A new initiative from the Department of Biomedical Engineering’s Health, Equity and Wellness Committee provides a safe place for students, staff and faculty to openly discuss the unique issues women and historically excluded minorities face in biomedical engineering.
The Davis-based Storx Technologies has made it to the final round of a National Institutes of Health competition for advancing fetal monitoring technology. The startup’s device builds on the patented work on transabdominal fetal oximetry by Soheil Ghiasi, a professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering.
Glaucia Helena Carvalho do Prado reflects on her takeaways from a DEI faculty workshop diving into disruptive speech and how to make the classroom a safe learning environment for all.
The fourth-year aerospace engineering major believes there are important connections between the principles of engineering and the technology that underpins arts and crafts.
In honor of International Women's Day, the College of Engineering recognizes women in engineering, their journey to and in the field, and how they promote a diverse, equitable and inclusive world.
The National Academy of Inventors has conferred senior membership to electrical and computer engineering professor Soheil Ghiasi. Senior memberships recognize success in the patenting, licensing and commercialization of technologies that promise positive change to the welfare of society.
Preparing for their first international competition in August 2024, Cyclone RoboSub explains why designing an autonomous underwater vehicle is such an impactful and collaborative opportunity for Aggie Engineers.
As machine learning and artificial intelligence become more involved with decision-making, Professor Ian Davidson is on a quest to integrate fairness into human-AI systems.
Meet Emily Arana — a fourth-year student majoring in biomedical engineering at the University of California, Davis, recently recognized with a Cadence Diversity in Tech Scholarship from over 300 submissions.
The Ahn Lab in the Department of Chemical Engineering is pioneering groundbreaking tools for new research that could lead to more effective pain therapies.