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Hopkins biomedical engineering students develop wearable tech to help ballet dancers improve form and prevent injuries.
Projects from Rama Chellappa, Bloomberg Distinguished Professor of biomedical engineering, and Joel Bader, professor of ...
Precision Care Medicine is a two-semester, project-based learning course offered to biomedical engineering graduate and undergraduate students at Johns Hopkins University. Students work with clinical ...
May 12, 2025 @ 11:00 am - 12:00 pm - Sei Kwang Hahn joins us from Pohang University of Science and Technology.
Natalia Trayanova, the Murray B. Sachs Professor of Biomedical Engineering at Johns Hopkins University, has been elected to the board of trustees for the Heart Rhythm Society. Founded in 1979, the ...
May 5, 2025 @ 1:00 pm - 2:00 pm - Abigail Person joins us from the University of Colorado Ancshutz Medical Campus.
As I watch my aging parents navigate their home, I can’t help but notice their increasing hesitancy on stairs or how careful they are reaching for objects on high shelves. Like millions of Americans, ...
Senescent skin cells, often referred to as zombie cells because they have outlived their usefulness without ever quite dying, have existed in the human body as a seeming paradox, causing inflammation ...
Student engineers in the Johns Hopkins Biomedical Engineering Design Team program have invented a new system to detect hemorrhagic shock early in traumatically injured children, who can lose a ...
Returning to sports too soon after a concussion or other traumatic brain injury (TBI) can increase the risk of an even more serious injury and long-term brain damage. Johns Hopkins biomedical ...
In an evolutionary paradox, one of the world’s most ancient predators might meet its match in one of humankind’s most modern advances: mosquito vs. artificial intelligence. Mosquito identification and ...
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