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Biomedical Engineers By Carolyn Kolb And Jackie DiMaria

Biomedical Engineers - Rutgers Engineering Planetengineeringplanet.rutgers.edu/pdf/ppt/presentation3.pdfBiomedical Engineers By Carolyn Kolb And Jackie DiMaria Table of Contents Page

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Biomedical EngineersBy Carolyn Kolb

And

Jackie DiMaria

Table of Contents

Page 3 DefinitionPage 4 Working tasksPage 5 Famous EngineerPage 6 Famous EngineerPage 7 Projects Being donePage 8 ProfessorPage 9 Jobs you can get with degreePage 10 SalaryPage 11 Work Condition

Definition of Biomedical Engineering

• Biomedical Engineering- They study how living things work. They do research and perform experiments to reconstruct robotic surgical instruments.

What a biomedical engineer does…

1) Design and test new materials, devices, and equipment;including programming electronics and trouble-shooting problems

2) Research to solve clinical problems. They do hands-on

and practical experiments that help people with disabilities live safely and independently

3) Discussing and solving problems with manufacturing, quality, purchasing, and marketing department

Famous Biomedical Engineers

• Yuan Cheng Fung: founder of the biomedical engineering department at UC, SD. He graduated from Cal Tech. He is famous for remolding tissue

Bonnie Dunbar

She earned her BS and MS in mechanical, biomedical, and ceramic engineering from

Washington University. She as a professor at Houston U and is a Nasa Astronaut

Projects being done at Rutgers

1) Clinical methods development using ultra fast lasers for assessing cancer tissue viability.

2) Clustering techniques for evaluating genomic and proteomic data

Professor at Rutgers University

Stanley M. Dunn is a biomedical engineer and a professor. He finished working on three papers from 1999-2001. Stanley is currently working on two projects that are dealing with creating new methods in biomedical engineering.

Jobs that you can get with a degree

You can be a…….• Biomedical scientist: deals with

laboratory tests on human samples• Clinical biochemist: develops methods

of analysis and data interpretations of patient samples

**Work Hours: 9a.m.- 5p.m.*8 hour work day*Longer hours may be necessary at certain stages of a project*they work in either an office, laboratory, workshop,

manufacturing plant, clinical, or other medical settings.*There is an approximate ratio of 60:40 male female

In 2002 Bio Medial Engineers, made around $60,410. 50% earned between $58,320 and $88,830. The lowest 10% earned less than $48,450. The highest 10% earned around $107,520.