Vol. 3 No. 1 September 2004
President's Welcome
BE Major Developments
BE vs. BME
MIT Bio, Eng Options
Prof. Schauer: BME Program
BMES-J&J Research Award
Internship Experience Abroad
Prefrosh Visit
Letter from Berkeley
Letter from UCSD
MIT BMES Chapter Goals
MIT BMES 10th Anniversary
Printable Version
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The BioTECH Quarterly
BE vs. BME: "Bio" + "Engineering"
landscape @ MIT
Definition of “Bio” + “Engineering”
terms from the MIT Biological Engineering (BE) Division:
Bioengineering (BioE) — an APPLIED
FIELD of engineering in biological materials and systems.
Biomedical Engineering (BME) — an APPLIED
FIELD of engineering in medicine and biomedicine, generally
inter-disciplinary in nature.
Biological Engineering (BE) — a new engineering
DISCIPLINE grounded in biology, particularly mechanistic
biology at the molecular and cellular levels, with novel applications
to biomedicine as well as biotechnology; it also enables new
approaches to fundamental discoveries in bioscience.
BE vs. BME at MIT — The crucial distinction
is that Biological Engineering (BE) is a new engineering
discipline, distinguished by having biology (particularly molecular
cell biology) as its foundation science, just as Mechanical Engineering
and Chemical Engineering, for example, have theirs in physics and
chemistry. Biomedical Engineering (BME) and Bioengineering (BioE),
on the other hand, are application fields for any engineering disciplines.
This is why MIT will be offering a MAJOR in BE, but only a MINOR
in BME (or could call it BioE) for students majoring in other
departmental disciplines.
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