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Results for: Department: Biomedical Engineering 4 courses
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  • BME 100: Intro Biomed Engineering

    Undergraduate 3 credits

    Prerequisites: BME major or BNG minor or departmental consent

    SBC: TECH

    A rigorous introduction to biomedical engineering that provides the historical and social context of BME though contemporary emerging areas within BME. Specific areas covered in depth include: bioelectricity and biosensors (action potentials to signal processing), bioimaging (invasive and non-invasive), genetic engineering (with ethical discussions), and biostatistics. Hands-on computational modeling introduces the physiological concept of positive and negative feedback loops in the body. Emphasis is placed on ways engineers view the living system by using design based approaches and computation.

    SessionSession 2Class #65963Section30InstructorMei Lin ChanModeOnline AsynchronousDaysFlexible (Online)TimeTBACampusWest (Main Campus)StatusOpenNotes
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  • BME 205: Clinical Chal 21st Cent

    Undergraduate 3 credits

    SBC: SNW; TECH

    Technology used by current medical practice, focusing on weekly topics associated with a specific disease state. Technology used to diagnose and treat these disease states will be rigorously examined. Weekly topics will include: cancer, cardiovascular disease, Alzheimer's, obesity, diabetes, osteoporosis, osteoarthritis, and organ transplant. Key disease states will be presented in physiological and cellular depth. This course may not be taken for major credit.

    SessionSession 2Class #61565Section30InstructorMei Lin ChanModeOnline AsynchronousDaysFlexible (Online)TimeTBACampusWest (Main Campus)StatusOpenNotes
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  • BME 303: Biomechanics

    Undergraduate 3 credits

    Prerequisite: BME 260 or MEC 260 Pre- or Corequisite: BIO 202

    DEC: H SBC: STAS

    Illuminates the principles of mechanics and dynamics that apply to living organisms, from cells to humans to Sequoia trees. The behavior of organisms is examined to observe how they are constrained by the physical properties of biological materials. Locomotion strategies (or the lack thereof) are investigated for the forces and range of motions required and energy expenditures. Includes the relationship between form and function to illustrate how form dominates behavior. Presents the physiological effects of mechanical stresses on organs, pathologies that develop from abnormal stress, and how biological growth and adaptation arise as a natural response to the mechanics of living.

    SessionSession 2Class #61623Section30InstructorChaudhry (Raza) HassanModeOnline SynchronousDaysMTWRTime06:30-08:15PMCampusWest (Main Campus)StatusOpenNotes
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  • BME 312: LabVIEW Programming

    Undergraduate 3 credits

    LabVIEW is the leading software development platform that enables engineers and scientists to create and deploy powerful measurement and control applications and prototypes with minimal time. This course will systematically teach LabVIEW programming with the focus on the data flow model. The highlighted course topics are basic programming logics, graphic user interface design and parallel programming. It will also teach hardware integration using LabVIEW built-in functions for data acquisition, instrument control, measurement analysis and data presentation. Hands-on projects and demonstrations will be implemented throughout the course to enhance the knowledge learned in classroom. At the end of the course, students will be offered the free exam for Certified LabVIEW Associated Developer provided by National Instruments for future career development.

    SessionSession 1Class #65940Section30InstructorWei LinModeOnline AsynchronousDaysFlexible (Online)TimeTBACampusWest (Main Campus)StatusOpenNotes
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