Engineering as a path to improve drug costs and delivery
For undergraduate senior Kaelyn Gaza, BME has provided a set of framing skills for tackling engineering problems from start to finish. Read more
For undergraduate senior Kaelyn Gaza, BME has provided a set of framing skills for tackling engineering problems from start to finish. Read more
After graduation, undergraduate senior Danielle Frye will start a career at Merck & Co. as part of their IT emerging talent program. Read more
Undergraduate senior Molly Eron is an aspiring physician excited to bridge healthcare divides through biomedical research. Read more
Undergraduate senior Caroline Kornbrek is studying BME to pursue a career in neuroscience research and technology. Read more
Undergraduate senior David Bruk-Rodriguez was inspired by his younger sister, born partially blind due to a disconnected retina, to study biomedical engineering and contribute to a solution for her vision impairment. Read more
Ph.D. student Aminat Modupe Ibrahim is applying a biohybrid approach to develop an affordable, next-generation heart valve for people in developing countries. Read more
Jeremiah James is a doctoral student in biomedical engineering from Tampa, Florida. He studies how a newly invented technique creates polymer nanoparticles at Cornell under the guidance of Rong Yang. Read more
NSF GRFP recipient Ambika Pachaury is a third-year doctoral student in biomedical engineering from Noida, India. She studies the interactions between the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein and the membrane components of cells under the guidance of Susan Daniel. Read more
Dr. Alex Kwan comes to Cornell from Yale University, where he was a faculty member in the Department of Psychiatry in the School of Medicine since 2013. At Cornell, Kwan will apply neuroengineering approaches to the study of mental health. Read more
Erica Pratt's doctoral work in Dr. Brian Kirby's lab focused on investigating circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in the peripheral blood system of patients with solid tumors and how these cells can be used as a noninvasive tumor surrogate, and as prognostic biomarkers for survival in advanced disease. Read more