Federal funding for biomedical research pays off by enabling basic discoveries that lead to lifesaving treatments, writes ...
Johns Hopkins biomedical engineers use federal funding to pioneer immunotherapies that could free diabetes patients from ...
Federally funded research at Johns Hopkins offers new avenues for detecting brain disease long before it strikes.
Unlike traditional course-based summer programs, Johns Hopkins ISPEED in BME emphasizes project-based, hands-on learning that allows students to build practical skills that will set them apart as they ...
Johns Hopkins Medicine laboratory scientists say they have developed a potential new way to treat a variety of rare genetic ...
Hopkins BME students go on to become leaders in industry, medicine, and science, all with a passion for solving problems.
Rachel Karchin is a pioneer in computational cancer genomics, developing innovative algorithms for variant interpretation and tumor evolution. She created CHASM, the first widely used statistical ...
Johns Hopkins Biomedical Engineering’s ISPEED program is a residential, four-week summer program for talented high-school students who are passionate about exploring concepts in biomedical engineering ...
Increasingly, the decisions physicians make about how best to treat their patients will be informed by the results of computational analyses of patient data. This increasing reliance on methods of ...
“Nano and Micro” Project: We are developing novel microfabricated sensors and devices for neuroscience research. The first example is the development of microelectromechanical (MEMS) techniques that ...