Online Master's in Biomedical Engineering @ Case.edu
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Innovations in Imaging

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Anant Madabhushi, PhD, will discuss how the development of knowledge in artificial intelligence (AI) and data science has created opportunities to extract and combine information from imaging, pathology, laboratory medicine and genomics during his presentation, “Radio-Patho-Genomics: Computationally Integrated Disease Specific Features Across Scales.”

For his long-term commitment to teaching and mentoring students, and his signature work in those two primary areas of research, Durand, the  E.L. Linsedth Professor of Biomedical Engineering and Neurosciences and director of the Neural Engineering Center, will be honored as a Distinguished University Professor during Fall Convocation today (Aug. 28) at Severance Hall.

The 2019 list has a total of 15 articles shortlisted to be the most influential. The Center for Computational Imaging and Personalized Diagnostics (CCIPD) at Case Western Reserve University holds two spots in that list.

Thursday, October 24, 2019 | Tinkham Veale University Center, CWRU campus

Case Western Reserve professor Anant Madabhushi’s research looks to improve diagnoses, treatment of patients

The European Society of Radiology (ESP) Board of Directors, and the European Radiology editorial team congratulated researchers in the Center for Computational Imaging and Personalized Diagnostics

Haima Therapeutics has been awarded a $300K Phase I Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) grant from the National Heart, Lung, And Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to support the development of SynthoPlateTM, an hemostatic nanotechnology to mitigate bleeding in thrombocytopenic patients.

Researchers at Case Western Reserve University have successfully prevented epileptic seizures in animal models by preemptively directing a low-frequency stimulus to the nerve fibers in the brain.

Project Title: Computational Pathology Approach for Characterizing Kidney Biopsies and Predicting APOL1 Risk Variants

Kaustav Bera, a research associate in the Center for Computational Imaging and Personalized Diagnostics, received the Early Career Travel Award from the International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer (IASLC).

It has been downloaded over 137,000 times, putting it in the top 25% of most downloaded books under the Springer family of AI publications in 2018.

Three Case Western Reserve University engineering undergraduate students were honored by the Ohio Cooperative Education Association (OCEA). Biomedical engineering major Emily Szabo won the association’s Cool Co-op Award for her co-op experience at Zimmer Biomet in Warsaw, Ind.

Defining which prostate cancers are potentially aggressive and provide early metastases is essential for patient management. It seems that visibility with MRI is a prognostic predictor.

Researchers and students working in the Center for Computational Imaging and Personalized Diagnostics have received several recent honors.

The goal is to start locally working with University Hospitals and Cleveland Clinic. Potentially game-changing cancer research, using artificial intelligence to determine who will benefit from chemotherapy before treatment begins, is being conducted at Case Western Reserve University .

Congratulations to researchers from the Center of Computational Imaging and Personalized Diagnostics (CCIPD) at Case Western Reserve University, Prateek Prasanna, PhD and Mohammadhadi Khorrami, for being selected to receive a 2019 Conquer Cancer Foundation of ASCO Merit Award on behalf of the Conquer Cancer Foundation and the 2019 Scientific Program.

Research by Andrew Shoffstall, A Mosquito Inspired Strategy to Implant Microprobes into the Brain,'received 2,127 article views in 2018, placing it as one of the top 100 read neuroscience papers for Scientific Reports in 2018.

For centuries scientists have sought an artificial substitute for blood. Equipped with modern nanotechnology and a humbler strategy, bioengineers think they’re closer than ever.

Research in artificial intelligence by Case Western Reserve scientists give hope to patients of lung and breast cancer; new discoveries help determine who will benefit from chemotherapy

Combination of Peri- and Intratumoral Radiomic Features on Baseline CT Scans Predicts Response to Chemotherapy in Lung Adenocarcinoma