News News Events All News Stories All news stories Filter by Topics Academics Active Learning Labs Dean REEF Makerspace AI / Machine Learning Allston Campus Alumni Applied Computation Applied Mathematics Applied Physics Awards Bioengineering Climate Computer Science Cooking COVID-19 Design Diversity / Inclusion Electrical Engineering Entrepreneurship Environment Environmental Science & Engineering Ethics Events Geoengineering Graduate Student Profile Health / Medicine Industry K-12 Master of Design Engineering Materials Materials Science & Mechanical Engineering MS/MBA Optics / Photonics Planetary Science Quantum Engineering Robotics Student Organizations Technology Undergraduate Student Profile Date Showing 590 of 608 results Apr 18, 2018 Biology without borders New Quantitative Biology Initiative will bring together physical and life scientists to answer major questions Academics, Applied Mathematics, Bioengineering, Mar 5, 2018 Personal cancer vaccines get their own boost A facile biomaterial approach that educates the immune system with tumor-specific peptides could help eradicate tumors more effectively while preventing them from recurring Bioengineering, Oct 31, 2016 Making every cell matter A new method for encapsulating single cells within tunable microgels could boost efficacy of cell-based therapies and tissue engineering Health / Medicine, Sep 26, 2016 An unobstructed view into the human body An antifouling coatingcould help clinicians see clearly during endoscope procedures Materials, Aug 4, 2016 Harvard spinout Validere to commercialize ‘liquid fingerprinting’ technique Ability to instantly identify unknown liquids in the field could aid first responders, improve plant safety Aug 14, 2020 Seven Million Face Shields and Counting How a Harvard COVID-19 project led to regional, scalable PPE production Health / Medicine, COVID-19, Oct 5, 2017 A decade of growth at SEAS The Harvard Paulson School celebrates widening innovative research, looks to expanded future Academics, Events, Sep 26, 2017 Amount of water in stem cells can determine its fate as fat or bone Study is first to find cell volume can influence the future role of stem cells, regardless of environment Bioengineering, Aug 1, 2018 A soft, on-the-fly solution to a hard, underwater problem Soft grippers can be 3D printed on board ships to safely sample different types of sea life Environment, Robotics, Nov 5, 2015 Making visualizations more memorable Eye-tracking research reveals which types of visuals help people remember Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 57 Page 58 Current page 59 Page 60 Page 61 Next page › Last page »
Apr 18, 2018 Biology without borders New Quantitative Biology Initiative will bring together physical and life scientists to answer major questions Academics, Applied Mathematics, Bioengineering,
Mar 5, 2018 Personal cancer vaccines get their own boost A facile biomaterial approach that educates the immune system with tumor-specific peptides could help eradicate tumors more effectively while preventing them from recurring Bioengineering,
Oct 31, 2016 Making every cell matter A new method for encapsulating single cells within tunable microgels could boost efficacy of cell-based therapies and tissue engineering Health / Medicine,
Sep 26, 2016 An unobstructed view into the human body An antifouling coatingcould help clinicians see clearly during endoscope procedures Materials,
Aug 4, 2016 Harvard spinout Validere to commercialize ‘liquid fingerprinting’ technique Ability to instantly identify unknown liquids in the field could aid first responders, improve plant safety
Aug 14, 2020 Seven Million Face Shields and Counting How a Harvard COVID-19 project led to regional, scalable PPE production Health / Medicine, COVID-19,
Oct 5, 2017 A decade of growth at SEAS The Harvard Paulson School celebrates widening innovative research, looks to expanded future Academics, Events,
Sep 26, 2017 Amount of water in stem cells can determine its fate as fat or bone Study is first to find cell volume can influence the future role of stem cells, regardless of environment Bioengineering,
Aug 1, 2018 A soft, on-the-fly solution to a hard, underwater problem Soft grippers can be 3D printed on board ships to safely sample different types of sea life Environment, Robotics,
Nov 5, 2015 Making visualizations more memorable Eye-tracking research reveals which types of visuals help people remember