Associate Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering Weijian Yang and his team have developed a new microscopy approach to capture high-speed images of brain cell activity with less harm to brain tissue than previous methods.
A visionary proposal for developing a pathway to 3D printing inside the human body using soundwaves took top prize at this year's Society of Manufacturing Engineers NSF Blue Sky Competition.
Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering Hyoyoung Jeong explores the use of wireless wearable devices for health monitoring. Jeong believes the technology can offer a more practical and economical option for health management compared to current hospital-bound machinery.
Assistant Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Jonathon Schofield has been recognized with a National Science Foundation Faculty Early Career Development, or NSF CAREER, Award for his research on engineering effective prosthetics for children born without fully formed limbs.
Technologies like ChatGPT have brought the potential of artificial intelligence into public awareness unlike ever before. In the College of Engineering, researchers show all that AI can and can be by pushing the boundaries of its foundational design and use in medicine and agriculture.
Researchers at the University of California, Davis, are taking the phrase “follow your gut” to a whole new level: They’re creating microfluidic technology that can map out and probe the neural pathways that form the gut-brain axis for the first time.
Biomedical engineering doctoral student Greg Wheeler explores how an emerging MRI technique can identify conditions like dementia earlier than ever before.
Dovin Kiernan, a recent graduate from the Biomedical Engineering Graduate Group at the University of California, Davis, explores biomechanics and wearable technology to reduce the high rates of overuse injuries in running.
The American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering has inducted biomedical engineering professor Aijun Wang into its College of Fellows, an honor reserved for the top two percent of individuals contributing to medical and biological engineering.
UC Davis researchers have developed a new catheter-based device that combines two powerful optical techniques to image the dangerous plaques that can build up inside the arteries that supply blood to the heart.