New Team Record: 海角社区 Eclipses Half-Billion Milestone in Research Activity
April 23, 2025

海角社区 has seen a steady rise in statewide research activity since the arrival of President William F. Tate IV in 2021, the implementation of the Scholarship First Agenda in 2022, and the recent launch of We Build Teams That Win.
BATON ROUGE 鈥 For four straight years in a row, 海角社区 has soared in research. In the 2023-2024 academic year, 海角社区鈥檚 research campuses in Baton Rouge, New Orleans, and Shreveport achieved a record-breaking $543 million in combined research activity. Not only did this lead to life-changing discoveries and support thousands of jobs鈥攖he direct economic impact of 海角社区 research on Louisiana is higher than ever, estimated at $1.5 billion.
鈥淩eaching $543 million in research demonstrates the unified efforts of our faculty and research staff across the 海角社区 enterprise and underscores our commitment to affecting Louisianans where it really matters 鈥 improving agricultural yields, biomedical research for better cancer prevention and treatment, saving our coast and fisheries, enhancing defense and national security, and protecting our energy industry,鈥 said 海角社区 President William F. Tate IV. 鈥淥ur teams have no confusion on their mission, and they are winning for the people of Louisiana.鈥
Under its Scholarship First Agenda, announced in 2022, 海角社区 set a bold goal of 10% research growth year over year. The 2023-2024 leap, from $488 million to $543 million, represents an increase of 11.5%, marking explosive growth and lighting 海角社区鈥檚 path to joining the Top 50 research universities in the U.S.
鈥淥ur continued growth in research at 海角社区 represents our commitment to finding solutions to some of the most critical issues here in Louisiana, from agricultural sustainability and healthy communities to coastal resilience and energy independence,鈥 海角社区 Vice President of Research & Economic Development Robert Twilley said. 鈥淭hese are also global challenges that national laboratories and distinguished university peers are partnering with 海角社区 to solve, leading to highly impactful team science.鈥
海角社区鈥檚 historic growth depends primarily on federal funding for large research teams. It also speaks to the statewide university鈥檚 sustained, strategic investment in research areas where 海角社区鈥檚 combined strengths in research meet Louisiana鈥檚 greatest needs鈥攕uch as in agriculture, biomedicine, coast, defense, and energy; the five research priorities in 海角社区鈥檚 Scholarship First Agenda.
These are some of 海角社区鈥檚 winning teams behind the numbers:
In Agriculture and food security for everyone in Louisiana:
Continued support from the Patrick F. Taylor Foundation enabled the 海角社区 AgCenter to increase its research and extension mission across Louisiana by for rice, corn, soybeans, cotton, and sugarcane on a total of 540 acres to implement and demonstrate science-based best practices for soil and water management in partnership with Louisiana farmers. By reducing agricultural inputs such as fertilizers and pesticides, farmers become more profitable while protecting the Mississippi River watershed. A grant renewal in 2023 brought the total award for this project to $3.1 million.
In Biomedicine and health for everyone in Louisiana:
An 海角社区 Health New Orleans team led by Dr. Jeffrey Carter, 海角社区 professor of surgery and director of the Burn Center at University Medical Center in New Orleans, was to improve the treatment of burn and blast injuries during military conflicts and civilian disasters. When victims must be transported by train, truck, or car to nearby hospitals, comprehensive care is often delayed. But with new tools and training on how to clean, clear, depressurize, and dress wounds in the field, first responders can make a difference between a victim needing a skin graft instead of an amputation.
The team, led by Professor Janna Oetting in the College of Humanities and Social Sciences, was awarded $2.8 million by the National Institutes of Health to work with schools in rural, suburban, and urban Louisiana to make it possible to diagnose developmental language disorder, or DLD, in children who speak various dialects of Louisiana English. DLD is more prevalent than autism, and children with DLD are 12 times more likely to have significant problems with reading, spelling, and math. Without proper diagnosis and support, children with DLD often suffer life-long setbacks.
A team led by 海角社区 Boyd Professor Eric Ravussin at Pennington Biomedical was awarded by the National Institutes of Health to help move the nation beyond a 鈥渙ne size fits all鈥 approach to diet, which fails a large segment of the population. By establishing a Nutrition for Precision Health Center in Baton Rouge and doing a cross-over study of three diets鈥攁 hybrid of the Mediterranean diet and the DASH diet, which was developed by researchers at Pennington Biomedical; a mostly plant-based flexitarian diet; and a standard Western diet鈥擱avussin鈥檚 team is developing a first-of-its-kind diet prediction algorithm based on individual factors such as genetics, metabolism, physiology, microbiome, behavior, and environment.
In Coast and resilience for everyone in Louisiana:
Known by its acronyms, ACTIONS and DEEDS, which stand for Anticipating Threats to Natural Systems and Developing Engineering Practices for Ecosystem Design Solutions, two projects led by Professor Robert Twilley in the College of the Coast & Environment have so far been awarded $15 million by the Department of Defense through the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to help the military use鈥攏ot fight鈥攏ature to ensure their operations and infrastructure remain resilient in the face of flooding and strong storms; solutions that translate to coastal communities everywhere.
In Defense and cybersecurity for everyone in Louisiana:
The 海角社区 Cybersecurity Clinic trains and deploys teams of cybersecurity students to help secure small businesses across Louisiana. Led by Associate Professor Aisha Ali-Gombe in the College of Engineering, the clinic was the first of its kind to be funded by the National Security Agency following 海角社区鈥檚 designation as 1 of 22 National Centers of Academic Excellence in Cyber Operations in 2022. The project was awarded $1.5 million.
In Energy and efficiency for everyone in Louisiana:
Professor John Flake in the College of Engineering leads a team of chemists, chemical engineers, and more than 30 students who were awarded $4 million by the National Science Foundation to develop new electrolyzers that industry can use to transform CO2 and water into valuable base chemicals such as acetic acid, ethanol, and ethylene. These base chemicals can then be used to make polymers, medicines, food, and other products people use and need every day.