
Amanda Randles Wins Inaugural Sony Women in Technology Award with Nature
Associated $250,000 prize will support Randles's work to build "digital twins" for the human vasculature to improve heart-related health outcomes
Associated $250,000 prize will support Randles's work to build "digital twins" for the human vasculature to improve heart-related health outcomes
Cameron McIntyre’s research allows doctors to see a patient’s brain in three dimensions. Using this hologram, neurosurgeons can perform complex surgeries to alleviate the tremors associated with Parkinson’s disorder and epilepsy.
A new platform can design and match small peptides with complex, tangled proteins previously considered unreachable
Faculty across biostatistics and bioinformatics, surgery and biomedical engineering will develop models to understand how antibodies protect against severe influenza infection
Kafui Dzirasa wants nothing less than to reengineer the brain’s electrical patterns to treat anxiety, depression, bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia.
Launched from the lab of Charles Gersbach, the company uses epigenetic editing to control gene expression without modifying the DNA itself
Local and global collaborations help BME Design Fellows make a low-cost, affordable, and easy-to-use screening tool for hearing loss in children
Sommer will play a key role in identifying opportunities for Duke to extend its impact in the brain sciences, through both pathbreaking research and educational opportunities
Join Dean Jerry Lynch and Professor Amanda Randles in a conversation about how digital twins - advanced, personalized computational models of a patient's body - could help save lives.
Kim will use the R25 grant to develop programs that help students learn how to integrate biotechnology tools into clinical environments
New award recognizes three early to mid-career tech researchers with $250,000 each to support research and accelerate achievements that will drive positive impact in the world
New algorithm better identifies the origin of a seizure to guide more precise surgical interventions