Murtaza Mogri - Bio-X Bowes Fellow
Home Department: Bioengineering
Faculty Advisors: Karl Deisseroth (Bioengineering, Psychiatry)
Home Department: Microbiology and Immunology
Faculty Advisor: Mark Davis
Talk Title: T-Cell Activation and Repertoire During Murine Malaria
Event: 2015 Malaria Gordon Research Seminar and Conference
Home Department: Radiology
Faculty Advisor: Craig Levin
Talk Title: Data correction and imaging studies for PETCoil: A second-generation RF-penetrable brain TOF-PET insert for simultaneous PET/MRI
Event: IEEE NSS/MIC 2024
Home Department: Chemical Engineering
Faculty Advisor: Zhenan Bao
Talk Title: High-density soft bioelectronic fibers
Event: 2023 MRS Fall Meeting & Exhibit - Muhammad was honored with the Best Presentation Award at the symposium.
Dr. Moses Charikar is the Donald E. Knuth professor of Computer Science at Stanford University. He obtained his PhD from Stanford in 2000, spent a year in the research group at Google, and was on the faculty at Princeton from 2001-2015.
Dr. Monther Abu-Remaileh's lab is interested in identifying novel pathways that enable cellular and organismal adaptation to metabolic stress and changes in environmental conditions. The lab also studies how these pathways go awry in human diseases such as cancer, neurodegeneration and metabolic syndrome, in order to engineer new therapeutic modalities.
Dr. Monroe Kennedy's research is to develop technology that improves everyday life by anticipating and acting on the needs of human counterparts. The research can be divided into the following sub-categories: robotic assistants, connected devices and intelligent wearables. Dr. Kennedy uses a combination of tools in dynamical systems analysis, control theory (classical, non-linear and robust control), state estimation and prediction, motion planning, vision for robotic autonomy and machine learning.