A Flexible Microdisplay Can Monitor and Visualize Brain Activity in Real-time During Brain Surgery

Athin film that combines an electrode grid and LEDs can both track and produce a visual representation of the brain’s activity in real-time during surgery–a huge improvement over the current state of the art. The device is designed to provide neurosurgeons visual information about a patient’s brain to monitor brain states during surgical interventions to remove brain lesions including tumors and epileptic tissue. 

Each LED in the device mirrors the activity of a few thousand neurons. In a series of proof-of-concept experiments in rodents and large non-primate mammals, researchers showed that the device can effectively track and display neural activity in the brain corresponding to different areas of the body. In this case, the LEDs developed by the team light up red in the areas that need to be removed by the surgeon. Surrounding areas that control critical functions and should be avoided show up in green. 

The study also showed that the device can visualize the onset and map the propagation of an epileptic seizure on the surface of the brain. This would allow physicians to isolate the ‘nodes’ of the brain that are involved in epilepsy. It also would allow physicians to deliver necessary treatment by removing tissue or by using electrical pulses to stimulate the brain. 

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“Neurosurgeons could see and stop a seizure before it spreads, view what brain areas are involved in different cognitive processes, and visualize the functional extent of tumor spread. This work will provide a powerful tool for the difficult task of removing a tumor from the most sensitive brain areas,” said Daniel Cleary, one of the study’s coauthors, a neurosurgeon and assistant professor at Oregon Health and Science University. Cleary was a medical resident and a postdoctoral researcher at the University of California San Diego. 

The device was conceived and developed by a team of engineers and physicians from University of California San Diego and Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and was led by Shadi Dayeh, the paper’s corresponding author and a professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at UC San Diego. The team describes their work in the April 24 issue of the journal Science Translational Medicine.

During brain surgery, physicians need to map brain function to define which areas of the organ control critical functions and can’t be removed. Currently, neurosurgeons work with a team of electrophysiologists during the procedure. But that team and their monitoring equipment are located in a different part of the operating room. Brain areas that need to be protected and those that need to be operated on are either marked by electrophysiologists on a paper that is brought to the surgeon or communicated verbally to the surgeon, who then places sterile papers on the brain surface to mark these regions. “Both are inefficient ways of communicating critical information during a procedure, and could impact its outcomes,” said Dr. Angelique Paulk of MGH, who is a co-author and co-inventor of the technology. 

In addition, the electrodes currently used to monitor brain activity during surgery do not produce detailed fine grained data. So surgeons need to keep a buffer zone, known as resection margin, of 5 to 7 millimeters (about ¼ of an inch) around the area they are removing inside the brain. This means that they might leave some harmful tissue in. The new device provides a level of detail that would shrink this buffer zone to less than a millimeter. 

“We invented the brain microdisplay to display with precision critical cortical boundaries and to guide neurosurgery in a cost-effective device that simplifies and reduces the time of brain mapping procedures,” said Shadi Dayeh, the paper’s corresponding author and a professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering. 

Researchers installed the LEDs on top of another innovation from the Dayeh lab, the platinum nanorod electrode grid (PtNRGrid). Using the PtNRGrids since 2019, Dayeh’s team pioneered human brain and spinal cord mapping with thousands of channels to monitor brain neural activity. They reported early safety and effectiveness results in a series of articles in Science Translational Medicine in 2022 in tens of human subjects. (New sensor grids record human brain signals with record breaking resolution and Microelectrode array can enable safer spinal cord surgery)–ahead of Neuralink and other companies in this space.   

The PtNRGrid also includes perforations, which enable physicians to insert probes to stimulate the brain with electrical signals, both for mapping and for therapy.

New Genetic Technology Developed to Halt Malaria-Spreading Mosquitoes

Malaria remains one of the world’s deadliest diseases. Each year malaria infections result in hundreds of thousands of deaths, with the majority of fatalities occurring in children under five. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently announced that five cases of mosquito-borne malaria were detected in the United States, the first reported spread in the country in two decades.

Fortunately, scientists are developing safe technologies to stop the transmission of malaria by genetically editing mosquitoes that spread the parasite that causes the disease. Researchers at the University of California San Diego led by Professor Omar Akbari’s laboratory have engineered a new way to genetically suppress populations of Anopheles gambiae, the mosquitoes that primarily spread malaria in Africa and contribute to economic poverty in affected regions. The new system targets and kills females of the A. gambiae population since they bite and spread the disease.

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Publishing July 5 in the journal Science Advances, first-author Andrea Smidler, a postdoctoral scholar in the UC San Diego School of Biological Sciences, along with former master’s students and co-first authors James Pai and Reema Apte, created a system called Ifegenia, an acronym for “inherited female elimination by genetically encoded nucleases to interrupt alleles.” The technique leverages the CRISPR technology to disrupt a gene known as femaleless (fle) that controls sexual development in A. gambiae mosquitoes.

Scientists at UC Berkeley and the California Institute of Technology contributed to the research effort.

Ifegenia works by genetically encoding the two main elements of CRISPR within African mosquitoes. These include a Cas9 nuclease, the molecular “scissors” that make the cuts and a guide RNA that directs the system to the target through a technique developed in these mosquitoes in Akbari’s lab. They genetically modified two mosquito families to separately express Cas9 and the fle-targeting guide RNA.

“We crossed them together and in the offspring it killed all the female mosquitoes,” said Smidler, “it was extraordinary.” Meanwhile, A. gambiae male mosquitoes inherit Ifegenia but the genetic edit doesn’t impact their reproduction. They remain reproductively fit to mate and spread Ifegenia. Parasite spread eventually is halted since females are removed and the population reaches a reproductive dead end. The new system, the authors note, circumvents certain genetic resistance roadblocks and control issues faced by other systems such as gene drives since the Cas9 and guide RNA components are kept separate until the population is ready to be suppressed.

“This technology has the potential to be the safe, controllable and scalable solution the world urgently needs to eliminate malaria once and for all.”

— Omar Akbari, Professor in the Department of Cell and Developmental Biology.

“We show that Ifegenia males remain reproductively viable, and can load both fle mutations and CRISPR machinery to induce fle mutations in subsequent generations, resulting in sustained population suppression,” the authors note in the paper. “Through modeling, we demonstrate that iterative releases of non-biting Ifegenia males can act as an effective, confinable, controllable and safe population suppression and elimination system.”

Traditional methods to combat malaria spread such as bed nets and insecticides increasingly have been proven ineffective in stopping the disease’s spread. Insecticides are still heavily used across the globe, primarily in an effort to stop malaria, which increases health and ecological risks to areas in Africa and Asia.

Among the Sierra Nevada, California

ArtistAlbert Bierstadt, born Solingen, Germany 1830-died New York City 1902Gallery LabelAlbert Bierstadt’s beautifully crafted paintings played to a hot market in the 1860s for spectacular views of the nation’s frontiers. Bierstadt was an immigrant and hardworking entrepreneur who had grown rich pairing his skill as a painter with a talent for self-promotion. He unveiled his canvases as theatrical events, selling tickets and planting news stories—strategies that one critic described as the “vast machinery of advertisement and puffery.” A Bierstadt canvas was elaborately framed, installed in a darkened room, and hidden behind luxurious drapes. At the appointed time, the work was revealed to thunderous applause.This painting was made in London and toured through Europe to St. Petersburg, fueling Europeans’ interest in emigration. Buoyed by glowing reviews, Bierstadt then offered the painting to American audiences who could take pride in an American artist’s skill and in the natural splendors of their young nation.Exhibition Label, Smithsonian American Art Museum, 2006Publication LabelAlbert

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Bierstadt’s beautifully crafted paintings played to a market eager, in the 1860s, for spectacular views of the nation’s frontier. Bierstadt painted Among the Sierra Nevada, California in his Rome studio. He then showed the canvas in Berlin and London before shipping it to the United States. Works such as this fueled the image of America as a promised land just when Europeans were immigrating to this country in great numbers.Smithsonian American Art Museum: Commemorative Guide. Nashville, TN: Beckon Books, 2015.Credit LineSmithsonian American Art Museum, Bequest of Helen Huntington Hull, granddaughter of William Brown Dinsmore, who acquired the painting in 1873 for “The Locusts,” the family estate in Dutchess County, New York1868Object number1977.107.1Restrictions & RightsCC0TypePaintingMediumoil on canvasDimensionsoverall: 72 x 120 1/8 in. (183 x 305 cm) frame: 96 1/4 x 144 3/8 x 7 1/4 in. (244.5 x 366.7 x 18.4 cm)See more items inSmithsonian American Art Museum CollectionDepartmentPainting and SculptureOn ViewSmithsonian American Art Museum, 2nd Floor, East WingSmithsonian American Art MuseumTopicLandscape\CaliforniaAnimal\bird\duckLandscape\lakeAnimal\deerLandscape\waterfallLandscape\mountain\Sierra Nevada MountainsRecord IDsaam_1977.107.1Metadata Usage (text)CC0GUID (Link to Original Record)http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/vk7498df029-5f85-45cd-8d0b-e64e9067f772

Theme: Energy & Environment

Sanford offers top-ranked environmental academics and expertise in environmental and energy policy to address policy innovations that affect the very health of our planet at a crucial time when science is being questioned. 

Related Programs & Courses

UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAM

The Public Policy Studies major is a perennial top major at Duke University.

PROFESSIONAL PROGRAMS

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  • MPP (Environment and Energy Specialization available) – view concentration requirements
  • MPP/Master of Environmental Management (MEM) or Master of Forestry (MF) – dual degree options with Sanford School/Nicholas School
  • IMEP (International Master of Environmental Policy)

GRADUATE PROGRAMS

  • PhD in Public Policy
  • PhD – University Program in Environmental Policy – joint program with Sanford School/Nicholas School

Graduate-level elective courses include:

  • Climate Change Economics and Policy
  • International Environmental Policy
  • Collective Action
  • Sustainable Development
  • Environment & Development
  • Energy & Development
  • Global Environmental Health

PARTNERSHIPS

  • top-ranked Nicholas School of the Environment
  • Duke’s Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions designing policy responses to the most pressing environmental and energy challenges
  • interdisciplinary project teams at the Duke University Energy Initiative

FACULTY

Streamlining Military Personal and Equipment Readiness

Every year, the United States Department of Defense (DoD) allocates billions of dollars and millions of training hours to equipment and personnel readiness. Personal and equipment readiness refer to the various tasks and checkpoints that U.S. military forces are expected to have prepared and passed at any given moment. Personal readiness includes job-specific training, medical clearances, recruitment targets and compliance requirements. Equipment readiness requires experienced maintainers as well as knowledge and assessment of equipment age and condition. Personal and equipment readiness together determine how effectively and quickly United States forces could respond if needed.

If all of that sounds like a headache to keep track of across all the personnel and equipment funded by the military’s $146 billion annual budget, that’s because it is. An incredible amount of time, energy and money is spent trying to keep everything and everyone ready to go at a moment’s notice.

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“Anyone who has worked in a professional environment understands the struggle of trying to meet your mandatory training requirements while completing your usual duties, and that problem is only exacerbated in the military, where missing training credentials creates a massive readiness issue,” said Max Weintraub, senior program manager at the National Security Innovation Network (NSIN).

Now, a startup created by a trio of Duke graduates is trying to solve these problems with the help of AI. Called “EZTrain,” the company has secured a series of startup grants from the DoD worth $125,000 and is poised to become a regular feature across several branches of the military.

But it all started with a single applied entrepreneurship class held by Duke Engineering in 2020. Called “Mission Driven Startups,” the class is part of a national program called “Hacking for Defense” that is sponsored by NSIN. The program assigns DoD problems to universities across the country and challenges them to use “Lean Startup” methodology to develop solutions.

The founders of EZTrain—Luke Sommer (Public Policy ‘21), Roberto Medrano (Public Policy ‘21) and Thomas Chemmanoor (Electrical Engineering and Computer Science ‘22)—were first approached by the Seymour Johnson Air Force Base in Goldsboro, North Carolina. The problem that the team was given to tackle was Air Force training inefficiency.

“What the DoD needs is tools that more efficiently leverage their time and money investment, and that’s where EZTrain comes in. We’re here to save them time and money and make sure that their operations are as efficient as possible.”Roberto Medrano
Duke Public Policy ’21

Over the course of the semester, the EZTrain team conducted hundreds of interviews and visited the base multiple times to nail down the cause of this training inefficiency and readiness crisis.

“Through our interviews and time spent on the base, we found that up to a third of these training sessions were unutilized because people didn’t have clear instructions and there weren’t formal communication streams,” Sommer said. “A lot of the technology to support readiness management was completely outdated, so that was the root cause of a lot of the issues that we found.”

Silkworms Help Grow Better Organ-Like Tissues in Labs

Biomedical engineers at Duke University have developed a silk-based, ultrathin membrane that can be used in organ-on-a-chip models to better mimic the natural environment of cells and tissues within the body. When used in a kidney organ-on-a-chip platform, the membrane helped tissues grow to recreate the functionality of both healthy and diseased kidneys.

By allowing the cells to grow closer together, this new membrane helps researchers to better control the growth and function of the key cells and tissues of any organ, enabling them to more accurately model a wide range of diseases and test therapeutics.

The research appears June 5 in the journal Science Advances.

Often no larger than a USB flash drive, organ-on-a-chip (OOC) systems have revolutionized how researchers study the underlying biology of the human body, whether it’s creating dynamic models of tissue structures, studying organ functions or modeling diseases. These platforms are designed to stimulate cell growth and differentiation in a way that best mimics the organ of interest. Researchers can even populate these tools with human stem cells to generate patient-specific organ models for pre-clinical studies.

But as the technology has evolved, problems in the chip’s design have also emerged –– most notably with the materials used to create the membranes that form the support structure for the specialized cells to grow on. These membranes are typically composed of polymers that don’t degrade, creating a permanent barrier between cells and tissues. While the extracellular membranes in human organs are often less than one micron thick, these polymer membranes are anywhere from 30 to 50 microns, hindering communication between cells and limiting cell growth.

This question led Musah and George (Xingrui) Mou, a PhD student in Musah’s lab and first author on the paper, to silk fibroin, a protein created by silkworms that can be electronically spun into a membrane. When examined under a microscope, silk fibroin looks like spaghetti or a Jackson Pollock painting. Made out of long, intertwining fibers, the porous material better mimics the structure of the extracellular matrix found in human organs, and it has previously been used to create scaffolds for purposes like wound healing.

“The silk fibroin allowed us to bring the membrane thickness down from 50 microns to five or fewer, which gets us an order of magnitude closer to what you’d see in a living organism,” explained Mou.

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To test this new membrane, Musah and Mou applied the material to their kidney chip models. Made out of a clear plastic and roughly the size of a quarter, this OOC platform is meant to resemble a cross section of a human kidney––specifically the glomerular capillary wall, a key structure in the organ made from clusters of blood vessels that is responsible for filtering blood.

Once the membrane was in place, the team added human induced pluripotent stem cell derivatives into the chip. They observed that these cells were able to send signals across the ultrathin membrane, which helped the cells differentiate into glomerular cells, podocytes and vascular endothelial cells. The platform also triggered the development of endothelial fenestrations in the growing tissue, which are holes that allow for the passage of fluid between the cellular layers.

By the end of the test, these different kidney cell types had assembled into a glomerular capillary wall and could efficiently filter molecules by size.

“The new microfluidic chip system’s ability to simulate in vivo-like tissue-tissue interfaces and induce the formation of specialized cells, such as fenestrated endothelium and mature glomerular podocytes from stem cells, holds significant potential for advancing our understanding of human organ development, disease progression, and therapeutic development,” said Musah.

As they continue to optimize their model, Musah and colleagues are hoping to use this technology to better understand the mechanisms behind kidney disease. Despite affecting more than 15 percent of American adults, researchers lack effective models for the disease. Patients are also often not diagnosed until the kidneys have been substantially damaged, and they are often required to undergo dialysis or receive a kidney transplant.

Three Juniors Named Faculty Scholars

Three undergraduate students whose research shows their deep expertise on number theory, 19th century American history and analysis of poetry were honored with Faculty Scholar Awards, the highest honor bestowed by university faculty on undergraduates.

Presented through the Academic Council, the 2024 winners are Sarah Konrad, Arielle Stern and Marie-Hélène Tomé. The award was established to highlight students who are likely to pursue a scholarly career and already have established a record of research and independent study that has impressed their faculty mentors.

The three were selected by a faculty committee chaired by Sheryl Broverman, professor of the practice of biology. The committee received 27 strong nominations from departments across the undergraduate program.

“As always this is a very challenging process, as so many of our students are doing exceptional, original research,” Broverman said. “The three Faculty Scholar recipients all impressed the committee with their in-depth knowledge of a field and their ability to communicate it to non-experts in the field.  From explaining the world via math proofs or the human condition via poetry to the history of slaveholding by women, the committee was deeply impressed by Marie- Hélène, Arielle and Sarah.”

Sarah Konrad, Department of History

With an interest in both history and law, Sarah Konrad has already produced a collection of original research that explores how the law affects social, cultural and political aspects of public life. Like a good historian, she has written several complicated portraits of women in 19th century America, living with limited legal rights but still finding ways to exercise power, and affecting issues of race.

One large project was close to home. Working with history professors Thavolia Glymph and Robert Korstad as part of the Duke Institutional History Project, Konrad dove into the early days of Trinity College to explore the relationships between the wives of the college’s Board of Trustees and how they benefited from the institution of slavery.

Konrad found close family ties between the board wives and their husbands, “creating a familial connection that pervaded the bonds of the academic administration,” she said. These ties were strengthened by slavery, as the wives often brought enslaved people with them into the marriage, which grew the economic status of their husbands. The research will be included as a chapter in a forthcoming book from the institutional history project published by Duke University Press.

In a second research project, under the supervision of professors Juliana Barr and Sarah Deutsch, Konrad explored stories of Cherokee women who owned enslaved people. She will complete this next year as her honors thesis.

“Sarah Konrad is an extraordinary scholar – an indefatigable researcher, creative both in how she ferrets out sources and how she makes sense of them, as well in the even more important area of how she comes up with and formulates a question,” said Sarah Deutsch, professor emerita of history. “Her excitement is contagious.”

Konrad says she hopes to continue this research following graduation in 2025 and will seek a joint J.D./Ph.D. degree. “With lifelong research efforts, I hope to contribute to historical and legal scholarship that bridges strict divisions of past and present to show how law has been formed by historical processes, and yet it can still be used as a tool of justice,” she said.

Arielle Stern – Department of English

To Arielle Stern, poetry is the place where the known and the unknown are placed together, where words “function to elucidate hidden and incomprehensible meanings, but do not erase the murkiness of the shadows that linger.”

That richness of meaning and language has long attracted Stern and has led to several research projects praised by Duke faculty members. In a graduate-level course on 20th century French theory, Stern considered historical memory in post-WWII poetry, particularly related to the Holocaust. The paper, which she was invited to present at a research symposium, explored ethical and literary questions of how to write about atrocity.

“Intrigued by the pervasiveness of absence in the aftermath of WWII, I was compelled to probe deeper into the question of how to portray extreme erasure, to both preserve memory and to acknowledge the gaps that constitute the difficulty of such a task,” she said.

An English and Romance Studies double major, Stern also has focused on Wallace Stevens and studying his rich poetry through the lens of Stevens’ interest in the French linguistic and philosophical traditions. A poet herself, this study has also benefited her own writings.

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 “The first of Arielle’s numerous critical gifts is the quality of her alertness to the poem,” said Joseph Donahue, professor of the practice of English, who directed some of her study of Stevens. “She approaches the page with allegiance to her already deeply schooled sophistication, but, always first, she sees and hears for herself what is going on in the poem and finds her own way to imaginatively enter into the world the text proposes.

“She expertly moves into unfamiliar terrain and makes it her own, even when the terrain is most forbidding, and so her interest in the poetics of death, in the great tradition in world literature of poetry written at the threshold of the abyss, at the absolute limit of what can be known and felt. Where else would such a curious and capable imagination as that possessed by Arielle Stern be spending its time?”

After graduation, Stern hopes to study for a Ph.D. in English Literature focusing on 20th and 21st century poetry and poetics. “The study of poetry itself is that of making sense of the

unknown and the purposefully obscured, an exercise that rejects the denial of erasure and brings absence to light, which I intend to do in my future pursuits, both when writing poetry and in a scholarly career,” Stern said.

Marie-Hélène Tomé – Department of Mathematics

In number theory, L-functions package important arithmetic information about number fields, a generalization of the integers. L-functions, of which the Riemann zeta function is a particular example, are the subject of many of the most challenging unresolved conjectures in mathematics.

This year, Marie-Hélène Tomé effectively answered an open L-function conjecture made in 1920 by the German Erich Hecke.

Tomé is a recipient of a 2024 Goldwater Scholarship, a nationally competitive award for students in mathematics, natural sciences and engineering. Part of her recognition came from her work on Hecke L-functions and their special values. Under the guidance of Professor Ken Ono at the University of Virginia, she studied the work of Japanese mathematician Takuro Shintani, who provides formulas for the class number, an important arithmetic invariant associated with a number field.

Di Fang Receives ORAU’s Junior Faculty Award

Di Fang, assistant professor of Mathematics, was granted a 2024 Ralph E. Powe Junior Faculty Awards by the Oak Ridge Associated Universities (ORAUS).

Fang, whose research focuses on the theory of quantum computing, numerical analysis for quantum algorithms and classical algorithms for quantum simulation, joined the Duke Department of Mathematics in 2023.

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The Ralph E. Powe Junior Faculty Enhancement Awards are one-year grants that provide seed money for junior faculty members and often result in additional funding from other sources. ORAU provides $5,000, and the applicant’s institution is required to match the award with at least an additional $5,000.

The award aims to enrich the research skills and professional growth of young faculty members at ORAU member institutions. Fang is one of 37 awardees from a pool of over 170 applicants from 95 institutions. Eligible applicants must be junior faculty within two years of obtaining tenure.

Unlikely Roommates, Surprise Friendships

Ishika Gupta didn’t know anyone when she arrived at Duke as a first-year student. So, when she learned that the university had a mandatory random roommate policy for incoming first-year students, she saw it as an opportunity to meet new people from different backgrounds.

“One of the reasons why I loved it is that my roommate was an engineering student, so there was no reason for us to ever meet at Duke except because of the random policy. I feel that because of it I got to meet her,” said Gupta, who at the time was a pre-med student. Today, she is a research tech in the White-McGarrah Lab in Duke’s Molecular Physiology Institute.

The policy, launched in 2018 with the goal of giving students more chances to meet others from various backgrounds, became the subject of a study conducted by Sarah Gaither, Nicholas J. and Theresa M. Leonardy Associate Professor of psychology and neuroscience. The findings, recently published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, suggest that the randomized roommate assignment is a promising way for universities to promote cross-race contact and increase diversity in friend networks.

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Gaither started researching random roommate policies while a graduate student at Tufts University, where she earned her Ph.D. in social psychology. Her interest lies in her experience growing up in a mixed-race household.

Gaither’s research at Tufts invited white students who lived with someone from a different racial background  to the lab to meet a Black individual they had never met before. The work showed that these interactions went much more positively for both students when the white student had lived with someone from a different race.

You can learn from your roommate and see what their interests are, and maybe you’ll learn something about yourself.Ishika Gupta

When Duke’s random roommate policy was instituted, not everyone was sold on the idea. Some students pushed back. That prompted Duke to reach out to Gaither.

“Since they knew I had done that work as a grad student, as they were deciding on the policy change, they reached out to me to ask if I would like to work with Duke and try to assess data points behind the policy change,” Gaither said.

As a postdoctoral researcher in Gaither’s lab, Analia Albuja, Ph.D., now an assistant professor of psychology at Northeastern University, broke the analysis into three parts: The first part used university survey data from students before the random roommate policy took effect. At that time, about 50 percent of students chose to be randomly assigned. The second group of students was surveyed after the policy was put into place. That resulted in a significant increase in the likelihood of students being assigned to someone from another racial group.

Tracing the Roots of Food Insecurity in Durham

At the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, lockdowns and layoffs made it harder for some Durham families to put nutritious meals on the table. Knowing that access to high-quality food is one of many important social drivers of health, a group of Duke medical students expanded a program to deliver fresh produce to low-income households that were identified by local health providers.

Their program, Root Causes, was sorely needed, as food pantries also saw a spike in demand during the pandemic, serving more people than they had in years.

While programs like Root Causes expanded alongside federal programs like Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC) and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) during the first few years of the pandemic, food insecurity in Durham has remained a critical issue.

In part, this is because the experiences of those who provide and receive food assistance have been understudied and there are critical information gaps between government programs, local organizations and the families they aim to serve.

Recognizing these disconnects, the Tracing the Roots of Nutrition Access, Implementation and Policy team, which includes faculty and students from medicine, public policy, sociology and theology, has spent the last two years untangling the network of programs aiming to increase food security and examining how their work affects Durham residents.

Examining How Residents Utilize Food Resources in Durham

To better understand the food landscape in Durham, the team works in two subteams. The first focused on unearthing the experiences of people receiving food from local organizations like Root Causes and the other focused on food access and policy impacts at the organizational level.

Doctoral student Noah Gibson (Sociology) and senior undergraduate Elaijah Lapay (Program II) lead the first subteam, which has been surveying program participants to examine how they describe their food needs; whether they are enrolled in government programs; whether they go to multiple food banks; and how they travel to food banks, and how far.

Gibson has a deep interest in food policy and is currently working on his dissertation research, which intersects with his work on the team. He feels that his involvement in the team has helped him gain on-the-ground experience that contextualizes the ideas in his dissertation and makes a difference in the lives of community residents.

“One of the really great things about this semester is the whole class has had the opportunity to talk to several different community members in Durham, from people working at the Duke Campus Farm, to leaders of food pantries, to those working in the healthcare system,” Gibson shared. 

Lapay, who volunteered with Root Causes and studied food insecurity on another Bass Connections team in the midst of the pandemic, noted the importance of cultural sensitivity and the necessity of having future policy be informed by the specific ways in which food-insecure people experience the network of resources in Durham.

“Part of what we are working to understand are the underlying challenges of developing trust and understanding with communities that have been historically marginalized with regard to food insecurity and food policy,” Lapay said.

Because the needs of marginalized groups are not as well understood, the standard questions in food security screenings by healthcare providers may contribute to missing or misrepresenting residents’ needs.

“All the current food security screening questions are centered around the ability to afford food,” Lapay noted. “But how does that change for cultural communities in which people regularly share food with one another? Does it mean that you are food insecure if you don’t know exactly where your food is going to come from, though you can rely on your community to provide that for you? Does this mean we need to think in terms of access instead of affordability?”

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Reexamining the underlying assumptions of the healthcare, food access and food policy communities is just one way this subteam is seeking to understand the populations that Tracing the Roots and similar organizations seek to support.

Tracing the Food Security Networks

The second subteam is investigating food policy and access at the organization level to better understand the ecosystem of food security groups in Durham. Through interviews and case study analysis team members are investigating how programs and organizations in Durham relate to each other (if at all); how well they understand local, state and federal policies and programs; whether they work to enroll participants in government programs; and what challenges they routinely face.

Subteam member Habibatou Koureichi (Public Policy ’25) noted, “Our team has found that there isn’t strong collaboration between food security organizations in Durham. They all tend to operate as separate entities.” This lack of communication between organizations can create roadblocks for knowledge and resources sharing, creating gaps that affect those who need food assistance.

This subteam is working to create materials for food-related organizations that facilitate connections and information sharing to make their programs stronger.

“Our goal is to make things easier and more concrete for nonprofit leaders,” Koureichi said. “We would like to create some type of report or network map of what organizations exist in Durham and how they work. We also want to provide recommendations on how they can utilize food policies like SNAP and WIC to expand outreach and education to their participants.”