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Headband device developed for home use with young ADHD patients
A Vanderbilt biomedical engineering professor has developed a prototype headband to measure brain activity that could have widespread application in studying and ultimately treating ADHD and other neurological disorders. The device is lightweight, portable, and inexpensive to construct. Prototype components cost less than $250, compared to costs exceeding $10,000 for… Read MoreOct. 21, 2021
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Immersive clinical training elevates engineering PhD programs
VISE alumni positioned to transform medical procedures In working with clinicians, Winona Richey gained big-picture knowledge of workflow, patient experience and existing technology in the operating room. The interactions sparked ideas to improve tumor marking and surgery for breast cancer. Carli DeJulius shadowed a rheumatologist and multiple orthopedic surgeons at… Read MoreOct. 21, 2021
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Novel advanced light design and fabrication process could revolutionize sensing technologies
Vanderbilt and Penn State engineers have developed a novel approach to design and fabricate thin-film infrared light sources with near-arbitrary spectral output driven by heat, along with a machine learning methodology called inverse design that reduced the optimization time for these devices from weeks or months on a multi-core computer… Read MoreOct. 21, 2021
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BME alumnus Ash Jayagopal named Chief Scientific Officer of Opus Genetics
Opus Genetics, a patient-focused gene therapy company developing treatments for orphan inherited retinal diseases, has announced a key appointment to its founding executive team. Ash Jayagopal has joined the company as Chief Scientific Officer. Ash Jayagopal Jayagopal, BE’03, MS’05, PhD’08, is a biomedical engineering graduate who also served as an… Read MoreOct. 21, 2021
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Team to engineer algae for more productive biofuel potential
Cyanobacteria, or blue-green algae, holds great promise for biofuel production because the free fatty acids they secrete are more easily recovered than those typically produced by green algae. Such fatty acids, or lipids, are readily converted into fuels. With a new $1.5 million Department of Energy grant, a three-institution team… Read MoreOct. 19, 2021
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Biomedical engineers demonstrate potential for first clinically successful osteoarthritis drug
Vanderbilt biomedical engineers have demonstrated the potential for the first clinically available osteoarthritis drug that interrupts the disease process rather than solely managing the pain it causes. The group used “packages” of engineered nanoparticles to sustainably deliver a type of RNA to the cells in the joint over time after… Read MoreOct. 19, 2021
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Coursework, mentors, and career development emphasis fuel internship success
Hannah Farley, CS ’23, talks about her internship at SiriusXM and Pandora and how her time at the School of Engineering set her up to succeed. Read MoreOct. 19, 2021
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Clinical observation adds rigor, real-world design constraints to BME graduate studies
BME PhD student Eric Tang talks about how clinical training he’s received through a VISE program has shaped his approach to research. Read MoreOct. 19, 2021
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21st Century literacy
Once a domain of room-sized mainframes and esoteric databases, computer science is everywhere and part of everything. Basic understanding of it has become, in effect, a 21st Century competency. Read MoreOct. 19, 2021
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Commercial Impact
VUSE technologies have generated nearly $7.5 million in the last five years. Read MoreOct. 19, 2021