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51 - 60 of 184 results for: ME

ME 233: Automated Model Discovery

Fundamentals of physics-based modeling and deep learning; deep neural networks, recurrent neural networks, constitutive artificial neural networks; Bayesian methods; training, testing, and validation; prediction and uncertainty quantification; soft materials and living matter; discovering models, parameters, and experiments to best explain soft matter systems. Prerequisite: ME80.
Terms: Win | Units: 3

ME 234: Introduction to Neuromechanics

Understanding the role of mechanics in brain development, physiology, and pathology. Mechanics of brain cells: neurons, mechanobiology, mechanotransduction. Mechanics of brain tissue: experimental testing, constitutive modeling, computational modeling. Mechanics of brain development: gyrification, cortical folding, axon elongation, lissencephaly, polymicrogyria. Mechanics of traumatic brain injury: high impact loading, neural injury. Mechanics of brain tumors, brain cancer, tumor growth, altered cytoskeletal mechanics. Mechanics of neurological disorders: autism, dementia, schizophrenia. Mechanics of brain surgery.
Last offered: Autumn 2022 | Units: 3

ME 235: Biotransport Phenomena (APPPHYS 235, BIOE 235, BIOPHYS 235)

The efficient transport of energy, mass, and momentum is essential to the normal function of living systems. Changes in these processes often result in pathological conditions. Transport phenomena are also critical to the design of instrumentation for medical applications and biotechnology. The course aims to introduce the integrated study of transport processes and their biological applications. It covers the fundamental driving forces for transport in biological systems and the biophysics across multiple length scales (molecules, cells, tissues, organs, whole organisms). Topics include chemical gradients, electrical interactions, fluid flow, mass transport. Pre-requisites: Calculus, MATLAB, basic fluid mechanics, heat transfer, solid mechanics.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3

ME 236: Tales to Design Cars By

Students learn to tell personal narratives and prototype connections between popular and historic media using the automobile. Explores the meaning and impact of personal and preserved car histories. Storytelling techniques serve to make sense of car experiences through engineering design principles and social learning, Replay memories, examine engagement and understand user interviews, to design for the mobility experience of the future. This course celebrates car fascination, and leads the student through finding and telling a car story through the REVS photographic archives, ethnographic research, interviews, and diverse individual and collaborative narrative methods-verbal, non-verbal, and film. Methods draw from socio-cognitive psychology design thinking, and fine art; applied to car storytelling. Course culminates in a final story presentation and showcase. Restricted to co-term and graduate students. Class Size limited to 16.
Terms: Spr | Units: 1-3 | Repeatable 2 times (up to 6 units total)
Instructors: Karanian, B. (PI)

ME 238: Patent Prosecution

The course follows the patent application process through the important stages: inventor interviews, patentability analysis, drafting claims, drafting a specification, filing a patent application, and responding to an office action. The subject matter and practical instruction relevant to each stage are addressed in the context of current rules and case law. The course includes four written assignments: an invention capture, a claim set, a full patent application, and an Office Action response. Pre-requisites: Law 326 (IP:Patents), Law 409 (Intro IP), ME 208, or MS&E 278.
Last offered: Winter 2023 | Units: 2-3

ME 242B: Mechanical Vibrations (AA 242B)

For M.S.-level graduate students. Covers the vibrations of discrete systems and continuous structures. Introduction to the computational dynamics of linear engineering systems. Review of analytical dynamics of discrete systems; undamped and damped vibrations of N-degree-of-freedom systems; continuous systems; approximation of continuous systems by displacement methods; solution methods for the Eigenvalue problem; direct time-integration methods. Prerequisites: AA 242A or equivalent (recommended but not required); basic knowledge of linear algebra and ODEs; no prior knowledge of structural dynamics is assumed.
Last offered: Spring 2019 | Units: 3

ME 243: Designing Emotion: for Reactive Car Interfaces

Students learn to define emotions as physiology, expression, and private experience using the automobile and shared space. Explores the meaning and impact of personal and user car experience. Reflective, narrative, and socio-cognitive techniques serve to make sense of mobility experiences; replay memories; examine engagement; understand user interviews. This course celebrates car fascination and leads the student through finding and telling the car experience through discussion, ethnographic research, interviews, and diverse individual and collaborative narrative methods-verbal, non-verbal, and in car experiences. Methods draw from socio-cognitive psychology, design thinking, and fine art, and are applied to the car or mobility experience. Course culminates in a final individual narrative presentation and group project demonstration. Class size limited to 18.
Last offered: Autumn 2024 | Units: 1-3 | Repeatable 2 times (up to 3 units total)

ME 244: Mechanotransduction in Cells and Tissues (BIOE 283, BIOPHYS 244)

Mechanical cues play a critical role in development, normal functioning of cells and tissues, and various diseases. This course will cover what is known about cellular mechanotransduction, or the processes by which living cells sense and respond to physical cues such as physiological forces or mechanical properties of the tissue microenvironment. Experimental techniques and current areas of active investigation will be highlighted. This class is for graduate students only.
Terms: Win | Units: 3

ME 248: Silver Pendant Project (DESIGN 223)

In DESIGN 223 (formerly known as ME 248), students will design and create a silver pendant. Beginning with a basic introduction to design and CAD, students use a computer aided design tool to create a 3D model of their pendant design. Next, using machines and processes at the Product Realization Lab, students build a version of their part in a wax-like material. This part is then used in a lost-wax investment casting process to turn the printed part into a cast silver part. Finally, the students are introduced to a set of hand tools they will use to turn their cast silver part into a finished silver pendant. By application only, see course listing notes below.
Last offered: Spring 2025 | Units: 1-2 | UG Reqs: WAY-CE

ME 249: Designing Biomaterials

How do you design a biomaterial to meet a medical need? The overall goal of this class is to provide students with practical tools and knowledge to be able to translate a medical need into material design requirements, and to realize those requirements by manipulating molecular structure and morphology. The class will be useful for those interested in pursuing a career in biomaterials innovation, spanning from academic or industrial research to biotech entrepreneurship. While biomaterials span a diverse array of material classes, in this class we will focus specifically on hydrogels. The class is suitable for mechanical engineers, materials scientists and engineers, chemical engineers, and biomedical engineers. Open to graduate students. Upper level undergraduates may also enroll with permission from the instructor.
Terms: Aut | Units: 3
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