Graduate Students
- Emily Miller is a fifth year Biomedical Engineering (BME) PhD student conducting research in Dr. Corey Neu's Soft Tissue Bioengineering Lab. She will defend her dissertation in summer 2024. What brought you to the University of
- Isabelle Eskay is a first year Biomedical Engineering (BME) Masters student conducting research in the lab of Dr. Debanjan Mukherjee and is a mid-fielder for the CU womens soccer team. To support the BME community, she has worked as a
- Payton Martinez is a third year PhD student in the Biomedical Engineering Program and is earning an Interdisciplinary Quantative Biology (IQ Biology) PhD Certificate designed for students in life sciences, engineering, computer
- Corrin is the recepient of the Investing in CU Engineering (ICUE) Graduate Fellowship. Corrin, tell us about your research. What is it that you study? Currently, I work in Dr. Maureen Lynch’s mechanobiology laboratory, researching breast cancer
- Chad Healy is a PhD student researching how the brain controls movement in Professor Alaa Ahmed’s lab. He returned to finish his PhD in 2021 after taking a break from his studies to complete an internship with SpaceX.
- Eight graduate students are graduating from the Biomedical Engineering Program this spring. Two have earned their doctoral degrees and six have earned master's degrees.
- First-year PhD students Juliet Heye and Payton Martinez were awarded the five-year fellowship, which recognizes outstanding graduate students from across the country in science, technology, engineering and mathematics fields.
- The collaborative work could boost health and drug advancements by giving researchers a better understanding of primary and secondary radiation forces in multiphase colloidal systems – such as emulsions, foams, membranes and gels.
- The new alumni are already starting their careers to help improve the world of healthcare – from designing diagnostic equipment to developing technology for disease treatment.
- Sarah Lipp, a graduate student in the NIH-supported tissue engineering lab of Professor Sarah Calve, creates image showing the interface of skin and muscle during mammalian development.