News News Events All News Stories All news stories Filter by Topics Academics Active Learning Labs AI / Machine Learning Allston Campus Applied Computation Applied Mathematics Applied Physics Alumni Awards Computational Science & Engineering Data Sciences Dean REEF Makerspace Bioengineering Climate Computer Science Cooking COVID-19 Design Diversity / Inclusion Electrical Engineering Entrepreneurship Environment Environmental Science & Engineering Ethics Events Geoengineering Graduate Student Profile Health / Medicine Industry K-12 Master of Design Engineering Materials Materials Science & Mechanical Engineering MS/MBA Optics / Photonics Planetary Science Quantum Engineering Robotics Student Organizations Technology Undergraduate Student Profile Date Showing 340 of 361 results Feb 22, 2011 Debra Auguste wins prestigious NSF CAREER Award Grant will support research on molecular aspects of drug delivery as well as educational programs Bioengineering, Awards, Feb 21, 2011 Applied physicists discover that migrating cells flow like glass Harvard-led research advances understanding of wound healing, cancer metastasis, and embryonic development Bioengineering, Applied Physics, Feb 17, 2011 Photo of Centipede-bot wins honorable mention from Science Graduate student Katie Hoffman's 12-legged, segmented robot honored in Visualization Challenge 2010 Robotics, Electrical Engineering, Bioengineering, Jan 18, 2011 Q&A with Amy Kerdok '06 (Ph.D.) "Harvard felt individualized versus institutionalized, and that was a good fit for me," says the clinical engineer Robotics, Health / Medicine, Bioengineering, Jan 14, 2011 Topics in Bioengineering series kicks off on January 18th The Topics in Bioengineering (TIB) seminar series is returning for the spring term Bioengineering, Jan 10, 2011 Cockroach inspires robotic hand to get a grip A new type of mechanical hand developed by researchers at Harvard and Yale promises to solve the issue of overthinking (PhysOrg) Robotics, Bioengineering, Jan 7, 2011 A pesky bacterial slime reveals its survival secrets Surprising discovery about biofilm may provide a new direction in antimicrobial research and bioinspired liquid-repellent surfaces Bioengineering, Jan 6, 2011 Two SEAS faculty win prestigious NSF CAREER Awards Stephen Chong will study language-based information security; Sharad Ramanathan will study locomotory decision making in C. elegans Computer Science, Bioengineering, Awards, Dec 14, 2010 "Magnetic sponge" could be new form of drug and cell delivery New material, called a macroporous ferrogel, can be compressed by an applied magnetic field and force out drugs, cells, or proteins Bioengineering, Nov 25, 2010 Found in translation Otger Campàs translates biology into mathematics, physics into cooking, and hard science into beautiful simplicity Cooking, Bioengineering, Applied Physics, Applied Mathematics, Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 32 Page 33 Current page 34 Page 35 Page 36 … Page 37 37 Next page › Last page »
Feb 22, 2011 Debra Auguste wins prestigious NSF CAREER Award Grant will support research on molecular aspects of drug delivery as well as educational programs Bioengineering, Awards,
Feb 21, 2011 Applied physicists discover that migrating cells flow like glass Harvard-led research advances understanding of wound healing, cancer metastasis, and embryonic development Bioengineering, Applied Physics,
Feb 17, 2011 Photo of Centipede-bot wins honorable mention from Science Graduate student Katie Hoffman's 12-legged, segmented robot honored in Visualization Challenge 2010 Robotics, Electrical Engineering, Bioengineering,
Jan 18, 2011 Q&A with Amy Kerdok '06 (Ph.D.) "Harvard felt individualized versus institutionalized, and that was a good fit for me," says the clinical engineer Robotics, Health / Medicine, Bioengineering,
Jan 14, 2011 Topics in Bioengineering series kicks off on January 18th The Topics in Bioengineering (TIB) seminar series is returning for the spring term Bioengineering,
Jan 10, 2011 Cockroach inspires robotic hand to get a grip A new type of mechanical hand developed by researchers at Harvard and Yale promises to solve the issue of overthinking (PhysOrg) Robotics, Bioengineering,
Jan 7, 2011 A pesky bacterial slime reveals its survival secrets Surprising discovery about biofilm may provide a new direction in antimicrobial research and bioinspired liquid-repellent surfaces Bioengineering,
Jan 6, 2011 Two SEAS faculty win prestigious NSF CAREER Awards Stephen Chong will study language-based information security; Sharad Ramanathan will study locomotory decision making in C. elegans Computer Science, Bioengineering, Awards,
Dec 14, 2010 "Magnetic sponge" could be new form of drug and cell delivery New material, called a macroporous ferrogel, can be compressed by an applied magnetic field and force out drugs, cells, or proteins Bioengineering,
Nov 25, 2010 Found in translation Otger Campàs translates biology into mathematics, physics into cooking, and hard science into beautiful simplicity Cooking, Bioengineering, Applied Physics, Applied Mathematics,