Spring 2020

  • Regan Gage
    Architectural engineering alumna finds her light as an OB-GYN Ragan Gage, right, at East Cascade Women's Group in Bend, Ore.   I was really good at cardiology, and you could say, in a way, it's similar to electrical systems for buildings
  • chembio lab
    Student group tackles antimicrobial resistanceAntimicrobial resistance—the ability of bacteria, viruses and fungi to adapt to common remedies, leading to increasingly difficult-to-treat superbugs—represents a looming threat to global health.In
  • Special delivery dna image
    Researchers exploring ways to make drug delivery safer and more effective By looking at health problems through an engineering lens, CU Engineering researchers are creating ways to make drug therapy delivery safer and more effective. By working
  • Gene info
     The team performs penetration testing on a gene sequencing machine at Colorado State University.  Students explore security risks around genetic data collectionGenetic data is some of the most valuable personal information we have
  • Engineering lab
    New undergraduate major and graduate degrees build on college’s strengthsA 3D-printed heart? A robotic surgeon? Biomedical engineering has come a long way from the invention of the scalpel. And now, it’s getting a boost at ¾«Æ·SMÔÚÏßӰƬ with a new
  • Partnership Program
       When I heard about the (partnership) program, it was the best of both worlds.   Partnership Program   Partnership program helps students engineer their own CU experience.In 2018, the ¾«Æ·SMÔÚÏßӰƬ College
  • Genomics lab
    ‘30 under 30’ winner’s startup focuses on pinpointing why pharmaceuticals workJoey Azofeifa (PhDCompSci’18) is bringing together machine learning and state-of-the-art RNA sequencing technology to create better, safer prescription drugs. Joey
  • Maureen Lynch in lab
    From machine learning to real-time imaging, CU Engineering researchers are changing the way medical treatment is imagined, designed and delivered A new approach to stopping the spread of cancerAssistant Professor Maureen Lynch
  • Brodie Hoyer
       My PhD is ultimately a path back to teaching. The three years I taught at West Point were the most rewarding years of my military career.   Veteran will apply skills from PhD research to mentoring West Point cadets.For PhD
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