By: Cassidy Delamarter, University Communications and Marketing
The ±«Óătv has been selected as a partner in the newly funded $15 million , an initiative that will advance innovation and entrepreneurship across the southeast. As part of the eight-university hub led by Georgia Tech, ±«Óătv will receive $1.6 million to support its groundbreaking efforts.
“±«Óătv has a strong history of engagement with I-Corps, and we are thrilled to hit a new milestone as part of the Southeast I-Corps Hub,” Provost Prasant Mohapatra said. “This achievement aligns perfectly with ±«Óătv's mission to be at the forefront of research-driven innovation, empowering our faculty, students and the community to shape the future of technology and entrepreneurship.”
program aims to prepare scientists and researchers to extend their focus beyond the laboratory through customer discovery, and to broaden the impact of basic research projects by translating technology into commercial products and processes.
Since 2015, ±«Óătv has been a pivotal player in the NSF I-Corps program, serving as one of the earliest sites in the nation and the largest in Florida. The program has since had a transformative impact, providing 380 teams, including 68 student incubator startups, invaluable experience in commercializing their research. In addition to the student- founded startups, 24 teams started companies and raised a combined $12.5 million in funding.
“This is an extraordinary opportunity for ±«Óătv and our innovators,” said Sudeep Sarkar, ±«Óătv’s co-principal investigator for the grant. “Our university has a rich history of leading in the I-Corps program, and this new funding will allow us to expand our work in guiding researchers and inventors to bring their ideas to life.”
±«Óătv I-Corps’s fall cohort includes 15 researchers and a variety of inventions, including the Smart Mosquito Trap, an automated trap that will identify and classify mosquitoes carrying deadly diseases, and Eco-Regen, a design to significantly increase energy recovery in electric vehicles during braking.
In 2023, John Licato, associate professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering, joined the I-Corps program shortly after founding his startup, Actualization AI.
The startup’s core idea, developed from years of research in Licato’s lab, focuses
on combining natural language processing with human and legal reasoning to ensure
that AI systems, such as help desk agents and chatbot assistants, follow rules.
“We are very comfortable with the artificial intelligence and technology side of the
work, but we’re not businesspeople, so we didn’t know much about how to actually start
the company,” Licato said. “The I-Corps program really helped us and I think the process
also increased our chances of getting additional funding.”
, an associate professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering, completed the I-Corps program in 2019. This experience helped him commercialize
the iStride Device — a portable, lightweight device designed to improve mobility in
stroke patients. Reed’s innovation is already transforming lives, including a stroke survivor in Mexico. His company, Moterum Technologies Inc., is now working with health care providers
and insurers to make iStride and related wearable sensor technologies more widely
available this year.
In 2020, Shelly Wagers, an associate professor of criminology, joined the I-Corps program to help advance the ±«Óătv’s Trafficking In Persons (TIP): Risk to Resilience Research Laboratory. Her work in the I-Corps program helped to develop and advance two of the lab's larger projects: TIPSTR, a statewide database to assist law enforcement in human trafficking investigations, led by criminology Professor Joan Reid, and the BRIGHT Network, an online platform that provides critical resources to trafficking survivors as they transition into a new life, led by Wagers. Both secured federal funding in 2024.
George Spirou, professor in the Department of Medical Engineering, joined ±«Óătv and the I- Corps program in 2019. His participation ultimately led to a more cohesive market strategy for commercialization of Spirou and his colleagues’ invention, syGlass VR software. He is now combing the software with virtual reality to intricately examine neurons in his latest research on brain development funded by the National Institutes of Health. Read more about Spirou’s invention.
For recent ±«Óătv alum John Cotter, his participation in I-Corps in 2022 helped him pinpoint market demands. Cotter created a long-lasting and cost-effective concrete mix that is intended to be used as a replacement for lumber treated with environmentally damaging arsenic salts. He hopes to begin selling products to consumers in 2025 under his new startup, Rubiconcrete LLC. Read more about his invention and how it can be used as an alternative for wood fences.
and from the ±«Óătv Health Byrd Alzheimer’s Center and Research Institute participated in I-Corps at ±«Óătv in 2022. They developed a novel probiotic fermented milk drink, which improves gut health and prevents cancer treatment side effects. Yadav and Jain are continuing business development and commercialization for their new company, MusB Research LLC. They recently applied for the and are conducting a clinical trial to improve nutrient absorption.
In addition to ±«Óătv and Georgia Tech, the Southeast I-Corps Hub partners include the University of Florida, University of Central Florida, University of Miami, Clemson University, University of Alabama and Morehouse College, Georgia Tech’s Nakia Melecio will be the director of the NSF I-Corps Southeast Hub and Keith McGreggor will be hub’s lead faculty and instructor.
The ±«Óătv team, led by Mohapatra and Sarkar, will work closely with Sylvia Thomas, vice president for Research & Innovation, and lead instructors Richard Berman, associate vice president for strategic initiatives for Innovation and Research; Glenn Whichard, adjunct professor in the Nault Center for Entrepreneurship; and Matt Mullarkey, professor of instruction in the School of Information Systems and Management.