News Release

UH awarded $2 million for new engineering professor

Grant from Texas agency will be used for advanced cancer imaging

Grant and Award Announcement

University of Houston

David Mayerich, University of Houston

image: David Mayerich, is an assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Houston. view more 

Credit: David Mayerich

Cancer imaging expert David Mayerich will join the University of Houston's Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering this fall.

Mayerich, who has been a Beckman Fellow at the University of Illinois since 2009, will help boost the department's expertise in biomedical research, particularly in the fields of high-performance computing and biomedical imaging, said Badri Roysam, chairman of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering.

UH received a $2 million grant from the Cancer Prevention & Research Institute of Texas (CPRIT) to help recruit Mayerich, who earned his Ph.D. in computer science from Texas A&M University. The award was one of several recruitment grants awarded by CPRIT, as part of the agency's mandate to spur the recruitment of cancer researchers to Texas institutions.

Mayerich has also received a National Institutes of Health (NIH) Pathway to Independence Award to fund research into imaging and modeling microvascular networks, extremely complex structures that play a particularly prominent role in kidney cancer.

He said that his work is two-pronged, focusing on both improving diagnosis by developing new methods for imaging clinical tissue biopsies and developing methods to image tumors in 3-D at fine resolution and massive scale. His work will provide diagnosticians and researchers with insight into tissue structure and molecular composition.

While he currently works with breast cancer, Mayerich said that his research is applicable to many tumors and disease types. Ultimately, he said, his goal is to bring the power of high-performance imaging and modeling to biomedical researchers and clinicians, improving diagnosis and treatment.

"We need to provide biomedical researchers with the ability to collect and process terabyte-scale datasets on their own desktops," he said.

Roysam said Mayerich's research, including his work using quantum cascade lasers and knife-edge scanning microscopy (KESM) to map the 3-D architecture of tumors with subcellular resolution, will prove invaluable to cancer researchers in the Texas Medical Center and elsewhere in the state.

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