Thursday, 6 May 2021, 9:06 am
(Hoboken, N.J. and Gisborne, New Zealand – May
6, 2021) – Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
images are usually meant to be static. But now, researchers
from Mātai Medical Research Institute (Mātai), Stevens
Institute of Technology, Stanford University, the University
of Auckland and other institutions, report on an imaging
technique that captures the brain in motion in real time, in
3D and in stunning detail, providing a potential diagnostic
tool for detecting difficult-to-spot conditions such as
obstructive brain disorders and aneurysms – before they
become life threatening.
The new technique, called 3D
amplified MRI, or 3D aMRI, reveals pulsating brain movement
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VIDEO: 3D aMRI not only provides a stunning look inside the beating brain , but it can also measure this physiological motion in all directions. Here, the amplitude of brain motion is. view more
Credit: 3D aMRI method outlined in Abderezaei et al. Brain Multiphysics (2021); Terem et al. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine (2021).
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) images are usually meant to be static. But now, researchers from Mātai Medical Research Institute (Mātai), Stevens Institute of Technology, Stanford University, the University of Auckland and other institutions, report on an imaging technique that captures the brain in motion in real time, in 3D and in stunning detail, providing a potential diagnostic tool for detecting difficult-to-spot conditions such as obstructive brain disorders and aneurysms - before they become life threatening.
Don’t just encourage college kids to get vaccinated. Require it | Editorial
Today 7:00 AM
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Since Rutgers became the first college in America to require that every student be vaccinated against COVID before returning to campus this fall, more than a hundred others have jumped on board – including nearly a dozen colleges in New Jersey.
This growing movement to require the shot could help vaccinate tens of millions of college-age Americans if all universities follow suit. That matters, because the more we allow the virus to circulate, the greater the chance that new variants could pop up that are more contagious, dangerous, or difficult to inoculate against.
Stevens Institute of Technology Continues Collaboration with Noodle to Add Three New Online Master s Degrees
Stevens Master s Programs are Centered Around In-Demand Professions
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HOBOKEN, N.J., May 4, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Stevens Institute of Technology, a premier research and technology-centric university in Hoboken, N.J., is continuing its collaboration with Noodle, the fastest growing online learning network in the country, to further broaden its offerings of online classes at the master s level.
This month, Stevens launched three new online master s degree programs, supported by a technologically advanced platform that features synchronous learning and interactive networking opportunities with world-class faculty and students. The three programs are:
Kean joins list of universities in NJ requiring COVID-19 vaccines
Published: May 3, 2021
Kean University as vaccine site, during a visit by the governor in March (Josue Lora/ NJ Governor s office)
Kean University has been added to the list of colleges requiring COVID-19 vaccinations for students to return to campus for the fall semester.
By the end of August, students need to be fully vaccinated against COVID and have updated vaccination records sent to the school in order to return to campus, the university has announced, noting that students would be able to request an exemption for health or religious reasons.