🎉Congrats to @curioss members, Bill Branan, Megan Forbes and all involved from the #SheridanLibraries on the $750,000 grant from the #AlfredPSloanFoundation to the #JohnsHopkinsUniversity #OSPO!

The funding will be used to create a Research Software Support Network Network to assist and coordinate #researchers' use of #software across the university.

📰https://hub.jhu.edu/2026/01/06/open-source-programs-office-research-software-support-network/

#AcademicOSS #AcademicOSPO #OpenResearch #OpenSourceSoftware #OpenScience #ResearchSoftware #RSE #RSEng

Open Source Programs Office receives grant to establish Research Software Support Network

With funding from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, Sheridan Libraries' OSPO launches an initiative to coordinate and support scholars' use of research software across the university

The Hub

Scientists Discover Neural Basis of Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder -SciTechDaily.com

Tiny engineered brain models reveal that psychiatric disorders may arise from distinctive disruptions in neural communication rather than obvious structural damage. Credit: SciTechDaily.com

Health

Scientists Discover Neural Basis of Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder

By Roberto Molar Candanosa, Johns Hopkins University, December 20, 2025, 8 Comments,
5 Mins Read

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Using lab-grown brain tissue, researchers uncovered complex patterns of neural signaling that differ subtly between healthy brains and those linked to severe psychiatric disorders.

For the first time, scientists have used pea-sized brain organoids grown in the laboratory to uncover how neurons may malfunction in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. These psychiatric conditions affect millions of people around the world, yet they remain difficult to diagnose because researchers still lack a clear understanding of their underlying molecular mechanisms.

The results could eventually help clinicians reduce diagnostic uncertainty when treating these and other mental health conditions. At present, such disorders are typically identified through clinical judgment alone, and treatment often relies on lengthy trial-and-error approaches to medication.

A detailed account of the findings was published in the journal APL Bioengineering.

“Schizophrenia and bipolar disorder are very hard to diagnose because no particular part of the brain goes off. No specific enzymes are going off like in Parkinson’s, another neurological disease where doctors can diagnose and treat based on dopamine levels even though it still doesn’t have a proper cure,” said Annie Kathuria, a Johns Hopkins University biomedical engineer who led the research. “Our hope is that in the future we can not only confirm a patient is schizophrenic or bipolar from brain organoids, but that we can also start testing drugs on the organoids to find out what drug concentrations might help them get to a healthy state.”

Annie Kathuria. Credit: Will Kirk / Johns Hopkins University

Machine learning decodes disease specific signals

Kathuria’s team created the organoids, simplified versions of brain tissue, by reprogramming blood and skin cells from people with schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and from healthy volunteers into stem cells capable of forming brain-like structures. They then applied machine learning tools to analyze the electrical activity of the organoids’ cells, allowing them to identify neural firing patterns associated with healthy and diseased states. In the human brain, neurons communicate through small electrical signals.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: Scientists Discover Neural Basis of Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder

#AnnieKathuria #BiomedicalEngineer #BipolarDisorder #Discover #HealthResearch #JohnsHopkinsUniversity #MentalHealth #NeuralBasis #Schizophrenia #Scientists #SciTechDaily

SpaceNews, JHU Bring Together Space Leaders to Discuss Commercial and Government Space Collaboration

https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://spacenews.com/spacenews-jhu-bring-together-space-leaders-to-discuss-commercial-and-government-space-collaboration/

Baltimore Banner: Johns Hopkins University Press will license its authors’ books to train AI models. “The Johns Hopkins University will license its books to train proprietary large language models, an advanced form of artificial intelligence that generates human-like language, the school’s publishing division announced this week. Authors have until the end of August to opt out of the […]

https://rbfirehose.com/2025/08/02/baltimore-banner-johns-hopkins-university-press-will-license-its-authors-books-to-train-ai-model/

Baltimore Banner: Johns Hopkins University Press will license its authors’ books to train AI model | ResearchBuzz: Firehose

ResearchBuzz: Firehose | Individual posts from ResearchBuzz
Attenzione: al giardino di San Leonardo è "gentrificazione in corso"

Da settimane è nata una mobilitazione che si oppone all'intervento urbanistico progettato da Comune e Johns Hopkins University sul parchetto di via Belmeloro. Tra le varie iniziative messe in atto anche quella testimoniata dalle foto che riceviamo e pubblichiamo.

Zic.it | Zeroincondott★

Thanks to all our members who identified these patterns and in particular to:

Bethany Philbrick (#UniversityofWisconsin-Madison), Bill Branan & Megan Forbes of #JohnsHopkinsUniversity, David Lippert and @labarba of @gwospo, Emily Lovell, @LauraLangdon & @slieggi of the #UniversityOfCalifornia OSPO Network, Fang Liu & Jeff Young (#GeorgiaTech), Jacek Plucinski (#UniversitéDuLuxembourg), Kendall Fortney (#UniversityOfVermont), and Sayeed Choudhury (#CarnegieMellonUniversity).

Johns Hopkins University: Former Sen. Ben Cardin donates political papers to Johns Hopkins. “The legislative and political papers of former U.S. Sen. Ben Cardin have found a new home at Johns Hopkins University’s Sheridan Libraries and University Museums.”

https://rbfirehose.com/2025/07/09/johns-hopkins-university-former-sen-ben-cardin-donates-political-papers-to-johns-hopkins/

Johns Hopkins University: Former Sen. Ben Cardin donates political papers to Johns Hopkins | ResearchBuzz: Firehose

ResearchBuzz: Firehose | Individual posts from ResearchBuzz

#TheGremlinZoo #Funding #JohnsHopkinsUniversity

From WJZ Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University pauses pay increases, reduces spending due to funding uncertainty

https://www.cbsnews.com/baltimore/news/johns-hopkins-student-visa-research-funding-grants-pay-increase/

Johns Hopkins University pauses pay increases, reduces spending due to funding uncertainty

Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore is implementing a hiring freeze and pausing annual pay increases due to the uncertainty of funding sources, the school confirmed.

Animal-Free Series for Early-Career Researchers Workshop No. 2

Antibodies and Beyond: The Power of Animal-Free, Recombinant Antibodies

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