Using Light, AI to See Cancer in Real Time
Tuan Vo-Dinh is exploring a faster, less invasive way to detect and analyze head and neck cancers using light and AI.
Translating visionary research into impactful tools will better human health worldwide. We stand at the convergence of disciplines and futuristic technologies poised to spark incredible advances in human health. With a long history of biomedical engineering innovation, Duke Engineering is ready to lead.
From harnessing supercomputers to create patient-specific digital twins to engineering the microbial communities we interact with every day, Duke Engineering is home to interdisciplinary centers poised to make real-world impacts.
Redefining the microbial environments where we live, work, and play.
Multidisciplinary research in tissue, cellular, and protein engineering.
Improving women’s cancer diagnosis, prevention, and treatment worldwide.
Tuan Vo-Dinh is exploring a faster, less invasive way to detect and analyze head and neck cancers using light and AI.
Smarter Skies, More Resilient Systems: The Future of Commercial Aviation The National Academy of Engineering Regional Event at Duke University will convene leading experts from industry, government, and academia to […]
May 20 8:00 am-12:00 pm Fitzpatrick Center Schiciano Auditorium
May 11
The Triangle Soft Matter Workshop has for the past 17-years brought together researchers, graduate students, and postdoctoral scholars from across the Research Triangle to share advances in soft materials research. […]
8:00 am
May 11
In this seminar, participants will learn about the structure and organization of medical record data, and use the Duke FCAP system to query data and gain hands-on experience with the […]
10:00 am
May 13
Summer Term 1 classes begin (8:30 AM); Drop/Add continues
8:30 am