Randolph Nesse, MD, is a research professor of life sciences at Arizona State University. For more about evolutionary medicine, see the International Society for Evolution, Medicine and Public Health.
Past Chairs’ Reflections (11:00–12:15 ET) Former BOHSI Chairs William Marras and Pascale Carayon will join current Chair Fred Oswald to discuss how human-systems integration has evolved across decades ...
Cardiovascular Reparative Medicine and Tissue Engineering (CRMTE) aims to develop future technologies and therapeutic strategies that will serve as treatment for cardiovascular disease. CRMTE includes ...
Embedding faculty is part of the center's $10 million effort to promote innovation and the exchange of ideas at the nexus of engineering and medicine. The center's faculty fellowships come with a ...
Matt Arkenberg, a first-year doctoral student at Purdue’s Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering, is developing novel biomaterials that could one day be used to promote survival of pancreatic islets ...
A new master’s program in Personalized Medicine and Applied Engineering will seek to provide students with the “hard skills” necessary to work in the medical device design industry. The year-long ...
BUFFALO, N.Y. -- Natesh Parashurama, MD, PhD, assistant professor of chemical and biological engineering at the University at Buffalo, has made his life’s mission the translation of stem cell research ...
Regenerative medicine combines tissue engineering and cell therapies to repair or replace damaged human tissues and organs. Key applications include treating osteoarthritis with mesenchymal stem cells ...
Researchers from Penn Engineering and Penn Medicine have developed a strategy for optimizing vaccination rollouts. The Jan. 22 report identified the challenges of distributing vaccines among different ...
Professor Igor Efimov joins a list of AASL honorees that includes Sir Salman Rushdie, Henry Louis Gates Jr., and three ...