Materials Morph for Easier Health Monitoring
Xiaoyue Ni, Assistant Professor of the Thomas Lord Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science and Assistant Professor of Biostatistics & Bioinformatics, is creating flexible electronics that go on a person’s skin to monitor everything from heart rate to muscle activity to brain function in real time.
NIH Funding Sustains Scientific Discovery
The Duke Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics ranks second in the nation in National Institutes of Health funding, based on grants awarded during the federal fiscal year ending September 30, 2024.
AI Model Predicts Risks and Potential Causes of Adolescent Mental Illness
An artificial intelligence model developed by Duke Health researchers accurately predicted when adolescents were at high risk for future serious mental health issues before symptoms become severe.
Explainer: Why Universities Need Support for Research Facilities and Administrative Costs
The National Institutes of Health's proposal to cap reimbursement of facilities and administrative (F&A) costs on research grants at 15% would significantly slow or cease scientific and biomedical research at Duke and other research institutions. Here is an explanation of what F&A costs are and why they are such a critical piece of the research endeavor.
Less Invasive Lung Cancer Surgeries on the Rise, Study Shows
Data reveal a new era of lung cancer surgery — less invasive, more precise, and still life-saving.
Examining Health Care Through a Different Lens
Ronald Harris, MMCi, was accepted to the Duke University School of Medicine in 2020, just as COVID-19 was spreading through the world and changing health care.
New Grant to Address Hidden Hypoxemia
Pulse oximetry has long been trusted as a key diagnostic tool. However, for patients with darker skin tones, this technology may not be accurate. A new grant aims to fix that.
Large Language Models Can Outperform Human Programmers
A study from Zhicheng “Jason” Ji, PhD, found that one artificial intelligence large language model outperformed 85% of human programmers in writing computer code.
Wruck Promoted to Full Professor
Celebrating Lisa Wruck PhD, and all the School of Medicine faculty promoted to full professor
New Blood Test Helps Predict Survival of Advanced Prostate Cancer Patients
A new blood test can help predict the survival of patients with advanced prostate cancer, according to research published by Duke Cancer Institute members Andrew Armstrong, MD, and Susan Halabi, PhD, James B. Duke Distinguished Professor of Biostatistics & Bioinformatics.