The Shoffstall lab focuses on two primary areas of research: 1) biomedical materials design and testing (including injectable and resorbable electrodes, novel material coatings and substrates, and ...
Miami University’s Biomedical Engineering and Biotechnology research cluster leverages interdisciplinary collaboration to solve critical health and clinical challenges. Research spans from tissue ...
The University of Denver’s Ritchie School of Engineering and Computer Science will launch a Bachelor of Science in Biomedical ...
Elucidata today announced the launch of the AI Lab, an initiative focused on advancing Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) across multiple research areas in Biomedical R&D, starting with one of the ...
Gargesha is a senior research associate for BMIL. He earned an MS and PhD in electrical engineering from Arizona State University and his BE in electronics and communications engineering from Banglore ...
The future of engineering-driven health innovation is currently unfolding at Arizona State University. In the School of Biological and Health Systems Engineering, part of the Ira A. Fulton Schools of ...
Researchers at UCL and Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH) have developed the first-ever lab-grown mini-stomach that contains ...
When Kagya Amoako, Ph.D., was a student at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, he had his first opportunity to take part in biomedical research. He soon realized how much he enjoyed the work and ...
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are tiny particles shed by cells that carry important molecular "clues" about the cell's identity and condition. EVs in blood vary widely and are mixed with many other ...
Biomedical engineering depends on cross-pollination—between medicine and engineering, research and application, academia and industry. As Canada’s first purpose-built school for this integrative ...
Biomedical engineering is an interdisciplinary field that combines the best of biology, medicine and engineering design to produce some of the world’s greatest healthcare innovations. Sound exciting?