Among Mel Owen's final two choices is Cindy Cullers, a 60-year-old retired biomedical engineer from Austin, Texas. Here's what to know about her.
Among Mel Owen's final choices is Peg Munson, a 62-year-old retired firefighter and bomb tech from Las Vegas, Nevada. Here's ...
Cortland Biomedical, a full-service medical textiles product development partner that provides access to a full-spectrum of global engineering, design and manufacturing capabilities, today announced ...
A peek inside some leading research labs shows how scientists-turned-detectives are painstakingly decoding what causes ...
RIT Assistant Professor Stefan Schulze’s lab is working toward new biomedical treatment approaches through NIH research in ...
Pain is a constant, complex companion that clinicians often struggle to understand and measure for people living with sickle ...
BMES looks for a chapter that demonstrates “they are second to only one” as well as strong growth, initiatives, and ...
Particles as different as soap bubbles and ball bearings can be made to arrange themselves in exactly the same way, according ...
Shenzhen New Industries Biomedical Engineering specializes in making in clinical laboratory instruments and in vitro diagnostic reagents. The company says its products are sold in over 160 countries ...
Are you a computer scientist who is secretly an artist? A biomedical engineer with a love for economics? Maybe an accountant with an interest in physics? A mix, or perhaps a completely different ...
Owens, a Detroit native, narrowed his choices down to two women ahead of the finale. A podcaster thinks he knows the choice.
(l-r) Karlee Macaw, Kate Benfield, Katherine Fors, Amevi Semodji, Trevor Lujan were named finalists in the BS, MS, or PhD ...
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