Posts tagged with 'Biological Sciences Collegiate Division'

Ashish Premkumar

I am a maternal-fetal medicine subspecialist and anthropologist. I am interested in multidisciplinary inquiries into abortion, maternal-fetal therapy, and management of infectious diseases - specifically HIV, cytomegalovirus, toxoplasmosis, and syphilis - during pregnancy. I also have a vested interested in health equity and reproductive justice, and utilize these lenses to engage in critical inquiry to improve health outcomes for pregnant and pregnancy-capable people.


PI willing to mentor undergraduates requiring pay. Students can participate in establishing prostate cell cultures to study cancer disparities.

Research Opportunities through the BSCD

https://cgh.uchicago.edu/education/summer-research-fellowship

Chicago EYES (Educators and Youth Enjoy Science) on Cancer is a cancer research training program for high school and college students interested in careers in biomedicine.

Travel grants for students presenting biological research at a conference.

Ellie Heckscher

We study the development, function and evolution of somatosensory and motor systems using insect larvae as models.


Opportunity to work on short film series at the STAGE Lab.

Study health discourse in Reddit groups to see why some information is more viral than others.

Jasmine Nirody

We study the physics of how biological systems interact with their environments, as well as the role of these interactions in shaping organismal morphology and behavior.

We use a range of theoretical and empirical (laboratory + field) techniques to answer questions that sit at the intersection of behavior, biophysics, and evolution.

We work on problems across organismal systems and levels of biological organization. While the underlying mechanisms (and the techniques we use to study them) may vary as we shift our focus from molecular motors to bacteria to animals, the larger questions we are fascinated by remain the same!

  • How do biological systems sense and respond to mechanical stresses in complex environments?
  • In what environments do adaptive mechanics improve performance?
  • How do flexible locomotive strategies affect the evolution of biomechanical structures?

Our research provides ample opportunities for undergraduate engagement. Please email Jasmine at jnirody@uchicago.edu to discuss options!


The Jeff Metcalf SURF Program is an opportunity exposing University of Chicago students to the world-class science conducted at the MBL.

The Jeff Metcalf SURF Program is an opportunity exposing University of Chicago students to the world-class science conducted at the MBL.

Kenneth Bader

P.I. willing to mentor undergraduate research volunteers work study students, and students requring pay interested in Biomedical acoustics.

The focus of the Biomedical Acoustics Development and Engineering Research Laboratory (BADER Lab) is the translation of therapeutic ultrasound for non- or minimally invasive treatment of cardiovascular and cancerous disease. Specifically, we utilize acoustic cavitation for combinatorial ablation and enhanced drug delivery treatment strategies of pathologies resistant to standard interventional techniques. To assess bubble activity and the resultant changes in tissue structure, we are developing multi-modal imaging approaches via diagnostic ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging. Analytic and numerical bubble dynamics models are also utilized to gain insight into the mechanism of action of our therapeutic approaches. Current research topics include:

  • Chronic thrombus ablation with histotripsy and thrombolytic drugs
  • Passive cavitation and MR imaging to assess histotripsy-induced liquefaction
  • In vitro assessment of histotripsy-enhanced drug delivery
  • Histotripsy-induced sonochemical reactions for the treatment of cancer
  • Numeric and analytic models of bubble dynamics
  • Magnetic Resonance-guided transurethral prostate ablation

For more information, visit our laboratory website: baderlab.uchicago.edu

Luka Pocivavsek

PI looking for undergraduate research volunteers. My lab is a highly collaborative and interdisciplinary lab that combines the physical sciences, engineering, and surgery. We study aortic pathologies, stability and failure of endovascular repairs, stress focusing phenomena induced by surgical interventions, and interfacial adhesion, surface renewal, and topography.


RA for developing a one-quarter public writing workshop related to Media Aesthetics

The Medical Informatics (MedIX) program’s main objectives are to encourage talented undergraduates to pursue graduate education and to expose students to interdisciplinary research, especially at the border of information technology and medicine.

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