says. “Recruitment of an EIP scholar and creation of the Center for Translational Vision Research will transform the overall experimental program at the College.” Dr. MuEn Yang
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