Nakhmani receives NIH grant to develop user-friendly software to aid in study of the brain

The goal of the project is to refine the existing software framework and convert it into a user-friendly Python-based package.
Written by: Grant Martin
Media contact: Brianna Hoge


University of Alabama at BirminghamStream Arie Nakhmani 4 originalArie Nakhmani, Ph.D.
Photography: Steve Wood
’s Arie Nakhmani, Ph.D., associate professor in the School of Engineering’s Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, recently received a short-term $85,000 award from the National Institutes of Health for a multi-university project to improve software that processes data from the glymphatic and lymphatic systems of the brain.

Nakhmani is the principal investigator for the UAB portion of the project, which will last seven months and also includes Helene Benveniste, Ph.D., of Yale University and Allen Tannenbaum, Ph.D., from Stony Brook University.

“The glymphatic and lymphatic systems control fluid and waste disposal from the central nervous system and are therefore pivotal for sustaining a healthy brain,” Nakhmani said. “A computational source code has been developed to process glymphatic-lymphatic data, which is of interest to the user community studying the two systems.”

The goal of the project is to refine the existing software framework and convert it into a user-friendly Python-based package that will then be integrated into a plug-in-based graphical user interface and tested for operational efficiency and usability.