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Randolph Nesse, MD, is a research professor of life sciences at Arizona State University. For more about evolutionary medicine, see the International Society for Evolution, Medicine and Public Health.
Clinical pharmacologist Harry Shirkey noted more than 50 years ago that children are often “therapeutic orphans” in biomedical research. Today, we see a continued five- to 10-year lag of pediatric ...
On September 11, a delegation from Sun Yat-sen University's School of Intelligent Engineering visited our institute for ...
Cardiovascular Reparative Medicine and Tissue Engineering (CRMTE) aims to develop future technologies and therapeutic strategies that will serve as treatment for cardiovascular disease. CRMTE includes ...
Matt Arkenberg, a first-year doctoral student at Purdue’s Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering, is developing novel biomaterials that could one day be used to promote survival of pancreatic islets ...
Embedding faculty is part of the center's $10 million effort to promote innovation and the exchange of ideas at the nexus of engineering and medicine. The center's faculty fellowships come with a ...
LONDON, ENGLAND - MAY 15: 3D printed organ scaffolds by Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine is displayed as part of the 'AI: More than Human' exhibition at the Barbican Curve Gallery on ...
Throughout any given year, the National Academies convene hundreds of conferences, workshops, symposia, forums, roundtables, and other gatherings that attract the finest minds in academia and the ...
The new detector developed by Professor Mercouri Kanatzidis promises to lower the cost and increase the quality of nuclear ...