Skip to main content
Welcome to Bio-X

Welcome to Bio-X

  • Support
  • Contact
  • About
    • Bio-X History
    • Contact Us
    • Clark Center
      • Map & Directions
      • Tours
      • Dining Options
    • Building Services
      • Room Scheduling
      • IT
      • General Facilities Issues
      • Urgent Facilities Issues
      • Non-Emergency Facilities Requests
      • Building Access Request
      • Lab Safety
      • Shared Equipment
    • FAQ
  • People
  • Research
    • Seed Grants
      • Browse Seed Grants
    • Visiting Scholars/Visiting Postdocs
    • PhD Fellows
    • Undergraduate Research
    • Ventures
      • Food@Stanford
      • NeuroVentures
    • Travel Awards
    • Research Partners
    • Browse Videos
    • Browse All Research
  • Highlights
    • Videos
      • Clark Center @ 10x Video
    • Bio-X in the News
  • Videos
    • USRP Faculty Talks
    • Symposium Lectures
    • Additional Videos
  • Events
    • Upcoming Events
    • Archive
    • IIP Symposium, August 2012 - Novel Molecular Force Probes to Investigate the Mechanism of Touch Sensation
    • Talk Videos
  • Get Involved
    • Faculty
    • Students
      • Courses & Workshops
    • Alumni & Friends
    • Corporations
      • Partnership Models
      • Benefits of Partnership
      • Corporate Member Projects
      • Corporate Forum Newsletter Archive
    • Browse Videos
    • Seminar Series
      • Stanford Bio-X Frontiers in Interdisciplinary Biosciences: 2019/2020
    • Support Bio-X
      • Stanford Bio-X White Paper
  1. Home
  2. Events

IIP Symposium, August 2012 - Novel Molecular Force Probes to Investigate the Mechanism of Touch Sensation

Alexander Dunn, Chemical Engineering
Novel Molecular Force Probes to Investigate the Mechanism of Touch Sensation

2012 IIP Symposium - August 27, 2012

Events

  • Upcoming Events
  • Archive
  • IIP Symposium, August 2012 - Novel Molecular Force Probes to Investigate the Mechanism of Touch Sensation
  • Talk Videos

Courses and Workshops

Photo of smiling white male faculty member, Dr. Alex Dunn, Professor of Chemical Engineering at Stanford University.

Alexander Dunn - Professor of Chemical Engineering

Bio-X Affiliated Faculty
Stanford Profile
Dr. Dunn's Lab Homepage
Dr. Dunn's current research is on the generation of force and motion inside living cells.

Related videos

IIP Symposium, August 2012 - Examining the Threshold of T Cell Memory by AFM-Based Receptor Mapping

IIP Seed Grants Symposium, March 2017 - Introduction

2014 Bio-X Mechanobiology Symposium: Dr. Morgan Delarue

  • Show More

Stanford Bio-X Seed Grants

Collage of headshot photos of Daniel Bernstein and Alex Dunn.

Interdisciplinary Initiatives Program Seed Grant: Discovering the biophysical mechanisms underlying cardiac hypertrophy

Interdisciplinary Initiatives Program Round 12 - 2024
Collage of headshot photos of Polly Fordyce and Alex Dunn.

Interdisciplinary Initiatives Program Seed Grant: High-throughput microfluidic force spectroscopy for engineering protein mechanosensors

Interdisciplinary Initiatives Program Round 12 - 2024

Interdisciplinary Initiatives Program Seed Grant: Biophysical mechanisms of adhesion GPCR activation

Interdisciplinary Initiatives Program Round 11 - 2022
  • Show More

Other Stanford Bio-X Supported Research

Silas Nissen: Mechanism of core planar cell polarity complex function elucidated with single-molecule methods

   Fellow - Silas Nissen - 2020

Activation mechanisms of mechanosensitive Deg/ENaC ion channels

Equipment Grant - 2013

Live-cell confocal microscopy for integration of engineered devices and neuroscience

Equipment Grant - 2013

Research News

Photo of several researchers standing outside, most of them wearing white lab coats except for male faculty member standing in the middle.

3D uterus model could unlock mysteries of embryo implantation

May 27th, 2026 - Stanford Report News
Stanford Bio-X affiliated faculty members Matteo Molè and Alex Dunn have developed a lab model of...

Stanford lands research grants for creative scientists and breakthrough projects

September 30, 2010
Grants awarded to Stanford faculty, inlcuding Bio-X affiliates Lynette Cegelski, Alexander Dunn, Brian Feldman, Gary Peltz,...

Image depicting nerve interaction.

Stanford researchers identify cellular elastic that keeps nerves resilient

February 26, 2014 - Stanford Report
Research conducted by Bio-X Affiliated faculty Alex Dunn and Miriam Goodman using technology developed in an...

Stanford Bio-X

James H. Clark Center, Stanford University 318 Campus Drive Stanford, CA 94305 contact-biox@stanford.edu
Follow @StanfordBioX

  • Contact
  • FAQ
  • Room Reservations
Stanford University
  • Stanford Home
  • Maps & Directions
  • Search Stanford
  • Emergency Info
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy
  • Copyright
  • Trademark
  • Non-Discrimination
  • Accessibility

© Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305