Playing with #singlemolecules, bending light, and algorithms to see really small things. Led by Matthew Lew, Associate Professor @WashUESE @WashUengineers
Very happy to share this news of my election to become an #OpticaFellow. I'm grateful to my many students and mentors over the years. Happy Thanksgiving!
Meet the new #OpticaFellows!
The Optica Board of Directors is pleased to announce that 121 members from 23 countries have been elected as Fellows for their outstanding contributions and service to Optica and the community.
Find the full class: https://t.co/eFFa5yjRdk
How do discoveries in the lab become lifesaving treatments?
This updated infographic provides a big-picture view of the R&D pipeline, illustrating the public-private sector continuum from discovery to delivery. It visualizes just how much innovation depends on collaboration among multiple sectors and stages of research.
Use this resource in your outreach to show how progress slows when any segment is underfunded or otherwise weakened.
#FundScience #MedicalInnovation #HealthResearch
"A new polarized dual-view inverted selective-plane illumination microscope (pol-diSPIM), coupled with engineering insights provided by its imaging model, offers an exciting way forward." My commentary is online in PNAS https://t.co/jD5Irs0bcx
Experiments confirm the prediction that fluid-like biomolecular condensates are defined by spatially inhomogeneous organization of the underlying molecules.
https://t.co/SZ41R6OEmc
A team of #WashUEngineers researchers has developed a new method to study biomolecular condensates — tiny, shifting blobs in our cells that help organize important molecules.
Learn more. {link}
https://t.co/DvM8oDHodb
Matthew Lew of @WashUESE & grad student Yiyang Chen developed a new method to improve precision in molecular imaging. Their technique boosts accuracy, with potential to transform studies in protein interactions & more.
#WashUEngineers
https://t.co/dAKbDzsWXD
This semesters Biophysical Evening seminar will be given by Matthew Lew, Professor in Electrical & Systems Engineering at WashU
"Single-Molecule Orientation-Localization Microscopy: New Challenges and Biophysical Insights"
Thurs, March 20th 4-5 PM, Connor Auditorium
Out today from the Lee lab @SteveTheChemist In the POLCAM paper, they make polarization cameras compatible with single-molecule detection for instant molecular orientation microscopy. https://t.co/b9XUHa5a2M
News coverage of our JPC article https://t.co/hTi7GXHqj0 "Wobbly molecules get a closer look" https://t.co/UlZtRTauVW via @WashUengineers@shawncballard
Congratulations to Joseph O’Sullivan, the Samuel C. Sachs Professor of Electrical Engineering! He was among 12 faculty and staff awarded at the 25th Annual Outstanding Faculty and Staff Awards.
Read more here: https://t.co/AGf6ihddBf
Matthew Lew & Jai Rudra's teamwork brings forth a new imaging method. Their technique highlights interlocking peptides, crucial in identifying toxic strains in Alzheimer’s.
#WashUEngineers#Imaging@WashUBME@WashUESE
https://t.co/WKCWT9mF3j