Research is more than discovery. It is preparation. It is partnership. It is progress. And at the University of Rhode Island (URI), it is the foundation upon which we build impact for our state, our nation, and our world.
This Annual Review of URI’s Research Impact illustrates the transformative power of research through the impact across disciplines and across lifetimes. From nanotechnology to detect disease at its earliest stages to coastal resilience strategies to protect Rhode Island communities from sea level rise, URI research improves lives in tangible and measurable ways. Just as importantly, research shapes the thinkers, innovators, and leaders who will carry this work forward.
This year marked a defining milestone for our research enterprise. In 2025, we achieved a record $165.2 million in research funding. This funding translates to economic impact. A recent study shows URI’s research enterprise results in $520.4M in economic impact to our regional economy and supports 6,350 jobs. The funding signals that our work addresses urgent challenges and advances solutions that matter—locally, nationally, and globally.
Research is not conducted in isolation. Scientific investigation strengthens the educational experience of our students, who work alongside faculty mentors to ask meaningful questions and develop practical skills. Through research, students become innovators, problem-solvers, and leaders prepared to navigate a complex world. Whether in laboratories, field sites, design studios, clinics, or community settings, experiential learning through research equips our graduates with the resilience and critical thinking demanded by today’s workforce.
At URI, research thrives in laboratories, in field settings, on farms, in coastal communities, in our cities and towns, and in partnerships with not only industry and government but with the people of Rhode Island. Our faculty and students connect chemistry to entrepreneurship, artificial intelligence to user experience, marine science to fisheries policy, engineering to sustainability, and humanities scholarship to ethical engagement. Their efforts bridge theory and application—an embodiment of our Land-Grant and Sea-Grant missions.
The stories in this issue remind us that research changes trajectories. Alumni such as Patrick McCarthy, Tong Sun, and Aria Mia Loberti demonstrate how immersive research experiences cultivate intellectual agility, resilience, creativity, and comfort with ambiguity-qualities that fuel innovation across sectors. Whether launching companies, leading AI development at global firms, shaping public policy, or building careers in the arts, they credit their research foundations at URI as the catalyst for their success.

Our commitment to student research remains central to our mission. Programs such as NSF-supported Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) and Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowships provide students with opportunities to tackle real-world challenges—from microplastics in Narragansett Bay to sustainable recycling solutions—while developing critical skills in experimentation, collaboration, and problem-solving. These experiences do more than train scientists; they cultivate informed citizens and strengthen Rhode Island’s knowledge economy.
At the same time, URI’s faculty continue to push the boundaries of discovery. Research awards support high-risk, high-reward research that advances nanotechnology, biosensing, coastal adaptation, and socio-ecological resilience. Through interdisciplinary collaboration and community engagement, our researchers co-generate knowledge that informs public policy, strengthens industry, and enhances quality of life.
As Rhode Island’s only public R1 land-grant university, URI holds a distinctive responsibility. The Morrill Act established a model of higher education rooted in accessibility, practical impact, and service. Today, that legacy endures through programs active in all 39 municipalities, through connecting science with our community partners, and through agricultural and environmental research that safeguards both livelihoods and landscapes.
Research matters because it fuels economic growth. It matters because it informs evidence-based policy. It matters because it prepares students not only for careers, but for leadership. And it matters because the most pressing challenges of our time—climate change, public health, sustainable energy, food security, and technological transformation—demand rigorous inquiry paired with public purpose.
“This issue celebrates a university community committed to curiosity, collaboration and impact.”Bethany D. Jenkins, Ph.D.
This issue celebrates the momentum we are building together. It reflects a university community committed to curiosity, collaboration, and consequences. The work shown here is ambitious, interdisciplinary, and deeply connected to the needs of our communities.
As we look ahead, we remain steadfast in our belief that research is not an end in itself. It is a catalyst—for opportunity, for resilience, and for a more equitable and sustainable future.
Together, we will continue to advance discovery, empower students, and deliver impact.
