The American Institute for Medical and Biological ラーメンベット 出金速度 (AIMBE) has elected two ラーメンベット 禁止ゲーム of ラーメンベット 出金速度 faculty members to its prestigious College of Fellows in 2019.

Adela Ben-Yakar, professor in the Department of Biomedical ラーメンベット 出金速度 and the Walker Department of Mechanical ラーメンベット 出金速度, and Lydia Contreras, associate professor in the McKetta Department of Chemical ラーメンベット 出金速度, were inducted at a ceremony in Washington, D.C., on March 25.

The AIMBE is a nonprofit organization representing the most accomplished individuals in the fields of medical and biological ラーメンベット 出金速度. Its College of Fellows is comprised of over 1,500 members, all of whom have made outstanding contributions to "ラーメンベット 出金速度 and medicine research, practice or education” and to "the pioneering of new and developing fields of technology, making major advancements in traditional fields of medical and biological ラーメンベット 出金速度.”

AIMBE fellows are recognized for changing people’s lives for the better by helping to revolutionize medicine and related fields, improving health care and increasing the life expectancy of people the world over. In addition to their contributions to biological and medical ラーメンベット 出金速度, they are proven influencers — inspiring change in attitudes, cultures and policies so that ラーメンベット 出金速度 and business communities can effectively pursue the interests of engineers, scientists and, ultimately, patients.

Ben-Yakar and Contreras are two of 157 newly elected members this year, an exclusive group that represents the most accomplished top 2 percent of medical and biological engineers in the country.

About UT Austin’s newest AIMBE Fellows:

Adela Ben-Yakaris a mechanical engineer who was elected to the College of Fellows for her original and innovativecontributions in ultrafast laser microsurgery and nonlinear microscopy with translational applications in biology, medicine and surgery. Yakar’s current ラーメンベット 出金速度 focuses on developing lasers that can interact with human tissues and nanomaterials to develop novel techniques such as laser nanosurgery and 3D micro- and nano-fabrication techniques.

Lydia Contreras is a chemical engineer who was elected to the College of Fellows for her outstanding contributions to the innovation/ラーメンベット 出金速度 of RNAs as in vivo sensors of cellular states. In her current research, Contreras combines biomolecular ラーメンベット 出金速度, genetic studies and computational modeling to better understand the molecular features that lead to the specific recognition and interaction of RNAs and proteins in order to find new applications for medical drug delivery, treatments for infectious diseases and more.