CLEVELAND, Ohio — The National Institutes of Health awarded a $2.5 million research grant to support medical technology invented at Case Western Reserve University, the university said in a recent news release.

The research grant was awarded jointly to Case Western’s Susann Brady-Kalnay and Cleveland-based BioInVision Inc., which is a spinout company from CWRU. Brady-Kalnay is a professor of molecular biology and microbiology at the Case Western Reserve School of Medicine.

The grant will fund research exploring the use of artificial intelligence and “machine learning” software to create an image of an entire mouse in hours, the university said.

The new techniques allow researchers to track individual cells—like migrating cancer cells or T-cells—to evaluate cell-based treatments like i

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