Research Keyword Biomedical Imaging

Zhongping Chen's picture
Zhongping Chen
http://chen.bli.uci.edu/
Professor
Biomedical Engineering
Office: BLI A110
Professor (Joint Appointment)
Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Professor (Joint Appointment)
Chemical Engineering and Materials Science
Professor (Joint Appointment)
Beckman Laser Institute

Dr. Chen's general research interests are in the areas of biomedical photonics, microfabrication, biomaterials and biosensors.

Dr. Chen and his group have developed a noninvasive technology, known as functional optical coherence tomography, which allows cross-sectional imaging of tissue structure, blood flow, and birefringence simultaneously with high spatial resolution.

Dr. Chen's current research foci are: (a) investigating light/tissue interactions; (b) developing medical diagnostic and therapeutic devices and instruments using advanced optical, microfabrication and biomedical technologies; (c) applications of these technologies for the early diagnosis of cancer and other diseases.

Dr. Chen currently has several active research projects funded by the NSF, NIH/NIBIB, NIH/NCI, and DARPA. Most of these projects are interdisciplinary, involving research areas in fiber optics, lasers and optoelectronics, MEMS, signal processing, and biomedical instrumentation.

Dr. Chen's laboratory is located at the Beckman Laser Institute, and he holds a joint appointment with the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Department of Surgery, and Materials Science and Engineering Program.

Tibor Juhasz
Professor
Biomedical Engineering
Office: MS 1 118
Professor
School of Medicine
Joerg Meyer's picture
Joerg Meyer
Personal Homepage
Assistant Professor
Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Creative Interactive Visualization Laboratory
http://imaging.eng.uci.edu
Office: EH 4223
Assistant Professor
Biomedical Engineering

Dr. Meyer's research is focused on large-scale biomedical imaging, interactive rendering of biological and medical data sets (CT/MRI/confocal laser-scan microscopy/cryosections), and biomolecular visualization (DNA/RNA/protein folding). He is also interested in large-scale earthquake visualization (ground motion and structural response simulations), and other application fields in scientific visualization. His teaching includes Computer Graphics, Interactive Rendering Techniques for Biomedical Imaging and Virtual Reality.

Dr. Meyer has a joint appointment with the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and the Department of Biomedical Engineering.