At the end of his clinical rotation, Anthony Pagan was asked by the chief attending physician at St. Johns Episcopal Hospital what he wanted to do after graduation. When he said emergency medicine, he was offered a job on the spot. He started in June.
The method, called ViTVS, uses an image processing technology to divide audio signals into distinct parts, or segments, for isolating clean bird sounds from a noisy background.
Objects from interstellar space, such as rogue planets and asteroids, can become permanently trapped in the Suns orbit as a result of the combined gravitational effects of the Sun and the entire Milky Way galaxy, according to a study.
Their proposal, A Data-Driven Approach to Urban Mobility, leverages advancements in artificial intelligence, data analytics and Internet of Things (IoT) technologies to revitalize the Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA).
Dr. Rinu Abraham, a recent graduate of the Katz Schools Occupational Therapy Doctorate, was the corresponding author of a study that found a negative correlation between manual dexterity and cognitive function in individuals with Multiple Sclerosis.
The projects, drawn across the schools graduate programs in STEM and Health Sciences, covered a range of subjects, and was an outcome of their own scholarship, as well as mentorship from faculty advisors, research collaborators and industry representatives.
A first-generation American in a family of health care providers, Sharona Abramova was drawn to the PA facultys reputation for clinical excellence and the curriculum that emphasizes compassionate care. She recently joined Maimonides Midwood Community Hospital as a PA.
Collaborations, like the one between Weill Cornell Medicine and the Katz Schools M.S. in Biotechnology Management and Entrepreneurship, have emerged as catalysts for the development of the next generation of drugs, devices and services.
One of the enduring spring rituals is graduation seasonprocessional marches, festooned mortarboards, Bach preludes and earnest speeches dolloped with thanks and optimism. At the Katz School, health sciences graduates participated in two rites of passage.
During the ceremony in Lamport Auditorium, Dean Paul Russo lauded the graduates as values-driven leaders who stand for truth reflected in their scholarship and practice, champions of a life built on humane values and compassionate practitioners.