Lee E. Voth-Gaeddert, PhD, PE, REHS, ASEP, Executive Director of the Infonomics Lab, will present the EEE Research Seminar on January 25 at 10:30 a.m. in POTR 234 (Fu Room).
Cynthia Holderbaum, administrative assistant for academic programs in the Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering, has received the 2021 Eudoxia Girard Martin Memorial Staff Recognition Award.
The program is another component of the expanding partnership between the Purdue College of Engineering and Indiana University School of Medicine to increase the number of doctoral engineering students who are focused on translating innovative technologies to clinical practice.
Science is an art, but not all scientists are artists. To push our students to their creative capacity while showcasing their research, the Weldon School held its first Art in Research exhibit on September 24, 2021 in Martin C. Jischke Hall of Biomedical Engineering.
The Neuroengineering and Neurotechnology research area fills a natural need that has arisen from the influx of outstanding new BME faculty with research aims in neuroscience, alongside the development of the research aims of established faculty and large cross-campus initiatives such as the Purdue Institute for Integrative Neuroscience and the Center for Implantable Devices.
One of the hallmarks of Weldon School is our intense focus on achieving real-world impact with our research. With Purdue BME licensing revenue exceeding $30M, the collective commitment of our faculty and students towards translating our research products from the benchtop to the bedside is more than evident.
Over the past decade BME has offered a series of graduate-level courses focused on Regulatory Affairs and Regulatory Science covering the full life cycle of medical technology. Increased knowledge around medical device regulation is an area that our advisory board, industry partners, and graduates have all shared as an unmet need.