For more than 80 years, scientists believed bat eyes were static. Research from the Cullen Lab reveals the first direct ...
Cell sorting device prepares high-quality cell suspensions for use in cell injection therapy to treat blindness in dogs.
Andrew Feinberg, Bloomberg Distinguished Professor of Epigenetics at Johns Hopkins University Schools of Medicine, Engineering and Public Health, has been awarded the 2026 AACR-G.H.A. Clowes Award for ...
Stephanie Hicks and Jamie Spangler honored for outstanding contributions to engineering and medicine research, practice, or ...
This year’s keynote lecture will be given by Carol Reiley, Engr ’07 (MS). She is currently CEO of AI and arts nonprofit DeepMusic.ai, a World Economic Forum Young Global Leader, and a brand ambassador ...
Hyeoncheol Park’s research focuses on the development of next-generation miniaturized biomedical devices and multimodal microphysiological systems for real-time sensing, imaging, and functional ...
The Johns Hopkins Department of Biomedical Engineering has once again been named the nation’s top graduate program by U.S. News & World Report. The 2026 rankings, released today, mark 34 consecutive ...
Researchers at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center report that an artificial intelligence (AI)-based liquid biopsy test using genome-wide cell-free DNA (cfDNA) fragmentation patterns and repeat ...
Working with “digital twins” of patients’ hearts, doctors improved cardiac ablation outcomes for patients with life-threatening arrythmias. In the first clinical trials for cardiac digital twins ...
Cancer has a sweet tooth—and that craving might be more revealing than scientists once thought. In a study published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry, a Johns Hopkins research team shows that ...
Two Johns Hopkins Biomedical Engineering researchers are among 449 distinguished scholars elected to the newest class of fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, or AAAS, ...
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