Celebration of Teaching Program
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2013 NCI Alliance for Nanotechnology in Cancer Annual Bulletin EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
2013 NCI Alliance for Nanotechnology in Cancer Annual Bulletin EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Piotr Grodzinski (NCI) SENIOR EDITOR Stephanie A. Morris (NCI) ASSOCIATE EDITOR(S) Dorothy Farrell (NCI) Lynn Hull (NCI) Mary Spiro (JHU) CONTRIBUTORS Martha Alexander (Rice CNPP) Michelle Berny-Lang (NCI) Dorothy Farrell (NCI) Emily Greenspan (NCI) Piotr Grodzinski (NCI) George Hinkal (NCI) Brenda Hugot (Boston CNTC) Lynn Hull (NCI) Contents Hannah Kim (Texas CCNE) 1 Introduction Julia Ljubimova (Cedars-Sinai CNPP) NIH Funding Opportunities Extend the Range Laura A. Miller (UIUC CNTC) 2 of Cancer Nanotechnology in Biomedical Research Sarah H. Petrosko (Northwestern CCNE) Mary Spiro (Johns Hopkins CCNE & CNTC) 6 Alliance Working Groups Provide Their Opinions to the Nanotechnology Community Li Tang (UIUC CNTC) Biana Godin Vilentchouk (Texas CCNE) 8 Crowdsourcing and the Dialogue Matthew Ware (Texas CCNE) on Nanotechnology in Cancer 9 Nano in the News DESIGN Danielle Peterson, Brio Design 12 Alliance Transitions INTRODUCTION BY DOROTHY FARRELL The third year of Phase II of the NCI Alliance for Nanotechnology These efforts included crowdsourcing strategies coordinated in Cancer was a busy and productive one for the Alliance. through a dedicated website (nanocancer.ideascale.com) and a Our investigators published over 300 papers in 2013, bringing Request for Information on the Directions and Needs for Cancer the total number of Alliance publications over the past three Nanotechnology (grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/ years to approximately 1,100. Alliance research continues to NOT-CA-13-017.html). The insights gained through these forums be high profile and high impact, as measured by the quality are discussed in the Crowdsourcing section of the Bulletin. -
2013 Annual Meeting
2013 ANNU 2013 BMES ANNUAL New Mobile App MEETING TM GO TO EITHER THE APPLE OR ANDROID A BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY STORE AND SEARCH FOR: L MEETING Advancing Human Health and Well BeingTM Conference 411 > Download the free app > Select BMES2013 from the list of available 2013 ANNUAL MEETING meetings • Browse the program September 25–28, 2013 by date or session type • Search keywords Washington State • Search author list Convention Center • Add presentations to a custom itinerary Seattle, Washington • Click a link to show where a presentation is on a map of the convention center BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY Advancing Human Health and Well Being 8201 Corporate Drive. Suite 1125 Landover, MD 20785-2224 Phone: 301-459-1999 Fax: 301-459-2444 Web: www.bmes.org BMES 2013 BMES Officers BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY Advancing Human Health and Well Being President Gilda Barabino, PhD 8201 Corporate Drive, Suite 1125 The City College of New York Landover, MD 20785-2224 Phone: 301-459-1999 Immediate Past President Fax: 301-459-2444 Web: www.bmes.org Richard E. Waugh, PhD University of Rochester BMES Staff Secretary Edward L. Schilling, III David A. Vorp, PhD Executive Director University of Pittsburgh Doug Beizer Treasurer Communications Director Jennifer West, PhD Jennifer Edwards Duke University Membership Director Valerie A. Kolmaister Publications Board Chair Operations and Finance Director Frank C. P. Yin, MD, PhD Michele Surricchio, MPH, CHES Washington University in St. Louis Education Director Finance Committee Chair Debra Tucker, CMP -
2009 NIH Director's Transformative Research Award Reviewers
2009 NIH Director’s Transformative Research Award Reviewers Editorial Board Members Chairs David Botstein Keith Robert Yamamoto Princeton University University of California, San Francisco Members John T. Cacioppo Myron P. Gutmann University of Chicago Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research Aravinda Chakravarti Johns Hopkins School of Medicine Nola M. Hylton-Watson University of California, San Francisco Garret A. Fitzgerald Cecil B. Pickett University of Pennsylvania Biogen Idec Alfred G. Gilman Susan S. Taylor University of Texas Southwestern Medical University of California at San Diego Center Michael J. Welsh University of Iowa Mail Reviewers Craig Kendall Abbey Margaret Ashcroft University of California, Santa Barbara Division of Medicine Samuel Achilefu Richard Herbert Aster School of Medicine Blood Research Institute Manuel Ares Arleen D. Auerbach University of California Rockefeller University Bruce A. Armitage J. Thomas August Carnegie Mellon University Johns Hopkins University Mark A. Arnold Kevin A. Ault University of Iowa Emory University School of Medicine David C. Aron Jennifer Bates Averill Case Western Reserve University University of New Mexico 1 Mary Helen Barcellos-Hoff Leslie A. Bruggeman New York University School of Medicine Case Western Reserve University David P. Bartel Peter Burkhard New Cambrige Center University of Connecticut Ralf Bartenschlager Alma L. Burlingame University of Heidelberg University of California, San Francisco Rashid Bashir Frederic D. Bushman University of Illinois at Urbana – Champaign University of Pennsylvania Carl A. Batt Robert William Caldwell Cornell University Medical College of Georgia Mark T. Bedford Phil Gordon Campbell Research Division Carnegie Mellon University Kevin D. Belfield Joseph Nicholas Cappella University of Central Florida University of Pennsylvania Andrew Steven Belmont William A. -
Mentoring and Advising of Black Students in Science, Engineering, and Medicine: a Workshop
Mentoring and Advising of Black Students in Science, Engineering, and Medicine: A Workshop December 7-8, 2020 Mentoring and Advising of Black Students in Science, Engineering, and Medicine: A Workshop December 7-8, 2020 https://nasem.zoom.us/j/92451902299?pwd=Um9ORmNmaS9UNmlmKzB0ZWwvbk11UT09 Day One - December 7, 2020 9:30 AM EDT Opening Remarks John L. Anderson, PhD President, National Academy of Engineering and Vice Chairman, National Research Council Cato T. Laurencin, MD, PhD Chair of the Roundtable; Albert and Wilda Van Dusen Distinguished Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery; Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Connecticut Randall C. Morgan, Jr., MD, MBA Co-Chair of the Mentoring and Advising Action Group; President and CEO, Cobb/NMA Health Institute; Clinical Associate Professor of Orthopedic Surgery at Florida State School of Medicine and Clinical Associate Professor in the Department of Community Medicine at the University of Connecticut Joan Y. Reede, MD, MPH, MS, MBA Co-Chair of the Mentoring and Advising Action Group; Professor of Medicine; Dean for Diversity and Community Partnership, Harvard Medical School: Professor in the Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health SESSION I : UNDERSTANDING THE CURRENT STATUS OF BLACK PROFESSIONALS IN ACADEMIA AND INDUSTRY 10:00 AM MODERATOR: L. D. Britt, MD, MPH, DSc(Hon), FACS, FCCM Chairman, Surgery Department, Eastern Virginia Medical School 1 SPEAKERS: Norma Poll-Hunter, -
The Center for Food Safety Engineering G
The Center for Food Safety Engineeringg 2007 - 2008 Research Report “Collaborating to make our food safer” The mission of the Center for Food Safety Engineering is to develop new knowledge, technologies and systems for detection and prevention of chemical and microbial contamination of foods. Through CFSE, Purdue University positions itself as a national leader in multi- disciplinary food safety research. Our multi- disciplinary approach, including a strong engineering component, makes Purdue University truly unique. 2007-2008 Research Report 2 Welcome from the Director • Message from Richard Linton, Center Director 2 Message from USDA • Message from our Partnership with USDA-ARS 3 Multipathogen screening using immunomicroarray • Arun Bhunia 4 Optical biosensors for food pathogen detection • Arun Bhunia 5 Optical forward scattering for bacterial colony differentiation and identifi cation • Arun Bhunia, E. Daniel. Hirleman, J. Paul Robinson 6 Immunocapture real-time PCR to detect mycotoxigenic mold spores in grains • Maribeth A. Cousin, Charles P. Woloshuk 7 Detection of foodborne pathogens via an integrated spectroscopy and biosensor-based approach • Joseph Irudayaraj, Lisa Mauer, Chitrita DebRoy, Pina Fratamico 8 Nanoparticle-based DNA-multiplexed probes for pathogen detection using confocal raman microscopy • Joseph Irudayaraj 9 Engineering of biosystems for the detection of Listeria monocytogenes in foods • Michael R. Ladisch, Rashid Bashir, Arun Bhunia, J. Paul Robinson 10 Spotlight on USDA-ARS Scientists 12 Rapid, quantitative, and -
Defining the Frontiers of Bioengineering Education at Illinois and Beyond
Paper ID #19347 Defining the Frontiers of Bioengineering Education at Illinois and Beyond Dr. Jennifer R Amos, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Dr Amos joined the Bioengineering Department at the University of Illinois in 2009 and is currently a Teaching Associate Professor in Bioengineering and an Adjunct Associate Professor in Educational Psychology. She received her B.S. in Chemical Engineering at Texas Tech and Ph.D. in Chemical En- gineering from University of South Carolina. She completed a Fulbright Program at Ecole Centrale de Lille in France to benchmark and help create a new hybrid masters program combining medicine and en- gineering and also has led multiple curricular initiative in Bioengineering and the College of Engineering on several NSF funded projects. Prof. Rashid Bashir, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Rashid Bashir completed his Ph.D. from Purdue University in Oct. 1992. From Oct. 1992 to Oct. 1998, he worked at National Semiconductor in the Analog/Mixed Signal Process Technology Development Group, where he was promoted to Sr. Engineering Manager. At National Semiconductor, he led the development and commercialization of 4 analog semiconductor process technologies. He joined Purdue University in Oct. 1998 as an Assistant Professor and was later promoted to Professor of Electrical and Computer En- gineering and a Courtesy Professor of Biomedical Engineering and Mechanical Engineering. Since Oct. 2007, he joined the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and was the Abel Bliss Professor of En- gineering, and Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering & Bioengineering. He was the Director of the Micro and Nanotechnology Laboratory (mntl.illinois.edu), a campus-wide clean room facility from Oct 2007 to Aug 2013 and the Co-Director of the campus-wide Center for Nanoscale Science and Tech- nology (www.cnst.illinois.edu), a ”collaboratory” aimed at facilitating center grants and large initiatives around campus in the area of nanotechnology. -
For Characterization of Mass of Single Live Cells in Fluids Kidong Park Purdue University, [email protected]
Purdue University Purdue e-Pubs Birck and NCN Publications Birck Nanotechnology Center 6-11-2008 'Living cantilever arrays' for characterization of mass of single live cells in fluids Kidong Park Purdue University, [email protected] Jaesung Jang Department of Mechanical Engineering, Chung-Ang University Daniel Irimia Massachusetts Gen oH sp, Shriners Hosp Children, Ctr Engn Med & Surg Serv, BioMEMS Resource Ctr Jennifer Sturgis Purdue University, [email protected] James Lee Ohio State Univ, Dept Chem Engn See next page for additional authors Follow this and additional works at: https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/nanopub Park, Kidong; Jang, Jaesung; Irimia, Daniel; Sturgis, Jennifer; Lee, James; Robinson, J. Paul; Toner, Mehmet; and Bashir, Rashid, "'Living cantilever arrays' for characterization of mass of single live cells in fluids" (2008). Birck and NCN Publications. Paper 147. https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/nanopub/147 This document has been made available through Purdue e-Pubs, a service of the Purdue University Libraries. Please contact [email protected] for additional information. Authors Kidong Park, Jaesung Jang, Daniel Irimia, Jennifer Sturgis, James Lee, J. Paul Robinson, Mehmet Toner, and Rashid Bashir This article is available at Purdue e-Pubs: https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/nanopub/147 Volume 8 | Number 7 | 2008 Miniaturisation for chemistry, biology & bioengineering www.rsc.org/loc Volume 8 | Number 7 | July 2008 | Pages 993–1228 Lab on a Chip Featuring research from the “Applied Miniaturisation Laboratory” As featured in: of Professor Chris Backhouse, University of Alberta, Canada. Miniaturisation for chemistry, biology & bioengineering www.rsc.org/loc Volume 8 | Number 7 | July 2008 | Pages 993–1228 Title: Electrically controlled microvalves to integrate microchip polymerase chain reaction and capillary electrophoresis. -
Improving Critical Thinking in Underserved Minority Students
THE DECADE AHEAD Lord Baltimore Hotel 20 West Baltimore Street Baltimore, Maryland 21201 10TH CONFERENCE ON UNDERSTANDING INTERVENTIONS That Broaden Participation in Science Careers THE DECADE AHEAD March 2-4, 2018 The Lord Baltimore Hotel Baltimore, Maryland Daryl E. Chubin & Anthony L. DePass, Co-chairs www.understanding-interventions.org FU N D I N G A N D S U PP O R T Understanding Interventions that Broaden Participation in Science Careers has benefited from generous support from the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and Educational Testing Service, along with productive collaborations with the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, the American Society for Cell Biology, the American Society of Plant Biologists, American Association for the Advancement of Science, and Long Island University. In September 2013, an NIGMS T36 MARC grant from the National Institutes of Health (Grant No.1 T36 GM 102000) was awarded to Long Island University and it currently provides long- term support for the following: Organization of conferences that will provide: a) venues for dissemination of interventions research and related training; b) opportunities for researchers/practitioners to interact and collaborate; and c) a mechanism for discourse on research-based interventions’ implementation across modalities, stages, and venues. An enhanced and interactive Understanding Interventions website that will: a) facilitate linkages among members of the Understanding Interventions (UI) community; and b) feature an accessible and searchable internet-based annotated database of Interventions articles and other resources. This will expand the dissemination of broadening participation research. An online/email-based publication that distills and disseminates research findings, development opportunities, and general announcements to provide an additional platform for growth of the Understanding Interventions community. -
Micro and Nanotechnology Laboratory Dedication
WWW.MNTL.ILLINOIS.EDU MNTL MICRO AND NANOTECHNOLOGY LABORATORY DEDICATION Thursday, September 4, 2008 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN MNTL MICRO AND NANOTECHNOLOGY LABORATORY DEDICATION Thursday, September 4, 2008 Micro and Nanotechnology Laboratory Dedication September 4, 2008 Dedication of the Micro and Nanotechnology Laboratory Celebrating completion of an $18 million,state-funded expansion of one of the nation’s premier research laboratories for Micro and Nanoelectronics, Nanophotonics and Optoelectronics, Nanomedicine and BioNanotechnology, and MEMS/NEMS and Integrated Systems research. Dedication of the “Light Array Rhythm Catcher” by S.Thomas Scarff Celebrating art inspired by LED technology advanced at the University of Illinois. Remarks & Ribbon Cutting Ilesanmi Adesida Dean, College of Engineering Board of Trustees State of Illinois B. Joseph White President, University of Illinois Capital Development Board Richard Herman Chancellor, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Rashid Bashir Director, Micro and Nanotechnology Laboratory Balloon Launch Students from Campus Middle School for Girls Special Guests Arden Bement Jr. Director, National Science Foundation and Keynote Speaker for the CNST Nanotechnology Workshop Robert Leheny Deputy Director, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and Co-keynote Speaker at the CNST Nanotechnology Workshop Tours Guided tours of the building will begin in the atrium and include some of the cleanrooms, nanoelectronics and photonics, and bionanotechnology laboratories. Video Historical highlights are presented on the plasma screen in the atrium. Luncheon Preregistration required. Please check registration materials for directions. Note: This year the University of Illinois Center for Nanoscale Science and Technology (CNST) Annual Nanotechnology Workshop is being held in conjunction with the Micro and Nanotechnology Laboratory Dedication. -
Speaker Biographies
1 ASEE 2018 Engineering Deans Institute Speaker Biographies Nicholas J. Altiero Dr. Altiero received a Bachelor of Science degree in aerospace engineering from the University of Notre Dame in 1969 and a Master of Science degree in aerospace engineering in 1970, a Master of Arts degree in mathematics in 1971 and a Doctor of Philosophy degree in aerospace engineering in 1974 from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. He joined the faculty of the Materials Science and Mechanics department at Michigan State University in 1975. At Michigan State, he advanced through the faculty ranks to the rank of Professor in 1986 and, in 1990, he was named the Associate Dean for Research and Graduate Studies of the College of Engineering, where he had administrative responsibility for the research, technology transfer, graduate studies and distance education operations of the college. In January 1998, he was named Chairman of the Department of Materials Science and Mechanics and he served in that position until June 2000. At that time, he joined the faculty at Tulane University as Dean of the School of Engineering. In 2006, in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, Tulane University was restructured and Altiero was named the inaugural Dean of the School of Science and Engineering. He served in the position through August 2017. For a brief period in 2016, he served as Tulane's Interim Provost. Altiero has held visiting positions at the Polytechnic University of Milan, Italy, as a Fulbright Scholar, and at the Technical University of Aachen, Germany, as an Alexander von Humboldt Fellow. He has taught a wide range of courses at the undergraduate and graduate levels and, in 1991, received the State of Michigan Teaching Excellence Award. -
Seminar Flyer Rashid Bashir
PRESENTS BioMEMS and Biomedical Nanotechnology: From Lab on Chip to Printing Cellular Machines THURSDAY, May 30th 2019 12:00 – 1:00 PM 2101 ENGINEERING V Rashid Bashir, Ph.D. UIUC Dean, Department of Bioengineering ABSTRACT: Integration of biology, medicine, and fabrication methods at the micro and nano scale offers tremendous opportunities for solving important problems in biology and medicine and to enable a wide range of applications in diagnostics, therapeutics, and tissue engineering. Microfluidics and Lab-on-Chip can be very beneficial to realize practical applications in detection of disease markers, counting of specific cells from whole blood, and for identification of pathogens, at point-of-care. In this talk, we will present data driven approaches for stratification of sepsis, detection of cells and proteins from a drop of blood, rapid detection of pathogens from body fluids, and spatial mapping of nucleic acids from cancer tumors. We will also present our work on bio- printing with stereolithography to produce bio-hybrid devices made of polymers and cells for the development of biological machines, soft robotics, and hyper organs. Such complex cellular systems will be a major challenge for the next decade and beyond, requiring knowledge from tissue engineering, synthetic biology, micro-fabrication and nanotechnology, systems biology, and developmental biology. These devices could have potential applications in drug delivery, power generation, and other biomimetic systems. BIOGRAPHY: Rashid Bashir is Dean of Engineering, the Grainger Distinguished Chair in Engineering and Professor of Bioengineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Previously, he was the Executive Associate Dean at the Carle-Illinois College of Medicine (2017 – present), the Abel Bliss Professor of Engineering, Head of Department of Bioengineering (2013 – 2017), and Director of the Micro and Nanotechnology Laboratory (a campus-wide clean room research facility) (2007 – 2013). -
2018 Program Book (PDF)
BMES Officers PRESIDENT Lori Setton, PhD Washington University in St. Louis 8201 Corporate Drive | Suite 1125 INCOMING PRESIDENT Landover, Maryland 20785-2224 Dawn Elliott, PhD 301.459.1999 | phone • 301.459.2444 | fax University of Delaware www.bmes.org SECRETARY John White, PhD Boston University TREASURER BMES Staff Ben Noe Medtronic Edward L. Schilling, III Terry Young Executive Director Director Career PUBLICATIONS BOARD CHAIR Programs and Meetings Kristina Ropella, PhD Doug Beizer Marquette University Communications Director Elizabeth Richards Student Affairs Manager FINANCE COMMITTEE CHAIR Michele Ciapa, MPH, CHES Jane Grande-Allen, PhD Education Director Lori Saskiewicz Rice University Registrar Valerie A. Kolmaister Operations and Katherine Quintanilla BMES Board of Directors Finance Director Receptionist/Administrative Assistant 2015—2018 DIRECTORS Jenn Novesky Guillermo Ameer, ScD Director of Membership Northwestern University Development and Media Contact Corporate Partnerships Todd Giorgio, PhD Doug Beizer Vanderbilt University Debra Tucker, CMP [email protected] Denise Forkey, MSBME Annual Meeting Director 410.814.9564 Medical Device Development Solutions Marjolein van der Meulen, PhD Cornell University Future BMES Annual Meetings October 16—19, 2019 2016—2019 DIRECTORS Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Catherine Klapperich, PhD Boston University October 14—17, 2020 San Diego, California Sara Muldoon, B.S. Abbott, Inc. October 6—9, 2021 Brenda Ogle, PhD Orlando, Florida University of Minnesota—Twin Cities Beth Winkelstein, PhD Social