A Johns Hopkins undergraduate design team won the Krosnick Prize at the National Institute of Health’s 2025 Design by ...
The annual award recognizes world's top graduate students from leading institutions of bioengineering, computer science, ...
To ensure that your application is reviewed by those who can best evaluate your research contributions and potential, please review the information below and choose your research area and faculty of ...
Rachel Karchin, professor of biomedical engineering at Johns Hopkins University, is pioneering the field of computational cancer genomics. She develops novel algorithms and software to analyze genomic ...
Amputees often experience the sensation of a “phantom limb”—a feeling that a missing body part is still there. That sensory illusion is closer to becoming a reality thanks to a team of engineers at ...
Johns Hopkins University researchers have grown a novel whole-brain organoid, complete with neural tissues and rudimentary blood vessels—an advance that could usher in a new era of research into ...
Transforming medicine, one discovery at a time. From groundbreaking medical devices to transformative new treatments, Hopkins BME researchers are engineering the future of medicine and pushing the ...
March 31, 2025 @ 1:00 pm - 2:00 pm - Peter Yingxiao Wang joins us from The University of Southern California, Los Angeles.
A new AI model is much better than doctors at identifying patients likely to experience cardiac arrest. The linchpin is the system’s ability to analyze long-underused heart imaging, alongside a full ...
Implantable medical devices–think artificial joints, cochlear implants, and insulin pumps–make some of our most challenging health issues more manageable. Even so, human bodies frequently reject ...
The wound was deep. At least 4 inches. And the surgical opening was at least that wide. Three Johns Hopkins engineering students, clad in green scrubs, huddled around the patient. They quietly ...