Graduation with Distinction Prepares Students for What’s Next
Graduation with Departmental Distinction gives MEMS undergraduates the skills and confidence to take their next step in academia, industry, medicine and beyond.
Graduation with Departmental Distinction gives MEMS undergraduates the skills and confidence to take their next step in academia, industry, medicine and beyond.
By transforming movement into data, Timothy Dunn is reshaping how scientists can study behavior and the brain.
Biomedical engineering professor recognized for pioneering technologies that transform women’s cancer care worldwide.
Intellectual Community Planning Grants are helping Duke Engineering faculty tackle big issues like global cancer disparities, insuring increasing climate risks and securing the nation's supply of critical minerals.
Haozhe “Harry” Wang pioneers atomic-scale semiconductor manufacturing to push electronics beyond silicon.
A new engineering graduate course shows how games can reinvent training at Duke Health—and how students learn by building for real clients.
Tania Roy studies novel semiconductor materials and devices to advance energy-efficient computing and edge AI.
Wilson shares this prize for his contributions to the development of the cochlear implant.
Yiran Chen develops brain-inspired semiconductor hardware to enable faster, greener AI at the edge.
Electrically heated elements turn from solids to liquids to provide flexibility to robotic building blocks.
Warren Grill's work with School of Medicine colleagues indicates that stimulating the vagus nerve system could reduce brain inflammation and disruptions in attention and awareness following surgery.