News News Events All News Stories All news stories Filter by Topics Academics Active Learning Labs AI / Machine Learning Allston Campus Applied Computation Applied Mathematics Applied Physics Alumni Awards Computational Science & Engineering Data Sciences Dean REEF Makerspace Bioengineering Climate Computer Science Cooking COVID-19 Design Diversity / Inclusion Electrical Engineering Entrepreneurship Environment Environmental Science & Engineering Ethics Events Geoengineering Graduate Student Profile Health / Medicine Industry K-12 Master of Design Engineering Materials Materials Science & Mechanical Engineering MS/MBA Optics / Photonics Planetary Science Quantum Engineering Robotics Student Organizations Technology Undergraduate Student Profile Date Showing 210 of 354 results Oct 13, 2017 Artificial Pancreas performs well in clinical trial Improving the quality of life for type 1 diabetes patients Bioengineering, Health / Medicine, Sep 26, 2017 Amount of water in stem cells can determine its fate as fat or bone Study is first to find cell volume can influence the future role of stem cells, regardless of environment Bioengineering, Aug 30, 2017 Schooled by middle-schoolers Engineering student draws life lessons from internship in India Bioengineering, Aug 4, 2017 Harvard first in Biomedical Engineering in new ranking of world universities Program tops Shanghai Rankings of 1,200 universities Bioengineering, Mar 22, 2017 Laser activated gold pyramids could deliver drugs, DNA into cells without harm Microstructures create temporary pores in cells Bioengineering, Mar 6, 2017 Student profile: Keegan Mendez Whether on the squash court or in the research lab, this biomedical engineering concentrator doesn't miss a beat Bioengineering, Feb 9, 2017 Artificial pancreas clinical trials open Trials test system to automatically regulate blood sugar for people with type 1 diabetes Bioengineering, Dec 13, 2016 David Mooney elected Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors Harvard Bioengineer recognized as a distinguished American inventor whose technologies benefit society Bioengineering, Awards, Nov 17, 2016 Harnessing bacteria to fight ocean pollution Students’ synthetic biology project claims gold at international competition Bioengineering, Oct 11, 2016 More progress in building functional human tissues Harvard materials scientists have bioprinted a tubular 3D renal architecture that recapitulates functions of the kidney Materials, Bioengineering, Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 19 Page 20 Current page 21 Page 22 Page 23 … Page 35 35 Page 36 36 Next page › Last page »
Oct 13, 2017 Artificial Pancreas performs well in clinical trial Improving the quality of life for type 1 diabetes patients Bioengineering, Health / Medicine,
Sep 26, 2017 Amount of water in stem cells can determine its fate as fat or bone Study is first to find cell volume can influence the future role of stem cells, regardless of environment Bioengineering,
Aug 30, 2017 Schooled by middle-schoolers Engineering student draws life lessons from internship in India Bioengineering,
Aug 4, 2017 Harvard first in Biomedical Engineering in new ranking of world universities Program tops Shanghai Rankings of 1,200 universities Bioengineering,
Mar 22, 2017 Laser activated gold pyramids could deliver drugs, DNA into cells without harm Microstructures create temporary pores in cells Bioengineering,
Mar 6, 2017 Student profile: Keegan Mendez Whether on the squash court or in the research lab, this biomedical engineering concentrator doesn't miss a beat Bioengineering,
Feb 9, 2017 Artificial pancreas clinical trials open Trials test system to automatically regulate blood sugar for people with type 1 diabetes Bioengineering,
Dec 13, 2016 David Mooney elected Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors Harvard Bioengineer recognized as a distinguished American inventor whose technologies benefit society Bioengineering, Awards,
Nov 17, 2016 Harnessing bacteria to fight ocean pollution Students’ synthetic biology project claims gold at international competition Bioengineering,
Oct 11, 2016 More progress in building functional human tissues Harvard materials scientists have bioprinted a tubular 3D renal architecture that recapitulates functions of the kidney Materials, Bioengineering,