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An outside shot of Nord Hall.

Case School of Engineering

From cutting-edge robotics and biomedical advances to breakthroughs in data science, sustainable energy and artificial intelligence, our students, faculty, staff and alumni are forging the future. Stay up to date with the latest stories from that showcase how we solve real-world problems with creativity and precision.

Recent News

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5 questions with… junior engineering student Jamie Yu
Jamie Yu has always enjoyed building things, whether with Legos, musical notes or a string of code. Yu grew up playing music, often creating her own songs for piano and guitar. And while she didn’t follow this passion into college, the skills and creativity she developed translated to her studies i...
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Engineering PhD student wins award for work in plasma science and technology
Souvik Ghosh, a PhD student in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, won the 2016 John Coburn and Harold Winters Student Award in Plasma Science and Technology. He received the award at the 2016 AVS International Symposium and Exhibition in Nashville last month. Souvik works in ...
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ӰƵ, ICBM Medical sign license option to advance biosensor technology for non-invasive management of prostate and breast cancer
ӰƵ and ICBM Medical Inc. signed a one-year option-to-license agreement to commercially advance a low-cost, rapid catalytic biomarker technology that improves patient screening and monitoring for a range of clinical conditions, from concussion to prostate cancer. By leve...
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Northern Ohio institutions become laboratories for future energy usage
ӰƵ, NASA Glenn Research Center and the University of Toledo will serve as “living laboratories” that demonstrate the value of integrating distributed energy sources with the assortment of devices, equipment and other power consumers within buildings and across the grid. ...
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Filling need for fast and accurate assessment of blood’s ability to clot
ӰƵ licenses new sensor technology to company pursuing fast-track FDA approval ӰƵ researchers have developed a portable sensor that can assess the clotting ability of a person’s blood 95 times faster than current methods—using only a single dr...
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Core Cram
Tau Beta Pi, the engineering honor society, will hold Core Cram Sunday, Dec. 11, from 4 to 7 p.m. in Tinkham Veale University Center ballroom C. At Core Cram, older students tutor other students on the engineering and science core classes. Tau Beta Pi holds the event each semester during finals we...
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Take a Break with MEM
Come in from the cold and have homemade baked good and drinks, courtesy of the Master of Engineering and Management (MEM) program. The program will hold an event, titled Take a Break with MEM, Dec. 5-7 from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in Nord Hall, Room 305. Students who stop by during these holiday of...
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“Entrepreneurship and Engineering: From CWRU Research to Action in Africa”
Join the Social Justice Institute for the next Research Lunch Series event Tuesday, Dec. 6, from 11:30 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. in Crawford Hall, Room A13. Daniel J. Lacks, chair of the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, and Michael Goldberg, assistant professor of design and innovation...
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Unraveling how a brain works, block by high-tech block
ӰƵ researchers modernizing cognitive skills testing to detect deficits, problem-solving strategies and more Psychologists have long used building blocks to assess cognitive skills. But researchers at ӰƵ are embedding the blocks with technolog...
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5 questions with… student innovator Matt Campagna
Matt Campagna has always had a knack for working with computers; from a young age, he often took them apart and put them back together. After developing an early interest in programming, he realized that he wanted to apply his skills and directly help people. Now a sophomore studying computer engin...