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Research Money Flowing Into UCI at a Vigorous Pace

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

The University of California, Irvine, received more money for research last fiscal year than it ever had, a gain of 36% from the previous year.

UCI, with a total of $194.5 million, made the largest jump of any UC campus. The average increase was 12%.

The gain was one more example of UCI’s growth, which is planned to include 10,000 more students in the next decade. About 20,000 students now attend UCI.

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UCI ranked sixth among the nine UC campuses in garnering research money. UCLA received the most money last year, $530 million, followed by UC San Francisco with $473 million, UC San Diego with $462 million, UC Berkeley with $431 million, and UC Davis with $269 million.

William H. Parker, associate executive vice chancellor at UCI, said several factors led to the increased research money flowing to UCI professors. They were: increased spending by the federal government, which funds most research; more faculty and facilities as UCI grows; and better relationships with industry, which provides most of the remaining research money.

“I think we’re learning how to respond to industry and being able to respond to [its] concerns,” Parker said.

Of the money UCI received, 65% came from the federal government, 14% from corporations, 11% from state and local governments, and 10% from nonprofit organizations.

The largest corporate sponsor was the Swiss company Novartis, Parker said, which gave $6 million for clinical drug trials.

UCI still ranks far below the top tier of universities for amount of research. Johns Hopkins heads the list, spending $829 million on research in 1998, the latest year available, followed by the University of Michigan at $483 million and the University of Wisconsin at $420 million. Spending is the most accepted way to measure research.

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UCI spent $143 million on research last year, a 9.6% jump from the previous year.

As it usually does, the College of Medicine received the most money, with a 30% increase to $91.9 million.

UCI’s School of Biological Sciences showed the biggest bounce, with a hike of nearly 68% in research money.

The largest grant was given to Alexander McPherson, a professor of molecular biology and biochemistry, who received $12.3 million from NASA.

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