Dr. Pao-Tai Lin is an associate professor of electrical and computer engineering and materials science and engineering at Texas A&M University. Dr. Lin’s research interests include mid-infrared integrated photonics, biomedical sensors-on-a-chip, multiscale fabrication technologies, reconfigurable materials, and nanophotonics and metamaterials.
Dr. Jiho Shin is an assistant professor of chemical engineering at Texas A&M University. Dr. Shin’s research interests include semiconductor materials and devices, implantable and wearable bioelectronics, and micro-LED displays.
Dr. Raksha Raghunathan is an assistant professor of biomedical engineering in radiology at the Houston Methodist Academic Institute. Dr. Raghunathan’s research interests include computational neuroimaging, brain network analysis, and applying machine learning techniques to study neurological disorders such as epilepsy and Alzheimer’s disease.
Dr. Hui-Wen Lo is a Jean and Tom McMullin Endowed Professor at Texas A&M University Naresh K. Vashisht College of Medicine. Her research interests are primarily in molecular and cell biology that underlie tumor growth, tumor progression, brain metastasis, and cancer drug discovery and development.
Dr. Hong Zhao is an associate professor of Molecular Biology in Medicine at the Houston Methodist Academic Institute. Dr. Zhao’s research uses systems biology approaches to study and combat brain metastatic cancer. Her projects integrate “dry lab” computational modeling with “wet lab” experimental testing to discover effective treatment strategies and explore personalized drug combinations.
Dr. Stephen Wong is a professor of radiology and medicine at the Houston Methodist Academic Institute. Dr. Wong’s research focuses on a systems-based understanding of health and disease to develop cost-effective strategies for disease management and healthcare delivery.
Dr. Biana Godin is an associate professor of nanomedicine at the Houston Methodist Academic Institute. Dr. Godin’s lab focuses on developing physiologically relevant in vitro and in vivo disease models and exploiting physical and biological mechanisms to improve currently available therapeutic options in oncology and obstetrics.
Dr. Yubin Zhou is a professor at Texas A&M’s IBT Center for Translational Cancer Research. Dr. Zhou’s research spans calcium channels, synthetic immunology, optogenetics, chemogenetics, epigenetics, and immunotherapy.
Dr. Jason George is an assistant professor of biomedical engineering at Texas A&M University. Dr. George’s research interests include stochastic models of tumor-immune interaction, foundational model development, mathematical biology, quantitative immunology, computational and statistical modeling, and cancer immunotherapy.
Dr. Tanmay Lele is a distinguished professor in the Departments of Biomedical Engineering and Chemical Engineering at Texas A&M University. He earned his PhD in Chemical Engineering from Purdue University in 2002, followed by postdoctoral research in Vascular Biology at Harvard Medical School and Children’s Hospital. Dr. Lele’s research focuses on mechanobiology, particularly how mechanical […]