Research Centers | College of Engineering and Mathematical Sciences | The University of Vermont(title)

At the College of Engineering and Mathematical Sciences, we are proud of the leadership role we play on and off campus as UVM successfully positions itself as a top-tier research University. Our students benefit from a growing portfolio of well-funded and interdisciplinary research centers.

Learn more about our research centers by exploring your center of interest. 

Vermont Complex Systems Center

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UVM Complex Systems Center

A strategic Spire of Excellence for growing research, scholarship, and innovation at CEMS is in the field of complex systems: highly dynamic, non-linear systems demonstrating emergent properties and behaviors. With the establishment of the CEMS Complex Systems Center— strategically focused on multidisciplinary research strengths in environment, transportation, and bioengineering — and a continuing influx of world-class faculty and top students, the College is poised to be a national and international leader in the field.

Complex Systems Center

Vermont Transportation Research Center

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UVM Transportation Research Center

Vermont’s Transportation Research Center (TRC) is a hub for innovative and interdisciplinary research, education and outreach on sustainable transportation system solutions. The TRC focuses on transportation planning as it relates to resilience, energy and health.

Vermont’s Transportation Research Center (TRC)

UVM's Center for Biomedical Innovation

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CEMS Center for Biomedical Innovation

UVM’s Center for Biomedical Innovation (CBI) is a hub for design, development, and testing of biomedical devices and systems with a focus on rural healthcare. The center supports and trains inventors, entrepreneurs, and business leaders who will bring advanced biomedical technologies to the people of Vermont and the world. The CBI brings together students, faculty, and industry through shared programming and an interactive space for applied research, technology development, and education.

UVM’s Center for Biomedical Innovation (CBI)

Justice Research Initiative

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Justice Research Initiative researchers meet with an inmate

The Justice Research Initiative (JRI) serves as the research core for the National Center on Restorative Justice (NCORJ). The National Center supports a community-driven, interdisciplinary approach to research that bridges the research-practice gap, empowers diverse voices, and grows the next generation of justice researchers. In this role, JRI is a hub for data-driven approaches focused on addressing issues at the intersection of public health and the criminal legal system both in Vermont and nationally. The NCORJ is a partnership between the Vermont Law and Graduate School, the University of Vermont, and the University of San Diego, with funding from the US Office of Justice Programs Bureau of Justice Assistance.

Justice Research Initiative

The Institute for Computationally Designed Organisms (ICDO)

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Institute for Computationally Designed Organisms (ICDO)

Led by Dr. Josh Bongard of the University of Vermont and Dr. Michael Levin of Tufts University, the Institute for Computationally Designed Organisms will gather a multidisciplinary team of researchers drawn from artificial intelligence, machine learning, developmental biology, bioengineering and related disciplines. Together, they will lay the groundwork of a new field where life and machine intersect. By creating machines that can move, repair, locate targets, and work together to achieve complex goals, the ICDO will bring us closer to some truly extraordinary—and now quite achievable—goals.

Institute for Computationally Designed Organisms 

Vermont Advanced Computing Core

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Vermont Advanced Computing Core

Our goal at the Vermont Advanced Computing Core (VACC) is to facilitate research and aid in educational advancement by providing high-performance computing and other services, allowing faculty and students to focus on their research rather than system administration. Our systems enable larger, broader and more complex computation than ever before.

Vermont Advanced Computing Core (VACC)

Vermont Space Grant Consortium

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Vermont Space Grant Consortium

The Vermont Space Grant Consortium (VTSGC) is an organization consisting of academic institutions, private industry, and public entities. Funded in part by a grant from NASA’s National Space Grant College and Fellowship Program, key goals of the VTSGC are: to build aerospace-related research infrastructure within the state; to promote science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) education among Vermont students; and to train and encourage students to pursue careers in aerospace-related areas.

Vermont Space Grant Consortium (VTSGC)