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 Belonging Collective behavior Computational Science & Engineering Data Sciences Dean REEF Makerspace Bioengineering Climate Computer Science Cooking COVID-19 Design Electrical Engineering Entrepreneurship Environment Environmental Science & Engineering Ethics Events Geoengineering Graduate Student Profile Health / Medicine Industry K-12 Kirigami Master of Design Engineering Materials Materials Science & Mechanical Engineering Meet Our Faculty Metasurfaces MS/MBA Optics / Photonics Planetary Science Quantum Engineering Robotics Robobee Student Organizations Technology Undergraduate Student Profile Wearable Devices Wildfire Date Showing 360 of 397 results Aug 25, 2011 Mapping the brain Computer scientist Hanspeter Pfister helps turn terabytes of image data into a navigable 3D model of neural circuits Computer Science, Bioengineering, Aug 11, 2011 Q&A with Steven Salzberg ’89 (Ph.D.) Expert in bioinformatics has helped sequence the genomes of humans, anthrax, and woolly mammoths Computer Science, Bioengineering, Aug 10, 2011 Gut coils with help from its elastic neighbor Mathematicians and biologists at Harvard explain why vertebrate intestines are so predictably loopy Bioengineering, Applied Physics, Applied Mathematics, Jul 22, 2011 Harvard bioengineers identify the cellular mechanisms of traumatic brain injury Findings offer new hope for treatment of TBI in veterans wounded by explosions Health / Medicine, Bioengineering, Applied Physics, Jul 13, 2011 Videos from privacy, autonomy, and personal genetics symposium are now online Watch panels exploring the promise and peril of shared genetic information and individual rights to genetic information Ethics, Computer Science, Bioengineering, Jun 23, 2011 In motor learning, it's actions, not intentions, that count Research from Harvard’s Neuromotor Control Lab contradicts a common assumption about how the body learns to make accurate movements Bioengineering, Jun 8, 2011 Tut, tut: Microbial growth in pharaoh's tomb suggests burial was a rush job Ralph Mitchell, an expert in cultural heritage microbiology, investigates a “fingerprint” left by ancient Egyptian microbes Bioengineering, Jun 1, 2011 Nanospray for nanodrugs New microfluidic device developed in Weitz lab can produce tiny drug particles for testing in development (Royal Society of Chemistry) Bioengineering, Applied Physics, May 13, 2011 Kit Parker and Todd Zickler granted tenure Biomedical/tissue engineer and computer vision expert will help further strengthen interdisciplinary research at SEAS Computer Science, Bioengineering, Applied Physics, Apr 29, 2011 Roger W. Brockett honored with McDonald Mentoring Award Pioneer in control systems theory recognized for his devotion to advising more than 60 graduate students Computer Science, Bioengineering, Academics, Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 34 Page 35 Current page 36 Page 37 Page 38 … Page 39 39 Page 40 40 Next page › Last page »
Aug 25, 2011 Mapping the brain Computer scientist Hanspeter Pfister helps turn terabytes of image data into a navigable 3D model of neural circuits Computer Science, Bioengineering,
Aug 11, 2011 Q&A with Steven Salzberg ’89 (Ph.D.) Expert in bioinformatics has helped sequence the genomes of humans, anthrax, and woolly mammoths Computer Science, Bioengineering,
Aug 10, 2011 Gut coils with help from its elastic neighbor Mathematicians and biologists at Harvard explain why vertebrate intestines are so predictably loopy Bioengineering, Applied Physics, Applied Mathematics,
Jul 22, 2011 Harvard bioengineers identify the cellular mechanisms of traumatic brain injury Findings offer new hope for treatment of TBI in veterans wounded by explosions Health / Medicine, Bioengineering, Applied Physics,
Jul 13, 2011 Videos from privacy, autonomy, and personal genetics symposium are now online Watch panels exploring the promise and peril of shared genetic information and individual rights to genetic information Ethics, Computer Science, Bioengineering,
Jun 23, 2011 In motor learning, it's actions, not intentions, that count Research from Harvard’s Neuromotor Control Lab contradicts a common assumption about how the body learns to make accurate movements Bioengineering,
Jun 8, 2011 Tut, tut: Microbial growth in pharaoh's tomb suggests burial was a rush job Ralph Mitchell, an expert in cultural heritage microbiology, investigates a “fingerprint” left by ancient Egyptian microbes Bioengineering,
Jun 1, 2011 Nanospray for nanodrugs New microfluidic device developed in Weitz lab can produce tiny drug particles for testing in development (Royal Society of Chemistry) Bioengineering, Applied Physics,
May 13, 2011 Kit Parker and Todd Zickler granted tenure Biomedical/tissue engineer and computer vision expert will help further strengthen interdisciplinary research at SEAS Computer Science, Bioengineering, Applied Physics,
Apr 29, 2011 Roger W. Brockett honored with McDonald Mentoring Award Pioneer in control systems theory recognized for his devotion to advising more than 60 graduate students Computer Science, Bioengineering, Academics,