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Packing It All In: Curricula for Biomedical Computing

Balancing Breadth and Depth

The last decade saw a proliferation of training programs at the intersection of life science and computation, with more than 60 new degree and certificate programs launched in the United States alone...
Sep, 01, 2005
BCATS: Not Your Usual Biomedical Computation Conference

Students, not faculty, are the ones in charge

Outwardly, the Biomedical Computation at Stanford (BCATS) conference resembles other academic conferences: Researchers converge to hear about the latest developments in their field and to...
Jan, 01, 2008
Simbios: Bringing Biomedical Simulation to Your Fingertips

How Simbios' state-of-the-art software tools are contributing to high-impact biomedical research

Simbios began with a simple idea: that physics-based simulation of biological structures at all scales could benefit from a unified tool-building effort.   At the same time, the thinking went,...
Oct, 01, 2009
The Ease and Grace of OpenSim 3.0

New release improves both GUI and API

OpenSim, the neuromuscular modeling and simulation software, is now available in a new digit: 3.0. The change (up from 2.4) reflects significant improvements that make this open source tool more...
OpenSim
Oct, 19, 2012
Clinical Decision Support: Providing Quality Healthcare with Help from a Computer
In a classic cartoon, a physician offers a second opinion from his computer.  The patient looks horrified: How absurd to think that a computer could have better judgment than a human doctor! But...
Jan, 01, 2010
OpenSim User Profile: Katherine Holzbaur, PhD

Katherine Holzbaur of Wake Forest University Medical School simulates the biomechanics of the upper limb.

from http://biomedicalcomputationreview.org/content/simbios-bringing-biomedical-simulation-your-fingertips   Katherine Holzbaur, PhD, assistant professor of biomedical engineering at Wake Forest...
Oct, 01, 2009
OpenSim User Profile: B.J. Fregly, PhD

University of Florida’s B.J. Fregly hopes to use OpenSim to simulate the knee.

from http://biomedicalcomputationreview.org/content/simbios-bringing-biomedical-simulation-your-fingertips   B.J. Fregly, PhD, associate professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering and of...
Oct, 01, 2009
Modeling the Spine, Cord and All

Injury type matters

When the bones and discs of the spinal column are broken, crushed, or displaced, the spinal cord itself may be devastatingly damaged. Now, a new computer model suggests that the manner in...
Jul, 01, 2008
Calculating Statistics of Arm Movements

An explanation of geometric constraints in computational biomechanics

  Suppose 20 friends live in the same city and want to meet for dinner. They should be able to identify a unique spot that minimizes the squared distance everyone needs to travel by taking the...
geometric constraints
Jan, 02, 2012
Human Versus Machine: Biomedical expertise meets computer automation

Computers and human experts duke it out over who is better at diagnosing disease, interpreting images, or predicting protein structure

Dorothy Rosenthal tenses over her microscope, peering at the problematic nucleus on the Pap smear yet again. “It’s abnormal,” she decides, and then hesitates. “No, it’s...
Jul, 01, 2006
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