Ewa Gerlak, right, a student in the M.S. in Physician Assistant Studies, posed a challenge to the status quo in inflammatory bowel disease treatment and how physicians think about gastrointestinal health.
Nikhil Deekonda, a student in the M.S. in Artificial Intelligence, unveiled the idea behind an AI-powered mobile app, called LungAware, designed to detect and classify lung cancer from CT scans at a Graduate Symposium on Science, Technology and Health.
Aspiring physician assistants, speech-language pathologists and occupational therapists—each forged by demanding training and shaped by moments of profound human connection—received master's degrees on May 27.
On May 27, the 342 graduate students crossing the stage at the 2025 Commencement of the Katz School of Science and Health were honored as innovators, builders and protectors in a world hungry for their expertise.
At the prestigious IEEE/CVF Winter Conference on Applications of Computer Vision (WACV), Katz School researchers presented SST-EM, a new evaluation framework to judge the accuracy of video edits.
When Ronee Goldman’s father was diagnosed with glioblastoma, an aggressive stage-four brain cancer, everything in her life suddenly shifted—her priorities, her sense of purpose and the career path she had long planned.
At its annual Graduate Symposium, the Katz School showcased the next generation of scientific and technological innovators, where students presented pioneering research designed to improve lives and tackle global challenges.
An interdisciplinary team of graduate students in the M.S. in Artificial Intelligence and M.S. in Biotechnology Management and Entrepreneurship have developed an ambitious solution to one of the most pressing problems in modern medicine: the lack of a centralized, comprehensive and accessible…
Kasey Giordano enrolled in the M.S. in Speech-Language Pathology not just with a dream but with a mission: To become an advocate for individuals with complex communication needs. Her belief in communication as a human right is deeply rooted.
By the time Ruby Pasupuleti began her clinical rotation at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, she had already carried a private grief for years—one that would shape her path in medicine.