Profiles in "Biophysics" Expertise Area

  • Woodbury is a professor in the School of Molecular Sciences and co-founder of the company HealthTell. His research ranges from protein dynamics to immunosignaturing and photosynthetic systems.
  • Marcia Levitus' research group focuses on the development and application of state-of-the-art techniques of single molecule detection.
  • Blain Christen's research includes bio-compatible integration techniques for CMOS electronics; microfluidics, non-traditional microfabrication; MEMS devices/bio-MEMS; bioelectronics focused on analog and neuromorphic design.
  • Jeff Yarger primary research interests are in biophysical chemistry, nano-materials and the general field of disordered or amorphous materials.
  • Ros is a faculty member of SMS and the Center for Applied Structural Discovery at ASU's Biodesign Institute. Her current research interests include bioanlalytics in the micro- and nanoenvironment.
  • The aim of all of Thorpe's research is to find underlying topological and structural principles and unifying concepts.
  • Vaiana has a research background in soft matter physics applied to biological systems. She uses methods from phase transition and polymer physics to understand the structure, dynamics and self-assembly of intrinsically disordered proteins.
  • Pavlic works in interdisciplinary decision-making problems in natural and artificial autonomous systems. He was the founding associate director of research for The Biomimicry Center at ASU.
  • Sean Seyler is a Postdoctoral Research Scholar in the Department of Physics and Center for Biological Physics at ASU. He joined Steve PressĂ©'s lab in 2018 after receiving his PhD in Physics at ASU under Oliver Beckstein.
  • Frasch has developed new assays to examine the rotation of single molecules of molecular motor proteins under a microscope.