View allAll Photos Tagged Bioengineering
Artist and mathematician Robert B. LISEK presents his recent bioengineering software projects SPECTRUM and CAPITAL, exploring the relationship between bio-molecular technology, code and issues arising from network technologies by combining his DNA code with codes of viruses and recently by testing influence of radioactive materials on biological entities.
Leaders in Software and Art was founded in 2009 to bring together the community of software and electronic artists, creative coders, data visualists, curators, collectors, digital and interactive agencies, and others who make their careers at the intersection of art and technology. [Photo © 2013 Emilio Vavarella]
Dept. of Chemical Engineering & Applied Chemistry - McGuigan Lab, Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering, University of Toronto
Photo by Sara Collaton
Dept. of Chemical Engineering & Applied Chemistry - McGuigan Lab, Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering, University of Toronto
Photo by Sara Collaton
UCSD assistant bioengineering professor Karen Christman is developing a novel and innovative multi-layer patterning technique that will provide step-by-step cues for cell and tissue development.
The Revolution will be Bio-Based
Genomics Forum and Innogen event at the 2012 ESRC Festival of Social Science
Bioengineering professor David Kwartowitz performing an ultrasound on a patient in a lab at Patewood in Greenville, SC
Dept. of Chemical Engineering & Applied Chemistry - McGuigan Lab, Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering, University of Toronto
Photo by Sara Collaton
The Revolution will be Bio-Based
Genomics Forum and Innogen event at the 2012 ESRC Festival of Social Science
Post-doc Tom Scanlon in the Bioengineering lab today producing oil-in-water emulsions for massively parallel biochemical assays as part of Prof Griswold's antiobiotic drug discovery research.
Photo by Catha Lamm.
Dept. of Chemical Engineering & Applied Chemistry - McGuigan Lab, Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering, University of Toronto
Photo by Sara Collaton
Biomedical engineering students created a "command center" for 10-year-old Vladimir Elliott, a Serbian child adopted and brought to the U.S. who has SOX2 anopthalmia syndrome, which has left him blind and mentally and physically disabled. The students' table is designed to give Elliott a fun and stimulating environment outside of the classroom so he may continue his development at home. (Photo credit: Curtis Chan)