Meet the 2022-23 Accenture Fellows This year's fellows, including an HST student, will work across research areas including telemonitoring, human-computer interactions, operations research, AI-mediated socialization, and chemical transformations. Kate Hodgins wins HMS award for excellence in medical education The Richard A. Gillis Award for Excellence in Medical Education is given to those who exemplify the standards of excellence of the MD program at Harvard Medical School Large language models help decipher clinical notes Researchers, including an HST faculty member, used a powerful deep-learning model to extract important data from electronic health records that could assist with personalized medicine. Are Covid-19 “comas” signs of a protective hibernation state? Scientists hypothesize that, as in a hibernating turtle, the brain under sedation and deprived of oxygen may assume a protective state. Nanosensors target enzymes to monitor and study cancer By analyzing enzyme activity at the organism, tissue, and cellular scales, new sensors could provide new tools to clinicians and cancer researchers. Pagination First page « First Previous page Previous … Page 22 Page 23 Page 24 Current page 25 Page 26 Page 27 Page 28 … Next page Next Last page Last »
Meet the 2022-23 Accenture Fellows This year's fellows, including an HST student, will work across research areas including telemonitoring, human-computer interactions, operations research, AI-mediated socialization, and chemical transformations.
Kate Hodgins wins HMS award for excellence in medical education The Richard A. Gillis Award for Excellence in Medical Education is given to those who exemplify the standards of excellence of the MD program at Harvard Medical School
Large language models help decipher clinical notes Researchers, including an HST faculty member, used a powerful deep-learning model to extract important data from electronic health records that could assist with personalized medicine.
Are Covid-19 “comas” signs of a protective hibernation state? Scientists hypothesize that, as in a hibernating turtle, the brain under sedation and deprived of oxygen may assume a protective state.
Nanosensors target enzymes to monitor and study cancer By analyzing enzyme activity at the organism, tissue, and cellular scales, new sensors could provide new tools to clinicians and cancer researchers.