Draft:Julius Fridriksson

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Julius Fridriksson
Julius Fridriksson in 2021.
Vice President for Research of the University of South Carolina
Assumed office
July 1, 2021
PresidentMichael Amiridis
Preceded byPrakash Nagarkatti
Personal details
Cognitive Neuroscience, Stroke recovery, Neuroimaging

Julius Fridriksson is an Icelandic-American academic and scientist who serves as the Vice President for Research at the University of South Carolina (USC).[1][2] He is also a SmartState Endowed Chair[3][4][5] and Health Sciences Distinguished Professor in the Arnold School of Public Health at USC,[6] and Director of the Aphasia Laboratory there.[7]

Fridriksson's expertise and research center on the neurobiology of human communication, particularly focusing on the impacts of damage to the brain areas responsible for communication. He has served as a faculty member and university leader at USC since 2001,[8] garnering more than $50 million in research funding throughout that time, primarily from the National Institutes of Health.[9]

Early Life and Education

Julius Fridriksson was born in the coastal town of Keflavík, in southwest Iceland. His brother, Johann Fridrik Fridriksson today serves as a member of the Icelandic parliament, Althing.[10]

Julius was the first member of his family to graduate from college.[11][12] In 1995, he earned a bachelor's degree in speech and hearing sciences from the University of Central Florida (UCF), where he went on to earn a master's degree in speech-language pathology in 1997. In 2001, Fridriksson completed his terminal degree, a Ph.D. in speech and hearing sciences from the University of Arizona (UA).[8][12]

Fridriksson's early research career began in 1995 while he was earning his master's degree from UCF. From 1995 through 1997, he worked as a Graduate Research Assistant at UCF's Speech Science Laboratory in the Department of Communication Disorders.[8]

After obtaining his master's degree, Fridriksson spent four years working as a speech-language pathologist, first at Avante Rehabilitation Center in Leesburg, Florida, from 1997 to 1998, and then at Kino Hospital in Tucson, Arizona, from 1999 to 2001, while he studied for his Ph.D. at UA.[8]

Career

Fridriksson was hired at USC in 2001, initially as an assistant professor in the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders. Progressing through the faculty ranks, Fridriksson received tenure in 2007 and full professorship in 2011, followed by appointment as USC Health Sciences Distinguished Professor in the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders in 2012.[8]

Research

As a neuroscientist, Fridriksson's research focuses primarily on the brain-based communication disorder, aphasia, which is typically caused by stroke or neurodegeneration (primary progressive aphasia). Aphasia is characterized by difficulty understanding or generating language because of injury to specific areas of the brain's left hemisphere that control communication. Fridriksson also has research interest and expertise in cognitive neuroscience, stroke recovery, stroke rehabilitation and neuroimaging. Over the course of his career, Fridriksson has garnered more than $50 million in research funding as a principal investigator (PI) to study aphasia and other areas of interest.[9]

In 2016, Fridriksson received an $11.1 million P50 program project grant from the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders to found and run the Center for the Study of Aphasia Recovery (C-STAR) for five years.[13][9][14][15] The grant supported work by Fridriksson and his collaborators to better understand how patients suffering from aphasia recover over time.

The 2016 C-STAR award included funding for two clinical trials: One trial, entitled Predicting Outcomes of Language Rehabilitation (POLAR), studied the impact of individual factors on aphasia recovery.[16][17] The other, called Brain Stimulation and Aphasia Treatment (SLISSE) studied the application of transcranial direct current stimulation for patients with chronic post-stroke aphasia.[18][19]

In 2020, the C-STAR P50 award was renewed for another $12.5 million over five years.[20][21][22] The 2020 C-STAR renewal award funded an expansion of the center's mission to include two additional clinical trials, Telerehabilitation for Aphasia (TERRA), which tested the effectiveness of telerehabilitation for treating aphasia,[23] and Escitalopram and Language Intervention for Subacute Aphasia (ELISA), which investigated the potential for the anti-depressant drug escitalopram to improve early aphasia recovery.[24][22]

Along with Dr. Chris Rorden,[25] Fridriksson serves as the co-director for USC's McCausland Center for Brain Imaging (MCBI), which is equipped with a Siemens Prisma fit 3T MRI system.[26] As a USC research core facility, the MCBI supports the neuroimaging needs of Fridriksson's research and that of dozens of other USC faculty members.

Fridriksson has also served as the SmartState Endowed Chair of Memory and Brain Function since 2016.[3][4][5]

Leadership

Julius Fridriksson has served as Vice President for Research at USC since July 1, 2021, succeeding Prakash Nagarkatti.[27][28]

Fridriksson implemented several new research programs in his first two years in the Office of the Vice President for Research. The Propel Research Mentorship Program came first, offering professional development and support for faculty early in their research careers as they develop a complete grant proposal for submission to either the NIH or NSF.[29] Over the course of one academic year, Propel provides a series of nine grant-writing workshops and pairs early-career faculty with more experienced senior researchers who can provide direct support. The first cohort of Propel mentees completed the program in spring 2022. By October 2023, Propel mentees had submitted about 175 grant applications and brought in more than $18 million in awards.[30]

In 2023, Fridriksson pursued development of the USC Brain Health Network and Brain Health Center,[31][32] securing state and federal funding to launch a network of satellite brain health clinics throughout South Carolina and build a cutting-edge hub for brain care and research in Columbia, South Carolina.[33]

The Brain Health Network[34] supports South Carolina patients experiencing cognitive symptoms of dementia by providing specialized screening and diagnostic services, along with neurologist-directed care plans a network of satellite clinics in rural and underserved areas around the state. This network meets a growing need in South Carolina for specialty care to support patients with Alzheimer's disease and other related dementias for which age is the greatest risk factor. The Brain Health Center in Columbia, slated to open in winter 2025-2026 will be equipped with a 7-Tesla MRI scanner and a 3-Tesla MRI scanner, spaces for infusion drug treatments and other facilities to treat and research dementias and other brain-based disorders.[33] Fridriksson and university partners secured funding for this pair of projects in 2023.[33] For the Brain Health Center, the state of South Carolina provided $30 million to renovate an existing facility, along with $5 million in recurring funds to support the Brain Health Network. Fridriksson and colleagues secured additional funding from the federal Health Resources and Services Administration to purchase MRI scanners for the Brain Health Center.[35][36]

In 2023, Fridriksson worked with partners to form a coalition to pursue designation and funding through the U.S. Department of Commerce Economic Development Association's Regional Technology and Innovation Hub program,[37] created by the the bipartisan CHIPS and Science Act of 2022. The South Carolina Tech Hub project consortium came together in 2023 under the title South Carolina Nexus for Advanced Resilient Energy (SC Nexus). The statewide SC Nexus consortium[38] includes more than 35 public and private member organizations led by the South Carolina State Department of Commerce. The University of South Carolina is a core member of SC Nexus.[39] In October 2023, SC Nexus received the EDA's Tech Hub designation,[39] and in 2024, the consortium applied for EDA Phase 2 funding to support its energy resiliency research and development efforts[40].[41]

Selected Bibliography

  • Age-specific CT and MRI templates for spatial normalization[42]; C Rorden, L Bonilha, J Fridriksson, B Bender, HO Karnath; Neuroimage 61 (4), 957-965; 2012[43]
  • Using transcranial direct-current stimulation to treat stroke patients with aphasia[44]; JM Baker, C Rorden, J Fridriksson; Stroke 41 (6), 1229-1236; 2010[43]
  • Individualized model predicts brain current flow during transcranial direct-current stimulation treatment in responsive stroke patient[45]; A Datta, JM Baker, M Bikson, J Fridriksson; Brain stimulation 4 (3), 169-174; 2011[43]
  • Transcranial direct current stimulation improves naming reaction time in fluent aphasia: a double-blind, sham-controlled study[46]; J Fridriksson, JD Richardson, JM Baker, C Rorden; Stroke 42 (3), 819-821; 2011[43]
  • Anatomy of aphasia revisited[47]; J Fridriksson, DB den Ouden, AE Hillis, G Hickok, C Rorden, A Basilakos, G Yourganov, L Bonilha; Brain 141 (3), 848-862; 2018[43]

Awards and Honors

  • UA Distinguished Alumnus Award, 2011[48]
  • Louis M. DiCarlo National Award for Clinical Advancement, American Speech and Hearing Foundation, 2011[49]
  • UCF Alumni Professional Achievement Award, 2013[50]
  • USC Breakthrough Leadership in Research Award, 2017[51]
  • SEC Faculty Achievement Award, 2018[52]

References

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