Luana Colloca, MD, PHD, MS: Researcher of the Year
Luana Colloca, MD, PhD, MS, first became fascinated with the placebo effect and pain management when she was in medical school.“I was captivated by the brain’s functions, especially how little we know about its role in healing and how it influences the perception of pain-related symptoms,” said Colloca, professor, Department of Pain and Translational Symptom Science, University of Maryland School of Nursing (UMSON), and University of Maryland MPower professor.Colloca is an international expert in the fields of placebo effect and nocebo effect — the opposite of the placebo effect in which instead of having a positive response, patients have negative outcomes to treatments that cannot be explained by the treatments’ pharmacologic effects — and mechanisms of pain modulation. She has secured multiple National Institutes of Health awards, including several R01 grants and an R21 grant. For her pioneering work, Colloca has been named the University of Maryland, Baltimore (UMB) 2024 Founders Week Researcher of the Year.Learn more: https://www.umaryland.edu/founders/founders-week-award-winners/researcher-of-the-year/
More from Youtube
- 8:38UMB Sustainability TourFor Campus Sustainability Month, we're going behind the scenes with the University of Maryland, Baltimore Office of Sustainability and Design and Construction to view the eco-friendly features of buildings at UMB.Recently retired University Architect Anthony Consoli, AIA, LEED AP, leads us on a tour of:Sixth Floor Greenwall in Design and Construction (00:32) Design and Construction Office Neighborhood (01:58) Arch Street Pedestrian Walkway (03:17) Health Sciences Research Facility 3 (04:09) HSRF 3 Bee Hives (05:12) Health Sciences Research Facility 2 Pollinator Garden (05:33) Louisa Parsons Memorial Garden (06:06) Pascault Row Native Plants (07:00)
- 58:30University of Maryland School of Social Work New Building Town Hall | May 2, 2024A final hybrid town hall was hosted on May 2, 2024, to present a design preview of the new University of Maryland School of Social Work building. The project is expected to break ground in October 2024.Learn more at https://www.umaryland.edu/designandconstruction/capital-projects/projects/school-of-social-work-building-project/
- 0:49See Me Beyond My Disability #inspirationalvideoRecognize the humanity in people, and don't define them by their disabilities.Sydnee Chavis, DMD, MS, clinical assistant professor in the Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery in the University of Maryland School of Dentistry, shares a story about growing up with her older sister, Brandy, who has cerebral palsy and developmental disabilities, and how she didn’t perceive her as different until the family was out to dinner one night.
- 0:54Why Don't People Trust Experts?Experts need integrity and benevolence above all else to gain public trust.Andrew Coop, PhD, MA, professor in the Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences and associate dean for Graduate Programs in the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy, shared those words during the third annual Faculty Convocation at the University of Maryland, Baltimore.Dr. Coop has been a faculty member at the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy since 1999, serving as chair of the Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences (PSC) from 2007 to 2015. In addition to his current role as UMSOP’s associate dean for graduate programs, he previously served as the school’s associate dean for academic affairs from 2016 to 2024 and as PSC’s vice chair of academic affairs from 2006 to 2007.Dr. Coop has received funding from the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute on Drug Abuse for his research on opioids, stimulants, and depressants, all of which were interdisciplinary projects concerned with the design and development of novel tools to allow pharmacological study of the biological systems involved in the abuse of these drugs.
- 0:43Augmented Reality Tech Overlays Arteries Over Stroke Patient #universityofmarylandWith the power of augmented reality, University of Maryland School of Graduate Studies physician assistant students are seeing real-time anatomy and symptoms up close, and take control of their @UMBaltimore medical education like never before.This is the HaloCamera, which is a volumetric capture studio at @UofMaryland that uses 300 cameras and AI-powered data to create lifelike 3D simulations, helping medical students and professionals experience patient care in an entirely new way. #MPowerMD #MedicalEducation #Innovation #AR #VR
- 3:53Inside the HoloCamera: How 3D Capture is Transforming Medical TrainingMedical educators at the University of Maryland, Baltimore led by Dr. Cheri Hendrix and computer scientists at the University of Maryland, College Park led by Amitabh Varshney collaborate to teach physician assistants with the help of an immersive virtual reality tool called HoloCamera.The HaloCamera is a volumetric capture studio, which is the same technology used in virtual reality and augmented reality games and providing character modeling in movies. This revolutionary technology uses 300 cameras and AI-powered data to create lifelike 3D simulations, helping medical students and professionals experience patient care in an entirely new way. Watch as virtual patients come to life, allowing physician assistant students at the University of Maryland School of Graduate Studies, located in Baltimore, to see real-time anatomy and symptoms up close, and take control of their medical education like never before.#Halocamera #MedicalTraining #3DTech #AIinMedicine