
Celebrating Summer Award Season
Duke Engineering faculty and students garnered a wide array of awards and recognitions over the summer
Duke Engineering faculty and students garnered a wide array of awards and recognitions over the summer
Data from smartwatches can help identify people with likely COVID-19 infections, enabling physicians to catch more cases with fewer tests
BME Professor Jessilyn Dunn comments on a health technology startup called HumanFirst that is changing the way clinical trials are run by putting people at the center of drug development.
Open-ended, $3.5 million award will help tie complex models of blood flow to simple heartbeat measurements through AI
NIH awards $15.75M to research team led by Case Western Reserve University and Duke University to map the vagus nerve
New encryption method uses simulated bacterial growth based on specific initial conditions to form patterns corresponding to letters
Students from Durham, NC, learn engineering fundamentals through two summer outreach programs at Duke
New nanoparticle shape can greatly enhance signals from multiple separate biomarkers at once, accurately detecting head and neck cancers without biopsies
Cryogenic electron microscopy (Cryo-EM) rapidly creates high-resolution images of the smallest pieces of proteins at the atomic level.
Through tight-knit cohorts, the unique endowed program provides financial aid, dedicated advising, a summer bridge program, and opportunities for research and entrepreneurship.
BME Professor Nimmi Ramanujam, the recipient of the highest award for outstanding contributions to biomedical engineering, shares her thoughts on the field and her research.
High levels of horizontal gene transfer could help researchers engineer useful microbiomes independent of unstable population dynamics