Shankar Subramaniam;Metin Akay;Mark A. Anastasio;Vasudev Bailey;David Boas;Paolo Bonato;Ashutosh Chilkoti;Jennifer R. Cochran;Vicki Colvin;Tejal A. Desai;James S. Duncan;Frederick H. Epstein;Stephanie Fraley;Cecilia Giachelli;K. Jane Grande-Allen;Jordan Green;X. Edward Guo;Isaac B. Hilton;Jay D. Humphrey;Chris R Johnson;George Karniadakis;Michael R. King;Robert F. Kirsch;Sanjay Kumar;Cato T. Laurencin;Song Li;Richard L. Lieber;Nigel Lovell;Prashant Mali;Susan S. Margulies;David F. Meaney;Brenda Ogle;Bernhard Palsson;Nicholas A. Peppas;Eric J. Perreault;Rick Rabbitt;Lori A. Setton;Lonnie D. Shea;Sanjeev G. Shroff;Kirk Shung;Andreas S. Tolias;Marjolein C.H. van der Meulen;Shyni Varghese;Gordana Vunjak-Novakovic;John A. White;Raimond Winslow;Jianyi Zhang;Kun Zhang;Charles Zukoski;Michael I. Miller
{"title":"Grand Challenges at the Interface of Engineering and Medicine","authors":"Shankar Subramaniam;Metin Akay;Mark A. Anastasio;Vasudev Bailey;David Boas;Paolo Bonato;Ashutosh Chilkoti;Jennifer R. Cochran;Vicki Colvin;Tejal A. Desai;James S. Duncan;Frederick H. Epstein;Stephanie Fraley;Cecilia Giachelli;K. Jane Grande-Allen;Jordan Green;X. Edward Guo;Isaac B. Hilton;Jay D. Humphrey;Chris R Johnson;George Karniadakis;Michael R. King;Robert F. Kirsch;Sanjay Kumar;Cato T. Laurencin;Song Li;Richard L. Lieber;Nigel Lovell;Prashant Mali;Susan S. Margulies;David F. Meaney;Brenda Ogle;Bernhard Palsson;Nicholas A. Peppas;Eric J. Perreault;Rick Rabbitt;Lori A. Setton;Lonnie D. Shea;Sanjeev G. Shroff;Kirk Shung;Andreas S. Tolias;Marjolein C.H. van der Meulen;Shyni Varghese;Gordana Vunjak-Novakovic;John A. White;Raimond Winslow;Jianyi Zhang;Kun Zhang;Charles Zukoski;Michael I. Miller","doi":"10.1109/OJEMB.2024.3351717","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Over the past two decades Biomedical Engineering has emerged as a major discipline that bridges societal needs of human health care with the development of novel technologies. Every medical institution is now equipped at varying degrees of sophistication with the ability to monitor human health in both non-invasive and invasive modes. The multiple scales at which human physiology can be interrogated provide a profound perspective on health and disease. We are at the nexus of creating “avatars” (herein defined as an extension of “digital twins”) of human patho/physiology to serve as paradigms for interrogation and potential intervention. Motivated by the emergence of these new capabilities, the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, the Departments of Biomedical Engineering at Johns Hopkins University and Bioengineering at University of California at San Diego sponsored an interdisciplinary workshop to define the grand challenges that face biomedical engineering and the mechanisms to address these challenges. The Workshop identified five grand challenges with cross-cutting themes and provided a roadmap for new technologies, identified new training needs, and defined the types of interdisciplinary teams needed for addressing these challenges. The themes presented in this paper include: 1) accumedicine through creation of avatars of cells, tissues, organs and whole human; 2) development of smart and responsive devices for human function augmentation; 3) exocortical technologies to understand brain function and treat neuropathologies; 4) the development of approaches to harness the human immune system for health and wellness; and 5) new strategies to engineer genomes and cells.","PeriodicalId":33825,"journal":{"name":"IEEE Open Journal of Engineering in Medicine and Biology","volume":"5 ","pages":"1-13"},"PeriodicalIF":2.7000,"publicationDate":"2024-02-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/stamp/stamp.jsp?tp=&arnumber=10443312","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"IEEE Open Journal of Engineering in Medicine and Biology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10443312/","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"ENGINEERING, BIOMEDICAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Over the past two decades Biomedical Engineering has emerged as a major discipline that bridges societal needs of human health care with the development of novel technologies. Every medical institution is now equipped at varying degrees of sophistication with the ability to monitor human health in both non-invasive and invasive modes. The multiple scales at which human physiology can be interrogated provide a profound perspective on health and disease. We are at the nexus of creating “avatars” (herein defined as an extension of “digital twins”) of human patho/physiology to serve as paradigms for interrogation and potential intervention. Motivated by the emergence of these new capabilities, the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, the Departments of Biomedical Engineering at Johns Hopkins University and Bioengineering at University of California at San Diego sponsored an interdisciplinary workshop to define the grand challenges that face biomedical engineering and the mechanisms to address these challenges. The Workshop identified five grand challenges with cross-cutting themes and provided a roadmap for new technologies, identified new training needs, and defined the types of interdisciplinary teams needed for addressing these challenges. The themes presented in this paper include: 1) accumedicine through creation of avatars of cells, tissues, organs and whole human; 2) development of smart and responsive devices for human function augmentation; 3) exocortical technologies to understand brain function and treat neuropathologies; 4) the development of approaches to harness the human immune system for health and wellness; and 5) new strategies to engineer genomes and cells.
期刊介绍:
The IEEE Open Journal of Engineering in Medicine and Biology (IEEE OJEMB) is dedicated to serving the community of innovators in medicine, technology, and the sciences, with the core goal of advancing the highest-quality interdisciplinary research between these disciplines. The journal firmly believes that the future of medicine depends on close collaboration between biology and technology, and that fostering interaction between these fields is an important way to advance key discoveries that can improve clinical care.IEEE OJEMB is a gold open access journal in which the authors retain the copyright to their papers and readers have free access to the full text and PDFs on the IEEE Xplore® Digital Library. However, authors are required to pay an article processing fee at the time their paper is accepted for publication, using to cover the cost of publication.