Archive for the 'Biomedical' Category
I would like to know free website to view samples of personal statement which goes up to UCAS, for biomedical science and clinical science courses.These personal statement should be reliable and valid as much as possible. Thanks for your help
Biomedical science websites at:
November 17 2008 | Biomedical | 3 Comments »
I would like to know free website to view samples of personal statement which goes up to UCAS, for biomedical science and clinical science courses.These personal statement should be reliable and valid as much as possible. Thanks for your help
Biomedical science websites at:
November 17 2008 | Biomedical | 3 Comments »
I would like to know free website to view samples of personal statement which goes up to UCAS, for biomedical science and clinical science courses.These personal statement should be reliable and valid as much as possible. Thanks for your help
Biomedical science websites at:
November 17 2008 | Biomedical | 3 Comments »
I would like to know free website to view samples of personal statement which goes up to UCAS, for biomedical science and clinical science courses.These personal statement should be reliable and valid as much as possible. Thanks for your help
Biomedical science websites at:
November 17 2008 | Biomedical | 3 Comments »
I’m looking through College Board’s website for career interests and I can’t seem to differentiate between being a just a medical researcher and being a biomedical laboratory researcher. Is biomedical lab research just a sub-field of medical research? They are both listed as different careers in the same category of medicine.
I’m interested in working in the medical lab as a career, but are there different requirements for either careers? And what other opportunities are there for someone who is interested in the medical lab?
Biomedical laboratory research is a subcategory of medical research. Medical research encompasses all types of research involving medical issues, including field work, clinical settings, survey analysis, statistical study of computerized medical databases, development of optimal treatment protocols, and many other research areas.
Biomedical laboratory research is a domain of medical research wherein the preponderance of work is performed in a laboratory setting. Nevertheless, it is a very broad field, which includes endocrinology, rheumatology, genetics, immunology, pharmacology, and many subspecialties of medicine. A Laboratory Technician or Laboratory Technologist can readily find careers in biomedical laboratory research, especially if they have a major or advanced degree in biology, chemistry, or biophysics. Masters degrees, PhDs, or an M.D. in any field of medicine, biology, biochemistry, biophysics, or psychology should provide many opportunities in medical research, as well as biomedical laboratory research.
November 15 2008 | Biomedical | 1 Comment »
I’m looking through College Board’s website for career interests and I can’t seem to differentiate between being a just a medical researcher and being a biomedical laboratory researcher. Is biomedical lab research just a sub-field of medical research? They are both listed as different careers in the same category of medicine.
I’m interested in working in the medical lab as a career, but are there different requirements for either careers? And what other opportunities are there for someone who is interested in the medical lab?
Biomedical laboratory research is a subcategory of medical research. Medical research encompasses all types of research involving medical issues, including field work, clinical settings, survey analysis, statistical study of computerized medical databases, development of optimal treatment protocols, and many other research areas.
Biomedical laboratory research is a domain of medical research wherein the preponderance of work is performed in a laboratory setting. Nevertheless, it is a very broad field, which includes endocrinology, rheumatology, genetics, immunology, pharmacology, and many subspecialties of medicine. A Laboratory Technician or Laboratory Technologist can readily find careers in biomedical laboratory research, especially if they have a major or advanced degree in biology, chemistry, or biophysics. Masters degrees, PhDs, or an M.D. in any field of medicine, biology, biochemistry, biophysics, or psychology should provide many opportunities in medical research, as well as biomedical laboratory research.
November 15 2008 | Biomedical | 1 Comment »

Get “Readings in Biomedical Ethics : Canadian Focus” new for only $57.15 . available; visit Textbooks.com for more detail.
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November 13 2008 | Biomedical | No Comments »

A novel automated approach of multi-modality biomedical image control point detection, registration, and fusion has been successfully developed. The new algorithm, which consists of the Adaptive Exploratory Algorithm for the control point/feature detection and Heuristic Optimization Algorithm, is reliable and time efficient. The new approach has been applied on three ophthalmologic modalities of nonhuman primate eyes - angiogram, fundus, and oxygen saturation retinal images. It has achieved an excellent result by giving the visualization of fundus or oxygen saturation image with a complete angiogram overlay. By locking the multi-sensor retinal images in one place, the algorithm allows ophthalmologists to match the same eye over time to get a sense of disease progress and pinpoint surgical tools. The new registration and fusion algorithm can be easily expanded to the eye, brain, or body images of human or animals’. The target readers are graduate/undergraduate students, faculty, and research scientists who are interested in the image registration and fusion algorithms; ophthalmologists and physicians; image processing software developers; and whoever wants to learn image fusion.
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November 13 2008 | Biomedical | No Comments »

Biomedical Images and Computers: Selected Papers Presented at the United States-France Seminar on Biomedical Image Processing, St. Pierre de Chartreuse, France, May 27-31, 1980
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November 13 2008 | Biomedical | No Comments »
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