BME News

July 16, 2024

The achievable resolution limit of fluorescence microscopy

The system's most essential feature is a microscope's ability to distinguish between two closely spaced points — its resolution.

But noise can reduce that resolution.

Fang Huang, Purdue Institute for Cancer Research member and Reilly Associate Professor of Biomedical Engineering in Purdue Engineering, and the team are the first to develop a theoretical approach that accounts for the impact of noise. Learn more about "The achievable resolution limit of fluorescence microscopy" and its impact.
July 8, 2024

Purdue BME alumnus making great strides

Aaron Kyle, a PhD alumnus of the Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering, was named a Fellow of the Biomedical Engineering Society (BMES) and the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering (AIMBE), while being a professor at Duke University and director of the Outreach Design Education Program.
July 1, 2024

Purdue BME grad student accepts award, publishes research

Adam Wright, a PhD student in Yunjie Tong’s lab, recently accepted the Merit Award: Summa Cum Laude from the International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine (ISMRM) during their annual conference. He was given the award for being in the top 5% of abstracts based on his research regarding diffusion imaging and human glymphatics.
July 1, 2024

Welcome to the Weldon School family

Purdue University in Indianapolis may be new but Biomedical Engineering has been a part of the Indianapolis landscape for decades. As a part of the Purdue expansion to Indianapolis, the Biomedical Engineering department in Indianapolis officially joins the Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering.
June 24, 2024

Purdue researchers' groundbreaking study published in Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience

Looking for an apple in a bowl of fruit, how do you locate the apple? Your brain must correctly bind together the location and features of each fruit. This “binding problem” is a significant challenge for artificial neural networks for object or scene recognition, which often have to add in attention mechanisms or memory-augmented architectures to mitigate the problem.
June 17, 2024

Culture and technology go hand-in-hand in Japan

Twenty-three students from the Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering, the College of Engineering and other Purdue University colleges and departments spent two weeks in Japan visiting medical device companies, universities, research facilities and government agencies.
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