Graduate Courses
BIOE 5200: Physiology And Anatomy For BioengineersÌýÌý
(3 hours) Review and study of general physiological principles and bioengineering
perspectives of the human circulatory, respiratory, digestive, immune, nervous, muscular
and excretory systems.
BIOE 6100: Computational PhysiologyÌýÌý
(3 hours) Application of mathematical and computational techniques to physiological
systems. Models include conductive cables and compartmental models of nerve fibers,
nonlinear differential equation models of electrophysiology, and stochastic models
of biomolecular interactions.
BIOE 5730 Computational Bioengineering
(3 hours) Introduction to and utilization of computation packages in orthopedic biomechanics.Ìý
Computer aided design of implants, shape-optimization, finite element analysis of
implant performance and failure of musculoskeletal organs, tissues and cells.
BIOE 8100: Computational PhysiologyÌýÌý
(3 hours) Application of mathematical and computational techniques to physiological
systems. Models include conductive cables and compartmental models of nerve fibers,
nonlinear differential equation models of electrophysiology, and stochastic models
of biomolecular interactions.