Entrepreneurship program helps students turn ideas into reality
About 400 students have participated in the university’s Entrepreneurship Certificate Program
About 400 students have participated in the university’s Entrepreneurship Certificate Program
The university’s intellectual property licensing and startup support function streamline the path from the laboratory or field to the marketplace, ensuring that UGA research discoveries reach their full potential for public benefit.
UGA offers companies three ways to license intellectual property developed through research partnerships
Accelerator program will serve up to 30 new startup projects a year
University of Georgia faculty and staff were honored with multiple awards by Georgia’s life sciences industry association, Georgia Bio, at its 2017 Annual Awards Dinner on Jan. 26 in Atlanta.
Government-backed consortium of manufacturers and universities designed to advance biopharmaceutical manufacturing
The New Materials Innovation Center will fulfill the local and regional need for a large-scale testing facility for new materials being developed by entrepreneurs, startups and researchers.
A project led by a team of UGA undergraduate students and including faculty from the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences and the College of Engineering was recently selected for funding by NASA’s CubeSat Launch Initiative.
UGA researchers crossed American sweetgums with their Chinese cousins, creating hybrid sweetgum trees that have a better growth rate and denser wood than natives, and they can produce fiber year-round.
UGA’s technology transfer team brings discoveries to the market and boosts Georgia’s economy.
An overwhelming number of researchers still struggle within the black hole of the effectiveness and safety of stem cell therapy for neurological diseases. While the complexity of understanding how neurons grow, connect and function has long been studied, it remains a mystery, one that graduate student Forrest Goodfellow in the University of Georgia Regenerative Bioscience Center is helping unravel.
An overwhelming number of researchers still struggle within the black hole of the effectiveness and safety of stem cell therapy for neurological diseases. While the complexity of understanding how neurons grow, connect and function has long been studied, it remains a mystery, one that graduate student Forrest Goodfellow in the University of Georgia Regenerative Bioscience Center is helping unravel.