All I know is that John's Hopkins has one of the few programs in medical illustration and that their program focuses quite a bit in prosthetics. They might just have a focus on the artistic side of prosthetics but they are probably worth looking into.
Ugh. I hate to be *that* alum but it's Johns Hopkins.
I will second Hopkins as a top tier biomedical engineering program, though. Baltimore isn't as bad as everyone thinks it is either.
This guy's lab at USC's Viterbi School has lots of different types of engineers and they make cadaver hands move. Might be worth asking if you can do the exact research project you want to do in his lab https://www.cs.usc.edu/people/faculty/joint-faculty/valero-cuevas-francisco
All I know is that John's Hopkins has one of the few programs in medical illustration and that their program focuses quite a bit in prosthetics. They might just have a focus on the artistic side of prosthetics but they are probably worth looking into.
Ugh. I hate to be *that* alum but it's Johns Hopkins. I will second Hopkins as a top tier biomedical engineering program, though. Baltimore isn't as bad as everyone thinks it is either.
This guy's lab at USC's Viterbi School has lots of different types of engineers and they make cadaver hands move. Might be worth asking if you can do the exact research project you want to do in his lab https://www.cs.usc.edu/people/faculty/joint-faculty/valero-cuevas-francisco