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Conor Hale
Senior Editor, Fierce Medtech
Kelvin Baggett
Managing Director, Head of Patient Impact and Chair of the EMPIRIC Institute, Patient Square Capital
Andrew Fish
President and CEO, Medical Device Innovation Consortium
Nada Hanafi
Founder and Manager, MedTech Strategy Advisors, LLC; Founder, MedTech Color
Ryan Lakin
Divisional Vice President for Medical Devices and Digital Solutions, Abbott
Michelle Tarver
Deputy Center Director, Chief Transformation Officer, Center for Devices and Radiological Health, US Food and Drug Administration
Watch the session: milkeninstitute.org/events/global-conference-2024/program
Ever tried to take a photograph with your left hand (if righthanded) with a DSLR-camera?
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Conor Hale
Senior Editor, Fierce Medtech
Colleen Campbell
President, National Society of Genetic Counselors
Lon Cardon
President and CEO, The Jackson Laboratory
Bernard Kwabi-Addo
Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Director, Prostate Cancer Disparities laboratory, Howard University College of Medicine
Benjamin Neale
Associate Professor and Co-Director, Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research, Broad Institute
Governor Charlie Baker visits the MedTech Conference at BCEC in Boston on Oct. 24 2022. The annual two-day conference showcases about 1,000 global manufacturers and innovators in medical devices, diagnostic products and digital health technologies. [Joshua Qualls/Governor’s Press Office]
Portrait d'Amélie Elouin PhD candidate at Institut Polytechnique de Paris
Le rôle de la myosine II dans la migration cellulaire collective dans l’embryon de poisson-zèbre. Les migrations cellulaires collectives sont cruciales dans de multiples processus développementaux. Elles sont également impliquées dans l’invasion de cellules cancéreuses. Chez le poisson-zèbre au cours du développement embryonnaire, un groupe de cellules mésodermales nommées « polster » migrent de manière collective dans une direction donnée. Le modèle établi est que chaque cellule qui migre met sous tension la cellule de devant via sa protrusion afin de l’orienter. Je m’intéresse au rôle potentiel de la myosine II qui pourrait être à l’origine de cette tension.
© Ecole polytechnique / Institut Polytechnique de Paris / J.Barande