Epidemic research takes HST students to South Africa HST students traveled to South Africa as part of the IAP course, HST.434: Evolution of an Epidemic, doing field work on HIV-focused biomedical and clinical research within the country's most affected communities. Accelerating the pace of engineering Nicolas Meirhaeghe, a PhD student in the HST MEMP program, specializing in Bioastronautics, was recently awarded an engineering fellowship from MathWorks. Ralph and Claire Brindis: A partnership of interests and opportunity An MIT graduate and his wife have established a fund that will support HST graduate students and research at IMES as a way to show their devotion to improving human health through evidence-based medicine and public policy. Engineers design bionic “heart” for testing prosthetic valves, other cardiac devices MIT engineers have developed a bionic “heart” that offers a more realistic model for testing out artificial valves and other cardiac devices — it is a real biological heart whose tough muscle tissue has been replaced with a soft robotic matrix of artificial heart muscles, resembling bubble wrap. Technique reveals whether models of patient risk are accurate Computer scientists have developed a new method that allows them to determine whether a particular model’s results can be trusted for a given patient, which could help guide doctors to choose better treatments for those patients. Pagination First page « First Previous page Previous … Page 57 Page 58 Page 59 Current page 60 Page 61 Page 62 Page 63 … Next page Next Last page Last »
Epidemic research takes HST students to South Africa HST students traveled to South Africa as part of the IAP course, HST.434: Evolution of an Epidemic, doing field work on HIV-focused biomedical and clinical research within the country's most affected communities.
Accelerating the pace of engineering Nicolas Meirhaeghe, a PhD student in the HST MEMP program, specializing in Bioastronautics, was recently awarded an engineering fellowship from MathWorks.
Ralph and Claire Brindis: A partnership of interests and opportunity An MIT graduate and his wife have established a fund that will support HST graduate students and research at IMES as a way to show their devotion to improving human health through evidence-based medicine and public policy.
Engineers design bionic “heart” for testing prosthetic valves, other cardiac devices MIT engineers have developed a bionic “heart” that offers a more realistic model for testing out artificial valves and other cardiac devices — it is a real biological heart whose tough muscle tissue has been replaced with a soft robotic matrix of artificial heart muscles, resembling bubble wrap.
Technique reveals whether models of patient risk are accurate Computer scientists have developed a new method that allows them to determine whether a particular model’s results can be trusted for a given patient, which could help guide doctors to choose better treatments for those patients.