Alumni

  • Vanderbilt University

    Successful entrepreneur and innovator chosen to lead new Innovation Center

    Robert Grajewski A startup veteran whose ventures range from retail to manufacturing will be joining Vanderbilt University this spring as the inaugural executive director of the newly created Innovation Center. Robert Grajewski, president of Edison Nation Medical and co-founder of Heritage Handcrafted, both in Charlotte,… Read More

    Feb. 1, 2016

  • Vanderbilt University

    Vanderbilt engineering PhD disrupts wearables market with biosensing through metal

      Fashion icon Iris Apfel, left, and Vanderbilt Engineering PhD and WiseWear founder Jerry Wilmink. (Photos courtesy of WiseWear) Put Wisewear on your wrist, and other women likely will think it’s simply a fabulous piece of jewelry. For now. After wowing 2016 Consumer Electronics Show… Read More

    Jan. 30, 2016

  • Vanderbilt University

    Research shows patient privacy, ‘big data’ can coexist

      A Vanderbilt study shows that anonymization algorithms can provide privacy protection across multiple institutions as clinical data are released for research. (photo by Susan Urmy) A new study, led by investigators at Vanderbilt University, confirms that the scientific pursuit of so-called big data from hospitals and… Read More

    Jan. 29, 2016

  • Vanderbilt University

    High-tech teddy bear creator to deliver engineering entrepreneurial lecture Feb. 25

    Jerry the Bear helps kids understand diabetes and self-care https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PNr0ASnxQ6k Jerry the Bear helps hundreds of kids diagnosed with type 1 diabetes learn to take care of themselves. Jerry has sensors throughout his body and a screen in his belly. Kids can “feed” him different foods, squeeze his fingers to… Read More

    Jan. 28, 2016

  • Vanderbilt University

    Vanderbilt team gets context, closer look for Sterling Ranch sustainability projects

    A team of 30 Vanderbilt University students and professors from across the disciplines spent a series of information-packed, 14-hour days in suburban Denver to understand better how their work will lead to smart, sustainable cities. They returned from that winter break trip with the context of research already underway –… Read More

    Jan. 22, 2016

  • Vanderbilt University

    Three faculty members selected as 2016 Chancellor Faculty Fellows

    Three engineering professors have been named to the 2016 class of Chancellor Faculty Fellows. The class comprises 14 highly accomplished, recently tenured faculty from the humanities, social sciences, life and physical sciences, and clinical sciences, as well as business, education and engineering. “This class of fellows represents… Read More

    Jan. 21, 2016

  • Vanderbilt University

    Vanderbilt on team to develop advanced nuclear reactors to reduce carbon emissions

    Vanderbilt University is part of a new public-private partnership that has been awarded up to $40 million from the U.S. Department of Energy to explore, develop and demonstrate advanced nuclear reactor technologies to help America meet its goals for carbon emission reduction. The current award to Southern Company Services, a… Read More

    Jan. 20, 2016

  • Vanderbilt University

    Amy Shah receives Vanderbilt’s Lai Sulin Scholarship

    Amy T. Shah, a biomedical engineering doctoral candidate, has received the 2015 Lai Sulin Scholarship. The award, given to a Vanderbilt University graduate student who conducts research in an area related to cancer, carries a $5,000 stipend and will be presented in early 2016. Amy Shah Shah’s current research with… Read More

    Jan. 15, 2016

  • Unique Vanderbilt Engineering partnership with smart city broadens immersive learning

    Unique Vanderbilt Engineering partnership with smart city broadens immersive learning

      Just how immersive is project-based learning at the School of Engineering? One team of fourth-years is figuring out how adding $50,000 in upgrades to a floor plan today could make a house net-zero for decades. Another is devising a monitoring system that allows homeowners to know how much water… Read More

    Jan. 14, 2016

  • Vanderbilt University

    Hall Lecture: Global health care inequities need engineering ingenuity

    New approaches to engineering design are needed to solve inequities in global health care, according to a widely-acclaimed bioengineer who tackles neonatal health and cancer mortality in low-resource settings in the United States and Africa. Richards-Kortum (Rice University) Rebecca Richards-Kortum will deliver the Vanderbilt University School of Engineering’s John R. Read More

    Jan. 13, 2016