OIE Mentor Supports Innovators’ Growth and Potential
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The Pitt SPARK objective is achieved through a combination of funding awards, education, mentoring, and networking opportunities, immersing awardees in ecosystem-level support for translational innovation.
Awards are granted in amounts of up to $250,000 for one year to support key technical and/or market de-risking studies, further developing Pitt technologies with high commercial potential and compelling proof-of-concept data. Full project funding is not guaranteed and is contingent upon awardees’ adherence to a milestone-based plan developed in collaboration with the Office of Innovation and Entrepreneurship (OIE) and external partners. Upon successful completion of year one project milestones, awardees may apply for a second year of funding of up to $250,000. Pitt SPARK is open to projects in life sciences-related fields that address unmet needs or challenges in human health and disease. It is anticipated that a maximum of two (2) new Pitt SPARK awards will be granted per year.
Program Benefits
Administered by the University of Pittsburgh Office of Innovation and Entrepreneurship (OIE), Pitt SPARK:
Funding Utilization
Pitt SPARK funding can be used to support efforts that de-risk one or more aspects of the technology’s commercial potential. The funding is expected to accelerate the translation of technologies from the academic lab to the commercial marketplace. Project outcomes may include the incorporation of a Pitt Licensed Startup Company (LSC) focused on the relevant intellectual property (IP) or the license of the relevant IP to an existing company. Pitt SPARK does not support basic research.
About Pitt SPARK
The objective of Pitt SPARK is to support the development of Pitt intellectual property to be ready for external funding and/or tech transfer events upon project completion. Projects are selected for near-term commercialization potential and societal impact using the following criteria:
Pitt SPARK funds may only be used for the direct costs of the activities outlined in the approved project plan and budget. Faculty personnel costs are not permitted. Non-faculty personnel costs are generally discouraged but will be considered on a case by case basis, must be limited and justified strongly in the proposal.
Eligible expenses include:
Ineligible expenses include:
Past Awardees
Awardee:
Jordyn Ting
Principal Investigator:
Elvira Pirondini, assistant professor, Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
Team members:
Jorge Gonzalez-Martinez
Pitt researchers have developed a motor thalamic deep brain stimulation (mThal-DBS) methodology that restores swallowing and speech in patients with chronic dysphagia and dysarthria stemming from lesions to the corticobulbar tract (Grigsby et al., 2024). Specifically, electrical stimulation is applied to the motor thalamus, which has excitatory projections to the motor cortex. The stimulation increases excitability of the motor cortex, leading to increased activation of the facial and oropharyngeal muscles used during swallowing and speech. The initial focus is on treating post-stroke dysphagia (difficulty swallowing), with the potential to expand to dysarthria (slurred or mumbled speech) in the future.
Principal Investigator:
Francesco Egro, associate professor, Department of Plastic Surgery
Team members:
Chris Fedor.
Surgeons performing anastomosis (connecting two tubular structures, such as blood vessels) often require expensive microscopes. But these procedures can still result in an inaccurate suture placement, called a backwall, which can result in a dangerous blood clot. University of Pittsburgh researchers have developed a novel device that enables accurate suture placement via a guide cylinder and a rod holding a microsurgical clip that provides stability and precision.