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- Supporting Biomedical Engineering Students in Holistic Development
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Ashley J. Earle, York College of Pennsylvania; Nozomi Nishimura, Cornell University; Isaac Smith, Brigham Young University; David M. Small, Cornell University
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Biomedical Engineering
Paper ID #33167Enhancing the Teaching of Research Ethics Through Emotional Priming withEncounters with Patients and ReflectionDr. Ashley J. Earle, York College of Pennsylvania Ashley is an Assistant Professor in the Mechanical and Civil Engineering department at York College of Pennsylvania. She received her B.S in Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering and B.A. in International Studies from Lafayette College. She then pursued her passion for neuromuscular disease research at Cornell University where she received her PhD in Biomedical Engineering. At York, she is passionate about developing pedagogy that encourages students
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- Supporting Biomedical Engineering Students in Holistic Development
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Dianne Grayce Hendricks, University of Washington; Yuliana Flores, Human Centered Design & Engineering, University of Washington
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Diversity
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Biomedical Engineering
Paper ID #34988Teaching Social Justice to Engineering StudentsDr. Dianne Grayce Hendricks, University of Washington Dr. Dianne Hendricks is a Lecturer in the Department of Human Centered Design & Engineering and the Director of the Engineering Communication Program at the University of Washington. She designs and teaches courses involving universal design, technical communication, ethics, and diversity, equity and inclusion. She co-founded HuskyADAPT (Accessible Design and Play Technology), where she mentors UW students in design for local needs experts with disabilities. She also leads STEM outreach activities for
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- Biomedical Engineering Division Poster Session (Works in Progress)
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Maysam Nezafati, Georgia Institute of Technology; Joseph M LeDoux, Georgia Institute of Technology; Kelvin D'wayne Pierre II, Georgia Institute of Technology; Katherine Tsai Shook, Georgia Institute of Technology
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Diversity
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Biomedical Engineering
values in theirassumptions scaffolds the engineering ethics (Feister et al., 2016; Dyrud, 2017). Just withinsubfield of biomedical engineering, unaddressed biases have led to situations such as not includingwomen’s anatomy and physiology in the design of joint implants resulting in irreversible healthissues, given the fact that women form more than 65% of joint replacement patients makes thisissue even more painful (Hutchison, 2019), pulse-oximeters read the SpO2 level of patients withdarker skins 8% lower than real value, which can have some fatal consequences for the patientsespecially at the time of coivd-19 pandemic (Sjoding et al., 2020), left-handed surgeons notreceiving appropriate equipment during training (Adusumilli et al., 2004), and
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- Biomedical Engineering Postcard Session (Best of Works in Progress)
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Mark A. Chapman, University of San Diego
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-departure symposium, the students will travel together to Stockholm tobegin their research projects at SciLifeLab. The author will travel with the students and be onsiteduring the first 3 weeks of the program. During these first three weeks at the host institution,weekly 2-hour research development workshops are to be held (Table 3). These workshops aredesigned to provide students with information on how to be an effective and ethical scientist.Since many of the student participants will be new to scientific research, workshop topicsinclude: the scientific method, hypothesis formulation, searching the scientific literature,managing references, writing scientific reports, experimental design, laboratory documentation(lab notebooks and data
- Conference Session
- Improving the BME Classroom on the Ground and Virtually
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Charles J. Robinson, Clarkson University; Loretta Driskel, Clarkson University; Erin Blauvelt, Clarkson University; Laura J. Perry, Clarkson University
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University, Syracuse, NY. Registered Professional Engineer (Ohio). Robinson’s teaching approach comes from an amalgam of academic, industrial (Bell Labs), governmental (VA) and clinical experiences, plus an interest in science and ethics from his undergraduate days.Ms. Loretta Driskel, Clarkson University Since the late 1990’s my passion has been to create engaging, diverse teaching and learning experiences for students and faculty. As the senior instructional designer at Clarkson University, I have presented at conferences such as the Online Learning Consortium and I have presented at a wide variety of other venues including ADEIL; Sloan-C International Online Learning; Sloan-C Blending Learning; eLearning Consortium of
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- Biomedical Engineering Division Poster Session (Works in Progress)
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Maryam Mobed-Miremadi, Santa Clara University; Navid Shaghaghi, Santa Clara University; Gangshu Cai, Santa Clara University; Prashanth Asuri, Santa Clara University
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Biomedical Engineering
biomedical industry, more specifically in Diagnostics (Abaxis), Genomics (Agilent Technologies, Wafergen) and Biomedical Devices (Boston Scientific). After serving as Kordestani’s Chair in Bioengineering at San Jose State University, she joined the department of Bioengineering at Santa Clara University.Navid Shaghaghi, Santa Clara University Navid Shaghaghi is a lecturer and researcher in the department of Mathematics and Computer Science in the College of Arts and Sciences, the departments of Bioengineering and Computer Science & Engineer- ing in the School of Engineering, and the department of Information Systems and Analytics in the School of Business at Santa Clara University. He directs the Ethical, Pragmatic
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- Improving the BME Classroom on the Ground and Virtually
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Jeffery Ethan Joll II, Vanderbilt University; W. David Merryman, Vanderbilt University
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, instructional design, and educational technology.Dr. W. David Merryman, Vanderbilt University W. David Merryman, PhD is the Walters Family Professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering, and Professor of Pharmacology, Medicine, and Pediatrics at Vanderbilt University. He is also Associate Chair of the Department of Biomedical Engineering. His research interests are cardiovascular and pul- monary mechanobiology with a particular focus on developing new therapeutic strategies, cell and soft tissue biomechanics, and bioengineering ethics. Prior to his arrival at Vanderbilt, Dave was an Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering at the University of Alabama at Birmingham and prior to that, a Research Associate of the
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- Supporting Biomedical Engineering Students in Holistic Development
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Tristan McCarty, University of Florida; Sarah Corinne Rowlinson Furtney, University of Florida
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Biomedical Engineering
and foreign language skills as well as the movement of research-based skillsets.Academia saw the addition of “the ability to publish academic literature”, movement of “noteresearch advisor”, movement of “ability to write grants”, “experimental design”, and “teaching atuniversity level as expert” shifted up by one tier from their initial positions. Healthcare saw thegreatest changes in terms of model content since medical schooling programs requiresignificantly different skillets and have different expectations when compared to applying forengineering positions. Additions included medical ethics, medical clinical work, inclusion ofadmissions test scores, as well as a focus on patient treatment and care experience. All changeswere made after