The research plan and goals for SCIB
The SCIB was established at UAB to improve research on human injury
resulting from motor vehicle crashes, and that remains its primary
goal. Currently, 17 projects across three research domains are
seeking to improve our understanding of human interaction with
machines in vehicle crashes. Some of the research projects are
not something that an average person might recognize immediately
as having a vehicle crash focus. However, all the SCIB’s
research taken together promises to improve the understanding
of what happens
to the human body in a vehicle crash and thus improve research
into better safety standards and more accurate post-injury treatment
both on the scene and in the hospital setting. It is foundational
research, critical to lowering injury rates, increasing survival
statistics, and improving human performance and function after injury. Said simply, the primary goals of SCIB are to lessen the chances
you will die or be injured in a vehicle crash, and to improve the
chances that if you are injured, you will have as few long-term
impairments as possible. The primary focus currently is on injuries
to the head, neck and extremities among children and adults. Back to top Research Domain One deals with head and brain injury; the domain
director is Dr. David Meaney of the University of Pennsylvania.
The main focus of this Domain is to improve the predictive capabilities
of a Simulated Injury Monitor, or SIMon, a “next generation” (G2)
injury assessment tool developed by Dr. Rolf Eppinger of the National
Highway Transportation Safety Administration (NHTSA). Essentially,
SIMon takes a wide range of data on how the body reacts to a deceleration
event, and predicts what type of injuries a specific set of factors
(such as speed and point of impact) will cause. A computational
model relies on good data, without which its calculations will
not be accurate or helpful. The various research projects under
Research Domain One are working together to improve the data used
to make calculations and to refine and improve the computational
power of SIMon. Back to top The overall goal of work in Research Domain
Two is to enhance
the understanding of neck injury mechanisms. The research projects
in this Domain focus specifically on catastrophic neck injury,
pediatric neck injuries, and whiplash injuries. One prominent feature
in several of the research projects is determining the load tolerances
of various configurations of the neck and spine; that is, what
level of pressure, impact or deceleration causes injury, and how
the interaction of parts of the neck and spine during an injury
event result in greater or lesser injury in response to the loading.
Some of the projects look at only one facet of the equation, such
as the mechanical properties of the cervical spine or the way children’s
bodies respond to deceleration and impact events as opposed to
the way adult bodies respond. Some of these data will also be used
in improving SIMon’s predictive accuracy. Back to top Research Domain Three deals with measuring and assessing human
tolerances and looking at the ways the human body responds to traumatic
loading. Recognizing that much of the current data on human tolerances – on
how varying loads affect muscles, bones, brain and integrated body
systems during a deceleration event – are not based on a representative
sample of the entire population, this Domain emphasizes assessment
of the effects of such variables as aging and population demographics,
on load responses. Research in this domain includes projects on
both body system responses to injury events and computational assessment
tools for increasing the scope and accuracy of future biomechanics
research.
Back to top Projects and investigators currently active in SCIB research
Projects By Research Domain, Title, Principal Investigator(s) and
Institution
Research Domain One: Head and Brain Injury
Domain Director: David Meaney, University of Pennsylvania
Long Term Vision
Evaluating and Enhancing the Predictive Capabilities of SIMon
King Yang & Albert King, Wayne State University
Measuring Brain Tissue Injury Thresholds
Susan Margulies & David Meaney, University of Pennsylvania
Impact Acceleration Tests and Material Properties of Rat Brain
Kurosh Darvish, Temple University & Jeff Crandall, University of Virginia
Small Animal Model of Diffuse Axonal Injury
Evangelos Eleftheriou, Jean Peduzzi-Nelson and Jay Mythaler,
University of Alabama at Birmingham
Brain Cell and Tissue Tolerance to Traumatic Loading
Michelle LaPlaca, Georgia Institute of Technology
Biomechanics of Brain Injury: Experimental Studies
Philip Bayly, Washington University in St. Louis
Data Archive of Non-Human Primate Brain Injury Studies
Susan Margulies, University of Pennsylvania
Research Domain Two: Neck and Whiplash Injury
Domain Director: Barry Myers, Duke University
Long Term Vision
Quantitative Tolerance Criteria for SIMon: Cell Death and Dysfunction
Barclay Morrison, III, Columbia University
Prevention of Head and Neck Impact Injury by Improved Helmet Design
(Completed 2002)
Barry Myers, Duke University
Pediatric Head and Neck Impact Injury
Barry Myers, Duke University
Computational Modeling of the Cervical Spine Musculature
Marcus Pandy, University of Texas at Austin (thru 01.05)
Barry Myers, Duke University
Determination of Cervical Spine Substructure Mechanical Properties
J. Marcus Hollis, University of South Alabama
Injury Mechanism of Facet Mediated Whiplash Neck Pain
Beth Winkelstein, University of Pennsylvania
Research Domain Three: Human Tolerance
Final Report: Effects of Impact Loading on Articular Cartilage
Domain Director: Kerry Athanasiou, Rice University
Long Term Vision
Effects of Impact Loading on Articular Cartilage
Kerry Athanasiou, Rice University
The Effects of Orbital Muscles on Eye Injury Biomechanics
Stefan Duma, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
(Virginia Tech)
Evolutionary Design of Finite Element Meshes for Injury Biomechanics
Research
Lewis Payton, Auburn University
Brian Carnahan (2003-2004) Feasibility Study for a Miniature 9-Axis Accelerometer Array
William Mills, Konigsberg Instrument Company
Numerical and Emperical Investigations of Automotive Related Aortic Injury
King Yang , Wayne State University
The SCIB's Digital Child Project
Numerical Model Development: Phase 1 and 2 Overview
Russ Fine and Jay Goldman, University of Alabama at Birmingham
Numerical Model Development: Phase 1
Identifying Pediatric Anatomy for Model Development
Al King, Wayne State University
Numerical Model Development: Phase 2
Development of Finite Element Meshes for Child Models
Bharat Soni, University of Alabama at Birmingham
Back to top SCIB researchers: News and Activities Researchers affiliated with the SCIB are very active in their
chosen fields. This section provides links to information on
their activities and news articles about them, on both SCIB and
non-SCIB research.
2006 News
2004 News
- Dr. Stefan Duma was featured in the Virginia Tech Research magazine in December 2004, in an article called “On A Quest to Banish Injuries”. Dr. Duma’s SCIB-sponsored research looks at in situ cadaveric eyes to learn more about the role of the eye’s oblique muscles in serious eye injury events. (Link for the article: http://www.research.vt.edu/resmag/2004resmag/Duma.html)
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