news
- Former Ansether Mark Tibbitt, now a postdoc at the Langer group, was selected as a finalist for the AkzoNobel Student Award which entails presenting a paper at the ACS Fall Meeting. Congratulations Mark!
- Emi Tokuda's paper entitled 鈥淓lucidating the Role of Microenvironmental Cues on Melanoma Drug Resistance鈥 was nominated as an outstanding contribution to the Society For Biomaterials鈥 2013 Annual Meeting. The Education and Professional
- Gillian Kopp, a high school student working with Dan McKinnon, earned the Yale Science and Engineering Award, which is awarded by the Yale Science and Engineering Association for the most outstanding 11th grade project in computer science,
- Gillian Kopp has been studying the release of functional protein from hydrogels crosslinked through different chemistries. She is competing in the high school division the morning of Thursday, February 28th in the Glen Miller Ballroom. Check out her
- Chun Yang will be presenting a poster explaining her work on hMSC osteogenesis, Zach Stephens will present his work on VIC activation on dynamic substrates, Abigail Bernard will present her work on the effect of aggregate
- Nava successfully defended his thesis January 31st demonstrating the capabilities of hydrogels to enchance osteogenic differentiation. Congratulations Nava!
- Kelly Schultz wrote an NSF grant that was funded and resulted in our lab getting a shiny new rheometer. In addition, she recently published her first paper in the Anseth group and has been helping everyone with their rheological
- Boulder County Business Report published their top "10 discoveries that could change the world" and the Anseth Group's work in tissue engineering made number 1. Check it out at http://www.bcbr.com/article/20121207/PUBLICATIONS06/121129941/0/
- Howard Hughes Medical Institute sent every member of the Anseth group a nice cooking apron decked out with a beer pouch, bottle opener, over mitt, and matching rag. We appreciate the gift and have been using them every evening so thank you Howard!
- William Wan earned the American Heart Association's prestigous postdoctoral fellowship for his proposal titled "Directing cardiomyocyte phenotype through dynamic, in situ modulation of substrate mechanical properties." Congratulations