UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — For faculty, staff and administrators working across Penn State’s Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences, the idea that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts is more than an abstraction. It’s an everyday reality.
Serving the University as a hub for cross-disciplinary collaboration in the life sciences, the Huck Institute’s mission is to bring together diverse approaches and perspectives. Research participation spans dozens of departments across eight colleges at Penn State.
“The challenges we face today are far too complex to address with a unilateral approach,” said Huck Director Andrew Read. “We need to bring many skill sets to bear so we can assemble the bigger picture. Only then do we stand a chance of making a meaningful impact.”
That interdisciplinary nature and focus on bringing people together meant that Huck was well-positioned to quickly and creatively respond to the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic through both collaborative research and public education efforts.
Catalyzing COVID-19 research teams
The drive to make an impact was very much on Read’s mind in February 2020, when the coronavirus outbreak first showed signs it could become a pandemic. By March 3, having recruited additional support from Susan McHale of the Social Sciences Research Institute and Clive Randall from the Materials Research Institute, Huck leadership spearheaded a rapid call for proposals across Penn State.
“Within a matter of weeks, we had evaluated 110 proposals and attracted $2.4 million in seed funding,” Read said. “We ultimately distributed this support to 48 research teams, encompassing the expertise of 136 faculty and staff members from 54 different departments and research units across Penn State. External collaborators on specific projects include Cornell, Nebraska-Lincoln, NYU, UCLA, and the Yale School of Medicine.”