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...Massachusetts General Hospitals and a Harvard Medial School (HMS) alumnus, died unexpectedly April 3, as the result of a construction accident that killed two others as well. Ty, 28, was driving down Boylston Street when a 10-ton lift platform crashed down on his car. The construction accident also killed two workers who were building Emerson College’s new Piano Row residence hall and student center. Ty graduated Phi Beta Kappa in 1999 from Johns Hopkins University and received his MD in 2004 from HMS under the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology. Those who knew...
...Nearly 10 years ago, Junne Kamihara ’97, now a joint MD and PhD candidate in the Harvard-MIT Health Sciences and Technology program, co-founded MIHNUET...
...according to a HMS statement released yesterday. “He had already accomplished much in his life—loving husband and son, skilled pianist, scholar of languages and philosophy, talented researcher, and caring clinician,” the statement said. When he studied at the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology (HST), a training program for biomedical engineers and physician-scientists from both institutions, Ty performed creative research on neural development and plasticity, according to Mriganka Sur, a neuroscience professor at MIT who worked with Ty on his research. Sur, who is also head...
...Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, in an e-mail. According to Steele, the USC stem cell Institute is a completely different kind of organization. It is too early to talk about possible overlap of research topics or collaboration, he wrote in an e-mail. “The name at USC refers simply to a building that will house many USC centers [whereas] The Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT is instead a unique academic organization that serves to bring together the already existing strengths of its members,” Steele wrote. Officials at the Harvard-MIT Broad...
Scientists at Harvard and MIT’s Broad Institute have mapped the genes of man’s best friend, the dog, in the hopes of uncovering insights into diseases that affect both humans and canines. The results, published in the December 8 issue of the science journal Nature, include the first comparative analysis of three mammalian genomes—human, mouse, and dog. Tarjei S. Mikkelsen, a graduate student at the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology (HST) and one of the leaders of the research project, said that researchers were surprised that the sequences that...