Archived News
New Faculty Member Hired: Prof. Wei Shen
Dr. Wei Shen is completing her Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering at CalTech under the advising of Profs. David Tirrell and Julia Kornfield. Her work has focused on characterizing self-assembled "leucine zipper" hydrogels, which can serve as cell scaffolds, including biological synthesis of the polymers. Dr. Shen's future work will revolve around the synthesis of novel biomolecules that can be used to directly probe cell-material interactions. She will be pursuing postdoctoral studies for two years with Prof. Scott Fraser at Caltech and then join our department fall semester, 2006.
New Faculty Member Hired: Prof. Chun Wang
Dr. Chun Wang is currently an NIH Postdoctoral Fellow in the lab of
Bob Langer at MIT. He completed his Ph.D. in Bioengineering in 2001 at
the University of Utah with Prof. Jindrich Kopecek. His work focuses
in molecularly-engineered biomaterials, with applications to protein-based
vectors for delivery of genetic therapeutics (i.e. DNA vaccines) and
hydrogels for tissue scaffolds. Dr. Wang will join our department fall
semester, 2004.
New Faculty Member Hired: Prof. Bin He
Prof. He is currently Full Professor of Bioengineering, Electrical and
Computer Engineering, and Computer Science at the University of Illinois
at Chicago. He completed his Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering in 1988
at the Tokyo Institute of Technology and was a postdoctoral fellow in
the Harvard-MIT HST program prior to joining UIC. His research is in
the development of electrophysiological and multimodal neuroimaging methods
with particular interests in noninvasive determination of eliptogenic
foci. He has a parallel program in cardiac imaging aimed at localizing
sources of cardiac arrhythmia. Prof. He will join the Department in January
2004.
First Graduating Class in the BME Bachelor's Degree Program
The first class of 27 students that took the complete curriculum graduated
in May. Given the program was announced just 3 years previously, this
underscores the popularity and rapid growth of this long-awaited degree
at the University of Minnesota. Among our 35 graduates to date, about
one-half are employed or are seeking employment (most with companies
in Medical Alley), about one-fourth have begun graduate studies (including
CalTech, MIT, U. California-SF, U. Michigan, and U. Washington), and
the remaining one-fourth have either begun or are seeking enrollment
in health professional or business school programs, or are working as
research associates. Our program is scheduled to be reviewed by the accreditation
board, ABET, in the fall.
Professor Bob Tranquillo Named Distinguished McKnight University
Professor
Bob was selected as one of this year's four Distinguished Mcknight University
Professors. The purpose of the Professorship is to recognize and reward
the University's most outstanding mid-career faculty. The winners were
chosen on the merit of their scholarly achievements and the potential
for greater attainment in the field; the extent to which their achievements
have brought distinction to the University of Minnesota; the quality
of their teaching and advising; and their contributions to the wider
community.
New Faculty Member Hired: Prof. Mark A. Nicosia
Mark is presently a Research Associate in the Division of Cardiothoracic
Surgery where he is investigating heart valve mechanics, including a
coupled solid-fluid model of leaflet motion during the cardiac cycle.
He already completed another two-year postdoc at Madison in the Institute
of Aging on research related to his doctoral dissertation on esaphogyal
mechanics. Mark obtained his Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering from Penn
State University in 1997 and begins his position as Assistant Professor
in August 2002.
Professor David Odde Named McKnight Land-Grant
ProfessorDave was
selected as one of this year's ten Mcknight Land-Grant Professors.
The purpose of this University-wide competitive program is to strengthen
the University's faculty for the future. It is designed to advance
the careers of the most promising junior faculty at a crucial period
in their professional lives, and to develop their potential to make
significant contributions to their scholarly fields.$1 Million Whitaker
Foundation Special Opportunity Award The Whitaker Foundation has awarded
a $1 Million grant for our proposal, "Lab-Based Courses
for BME Undergraduates and Practicing Engineers."This grant will
be used to * establish and expand our new bachelor's degree program in
biomedical engineering with a focus on instructional laboratories integrated
with six core lecture courses* establish and expand intensive short courses
targeted to local biomedical device companies* hire two additional tenure-track
faculty to enable and sustain these activities (to 9 full-time faculty
members beyond the current 4 filled plus 3 open positions)
New Faculty Member Hired: Dr. Peter N. Steinmetz
Peter Steinmetz is
presently a post-doctoral scholar at the California Institute of Technology
in the Division of Biology and the Computation and Neural Systems Program.
His research interests are understanding how information is represented
and transformed in the brain, the biophysics of these transformations,
and how we can engineer devices, such as neural stimulators, to affect
these transformations. After completing his B.S. in Physics at the
University of Minnesota, he founded a local computer design and consulting
company, Steinmetz & Brown, Ltd. Several years
later he returned to research, obtaining his M.D. and Ph.D. in Biomedical
Engineering from the Johns Hopkins University in 1997. Peter begins his
position as Assistant Professor in June 2001.
New Bachelor's Degree Program Initiated
The Department is
implementing a new undergraduate degree program in biomedical engineering,
the only such program in the state of Minnesota. Four new courses are
being introduced in the 2000-2001 academic year: BMEn 2501 "Biomedical Engineering Sophomore Seminar", BMEn
2601 "Cellular and Molecular Biology for Biomedical Engineers",
BMEn 3001 "Biomechanics", and BMEn 3101 "Biomedical Transport
Processes". All additional required courses will be introduced in
the 2001-2002 academic year. The sophomore seminar and senior design
courses will both involve significant participation from practicing biomedical
engineers from local medical device companies around the Twin Cities.
Institute Director Named
On July 1, 2000, Dr. Jeffrey McCullough was named Director of the Biomedical
Engineering Institute. Dr. McCullough is a Professor in the Department
of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology. He holds the Variety Club Chair
as Director of Molecular and Cellular Therapy in the Academic Health
Center, and he is recognized internationally for his contributions to
transfusion medicine and blood banking.
New Department Head Named
On August 1, 2000,
Prof. Robert T. Tranquillo was named the Head of the Department of
Biomedical Engineering. Prof. Tranquillo had been a member of both
the Department of Chemical Engineering & Materials
Science and the Department of Biomedical Engineering prior to his appointment
as Head, and had served as Interim Head since April, 2000. He is also
the program leader for the Artificial Tissues program of the University's
NSF-funded Materials Research Science & Engineering Center. His areas
of expertise include cell migration and cell-matrix interactions with
applications to wound healing, guided nerve regeneration, and cardiovascular
tissue engineering (bioartificial artery and valve fabrication).
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