BME News

May 16, 2019

Leading clinicians and researchers propose transformative changes in healthcare

What if instead of investing most of our healthcare resources in treating disease, we invested more in preventing disease? What will it take for new technological advancements to start saving lives? What will healthcare look like in the near- and long-term future? These are a few of the topics that were discussed at the “What IF Medical Technology Advanced Health?” public forum on May 3 at Hine Hall Auditorium in Indianapolis.
May 14, 2019

Chi Hwan Lee wins Young Investigator Grant

Chi Hwan Lee has won a 2019 Korean-American Scientists and Engineers Association Young Investigator Grant in recognition of outstanding early career development in science, engineering and technology. Lee is an assistant professor of biomedical and mechanical engineering and speech, language, and hearing sciences at Purdue University.
April 17, 2019

Eight students advance to Engineering 2169 Student Pitch Competition

Eight graduate students from Purdue’s College of Engineering emerged as finalists from a field of 21 hopefuls who competed in the first round of the Engineering 2169 Health and Longevity pitch competition held at the Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering on April 11.
April 16, 2019

Irazoqui receives 2019 Faculty Excellence Award for Research

Pedro P. Irazoqui, Reilly Professor of Biomedical Engineering and interim head of Electrical and Computer Engineering, received the Purdue College of Engineering Faculty Excellence Award for Research. The award honors faculty for an exceptional recent research contribution that has had significant impact on the discipline and/or society.
April 1, 2019

Two junior faculty members recognized with named professorships

Tamara Kinzer-Ursem and Jacqueline Linnes were named Marta E. Gross Assistant Professors of Biomedical Engineering through the Purdue College of Engineering's Rising Star program. The Rising Star Program recognizes assistant and associate professors for their exceptional accomplishments and leadership in research, teaching, and engagement.
March 27, 2019

Implant to better track brain chemical gone rogue after neurotrauma

Your chances of getting a nasty migraine increase following a spinal cord injury, thanks to a chemical messenger in the brain that spikes to toxic levels, past studies have suggested. For treatment to get any better, researchers need to catch that split-second spike in action and closely follow its path of destruction.
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