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A robot called MIME.
Professors Jim Carroll (electrical engineering) and George Fulk (physical therapy) are testing the Mirror Image Movement Enabler (MIME) robot.
The MIME is a robotic arm that allows individuals with movement dysfunction to improve motor function and their ability to perform everday tasks such as dressing, eating and grooming.
Biomedical Engineering Science and Technology: Research Opportunities
Clarkson University does world-class research in the area of biomedical and rehabilitation engineering. Undergraduates can get involved in research through a variety of ways, including undergraduate research projects, honors theses, and SPEED teams. Biomedical and rehabilitation engineering is a multi-disciplinary field. Projects include engineers, biologists, neuroscientists, chemists, computer scientists, physical therapists, and beyond. Example projects include:
- Power wheelchair simulator with a virtual reality environment
- Infant monitoring to understand Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS)
- Wearable chewing and swallowing sensors
- Study of how people stand and how they fall
- Novel electrochemical biosensors, including glucose biosensors
- Noninvasive detection of hearing loss in newborns
- Health effects of pollution
- Fluorescence imaging of the brain using nano-spheres
Where Can Biomedical Engineering Science and Technology Take Me?
Requirements
Curricula
Student Projects for Engineering Experience & Design
Center for Rehabilitation Engineering Science & Technology
Department of Chemistry & Biomolecular Engineering
Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering
Department of Mechanical & Aeronautical
