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Designed by Hopkins students, a new rehabilitative tool helps recovering stroke patients improve their walking ability.
Projects from Rama Chellappa, Bloomberg Distinguished Professor of biomedical engineering, and Joel Bader, professor of ...
Precision Care Medicine students work with clinical faculty at Johns Hopkins Medicine to learn how to use machine learning and mechanistic and statistical modeling to develop novel data-driven ...
<img decoding="async" width="1024" height="683" src="https://www.bme.jhu.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/WSE-Design-Day-4-29-25-228-1024x683.jpg" class="vc_single ...
3400 N. Charles Street Wyman Park Building Suite 400 West Baltimore, MD 21218 East Baltimore Campus 720 Rutland Avenue Baltimore, MD 21205 (410) 955-3132 ...
Research Interests: Organoid tissue engineering, pluripotent stem cells, 3D tissue models, cerebral organoids, neurological disorder research (focusing on Autism, Schizophrenia, and Alzheimer's ...
Amputees often experience the sensation of a “phantom limb”—a feeling that a missing body part is still there. That sensory illusion is closer to becoming a reality thanks to a team of engineers at ...
Imagine if after a serious accident, your damaged facial bones could be replaced with tissue made by your own cells. Or if you could pop a pill that could reprogram your immune system to fight a ...
The Johns Hopkins Biomedical Engineering graduate programs have, once again, been ranked No. 1 in the nation by U.S. News & World Report according to the 2025 rankings released today. This marks 33 ...
Students in the Johns Hopkins Department of Biomedical Engineering’s Design Team program have developed a new tool for improving the assessment of damaged nerves during surgery. The innovation is a ...
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