[Illinois] Bio-sensing Summer Series 2010: Engineering Cellular Microenvironments and Microstructures
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NCN@Illinois Video Team
This resource belongs to the NCN@Illinois Video Team group.
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Category
Published on
Abstract
Advances in informatics, nanotechnology, and deeper understanding of biological systems have provided new opportunities to make fundamental advances in sensing and dynamic control of engineered systems. BioSensing-BioActuation (BSBA) is a developing new research frontier that will profoundly impact both engineering and biological sciences in sensing/actuation science and technologies, and could has the potential for bringing a paradigm shift in engineering and biological research by creating new, truly cross-disciplinary research methodologies. BSBA refers to an emergent research area that aims at developing novel bio-derived and bio-inspired sensing/actuation technologies based on the fundamental understanding of biological systems. It is highly interdisciplinary by nature, drawing expertise from biology, engineering, computer science, materials science, and mathematics.
Submitter
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Bio
Brendan Harley, Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Illinois
Research Topics - Biodata
Extracellular Matrix Analogs, Cell and Tissue Engineering
From Brendan Harley's faculty profile
Cite this work
Researchers should cite this work as follows:
-
Brendan Harley; NanoBio Node; Obaid Sarvana (2013), "[Illinois] Bio-sensing Summer Series 2010: Engineering Cellular Microenvironments and Microstructures," https://nanohub.org/resources/16742.
Time
Location
MNTL 1000, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL