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Displaying all 7 results
Conference Session
"Best" of BED
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Anthony J McGoron, Florida International University; Hamid Shahrestani, Florida International University, BME; Michael Edward Brown, Florida International University; James Dennis Byrne, Florida International University
Tagged Divisions
Biomedical
design experience based on theknowledge and skills acquired in earlier course work and incorporating appropriate engineeringstandards and multiple realistic constraints”. It allows students to develop their managementskills while learning design and product development. Students apply what they have learned inthe previous years, develop their communication skills, as well as their interpersonal and projectmanagement skills towards design and product development. The capstone design courseprepares students for successful and productive professional careers. Teams must be composedof members with skills needed to successfully complete the project. For complex problems theseskills often require knowledge from disciplines outside of their own, and
Conference Session
Biomedical Engineering Poster Session
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Richard L. Goldberg, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Kevin Caves, Duke University
Tagged Divisions
Biomedical
Page 23.1387.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2013 Work in Progress: Using clinical advisory boards and an online system to provide feedback for client-based senior design projectsAbstractIn our capstone design class, biomedical engineering (BME) students develop custom assistivetechnology for people with disabilities in the local community. Project ideas come fromtherapists and clinicians in Durham and Chapel Hill. Students spend the entire semester workingon the design and development of a device that meets the client’s need. This work involves asignificant clinical understanding to ensure that the final device will be appropriate for the client.To provide this clinical perspective
Conference Session
"Best" of BED
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Idalis Villanueva, University of Maryland, College Park; Rachel L. Manthe, Fischell Department of Bioengineering, University of Maryland, College Park; Kevin M Knapstein, Bioprocess Scale-Up Facility, Fischell Department of Bioengineering, University of Maryland, College Park
Tagged Divisions
Biomedical
bioengineering laboratory courseAbstractSuccessful engineers are competent in 21st century skills (problem-solving, critical thinking,technology literacy, creativity, independent learning, excellent communication, and collaborationskills), as well as technical and mathematical principles in order to develop societal solutions.Typically, undergraduate engineering programs utilize capstone design projects and problem setsto promote understanding and integration of engineering concepts. However, in cross-disciplinary fields such as bioengineering, knowledge and use of life sciences is as important asapplying engineering principles. Thus, we need to identify ways to introduce more life sciencestrategies into our bioengineering curriculum. One way to
Conference Session
Biomedical Engineering Poster Session
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
M. Barbara Silver Thorn, Marquette University; Karla Bustamante, Itesm chihuahua
Tagged Divisions
Biomedical
engineering technical electives, one participated in a capstone designproject, and nearly all students conducted research in a faculty laboratory; no studentsparticipated in an engineering service project, industry internship, or formal clinical rotation asyet.The program supports eight (two at each of the four institutions out of country) studentexchanges per institution, 48 student exchanges total over the 4 year project duration. Theprogram is in its third year; none of the partner institutions have met this target allocation as yet.This may be attributed, at least in part, to the delayed completion of the MOU, personnelchanges affecting incoming student placement as well as recruitment of outgoing students,curriculum revisions affecting
Conference Session
Biomedical Engineering Poster Session
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Denny C. Davis, Washington State University; Howard P Davis, Washington State University
Tagged Divisions
Biomedical
Paper ID #5945Work-in-Progress: Teaching Responsibility for Safety in Bioengineering De-signDr. Denny C. Davis P.E., Washington State University Dr. Denny Davis is emeritus professor of Chemical and Bioengineering at Washington State University. He has taught bioengineering multidisciplinary design for approximately a decade, with recent attention given to entrepreneurial projects. Dr. Davis recently co-developed instructional materials on Prevention through Design in Bioengineering for the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH). He is a Fellow of ASEE.Dr. Howard P Davis, Washington State University
Conference Session
Biomedical Engineering Poster Session
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jorge E Bohorquez, University of Miami; Jonathon Anthony Toft-Nielsen
Tagged Divisions
Biomedical
instruments;this main objective encompasses the following specific ones: 1) to use systematic methods forthe development of devices: specifications, analysis, simulation, implementation and testing; 2)to have in consideration safety, noise and power consumption; 3) to use CAD tools for schematiccapture, simulation and PCB routing; 4) to understand the basic configurations and specificationsof medical power supplies and 5) to write microcontroller DSP software for real time acquisition,storage and transmission of biomedical data. MEDELAB is the most advanced required course for BME students following electricalconcentration. The course serves as a sort of capstone, consolidating the various skills studentshave acquired over their studies in the
Conference Session
Biomedical Engineering Poster Session
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jeffrey A. LaMack, Milwaukee School of Engineering; Charles S. Tritt, Milwaukee School of Engineering
Tagged Divisions
Biomedical
engineering tools and the ability to integrate knowledge from differentdisciplines.1,2 Undergraduate capstone design experiences are largely developed to provide asetting for the attainment of these skills, and many have demonstrated positive outcomes in theseareas.3,4 However, it remains a challenge to provide students with opportunities to hone theseskills, particularly those based in the highest levels of Bloom’s Taxonomy of synthesis andevaluation, elsewhere in the curriculum. The junior-level undergraduate biomedical engineeringlaboratory module described here attempts to do this by asking students to use three distinctengineering approaches toward a common problem in a multidisciplinary laboratory course.Multidisciplinary Laboratory Course