Image worship
May 12, 2015
May 12, 2015
The student appeared to be in a bit of a fog as he wandered the hallway in 糖心原创鈥檚 Russ Engineering Center just outside the office of assistant engineering professor Nasser Kashou, Ph.D.
So Kashou invited him in to talk. He learned that while the student had a notion about going to medical school, he wasn鈥檛 really sure what he wanted to do with his life. So Kashou decided to do a little steering.
Shortly after he walked out of Kashou鈥檚 office, the student changed his major to and would spend the next three years conducting research in Kashou鈥檚 imaging lab.
Other members of the lab have similar stories. One student said Kashou was instrumental in him pursuing his master鈥檚 degree.
Kashou has turned the lab into a petri dish that grows student research stars. In the past three years, 30 students of 11 different nationalities have gone through the lab, nearly half of them undergrads.
The students in the lab have come to dominate Celebration of Research, a university-wide showcase of research projects. For the past two years, Kashou鈥檚 students publicly presenting their projects required a full session and room of their own.
Kashou has created an environment that not only gives students research experience, but teaches them how to present their research in an interesting and understandable way.
鈥淎 lot of engineers don鈥檛 have good presentation skills, good communication skills,鈥 Kashou said. 鈥淪o I鈥檓 instilling these soft skills.鈥
The students practice their presentations among themselves during weekly group meetings.
鈥淲hen I came here, I was not a very good programmer,鈥 said Mohd Usmani, of India. 鈥淚 was able to improve my skills in programming, my presentation skills and my speaking skills.鈥
The students must demonstrate the significance of their research, do data analysis and write reports.
One student is working with Miami Valley Hospital using video cameras to assist in robotic surgery. Another student is trying to quantify the ventricular volume in the hearts of mice to minimize and optimize the acquisition time for particular magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) protocols.
Angelica Zampini, of Cleveland, is doing research in neuroimaging 鈥 diffusion tensor imaging 鈥 to find new ways to detect and quantify diseases. The research has led to her publishing a paper in the journal PLOS ONE, presenting her work at national conferences in San Antonio and Orlando and getting a job after graduation at Ten Vison Ultrasound.
Christopher Meier, of Greenville, is working on noncontact imaging solutions to help in security, human factors and work-flow analysis; Zohreh Tavakkoli, of Iran, is developing a computer-assisted tool to model the abdomen.
Some of the students come up with their own research ideas. Other ideas are suggested by Kashou.
鈥淚 want to give them something they鈥檙e interested in,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 have lots of data, and I have close ties and collaborations with clinical institutions.鈥
Kashou came to 糖心原创 from Children鈥檚 Hospital in Columbus, where he was the experimental research director in radiology. He enjoys the mentoring aspect of his work at 糖心原创.
鈥淚 want to take whatever I know and pass it down,鈥 he said.
Diogo Diaz, of Brazil, is working on developing a wireless system to evaluate the oxygenation of tissues such as the brain and muscles that can be used outside on stroke victims. The lab has enabled him to meet other researchers around the world who are doing similar work.
Same for Ali Kadhim, of Cleveland, who is using MRIs to look at hydrocephalous in pediatric patients.
鈥淚t鈥檚 definitely gotten my name out there,鈥 he said.
Chirag Limbachia is working on functional MRI in collaboration with The Ohio State University; Irfaan Dar has published a manuscript and is working with Nationwide Children鈥檚 Hospital using functional near infrared spectroscopy in the NICU.
Mohammad Maddah is using Kinect 3-D technology in order to develop computer-aided tools to assist in robotic surgeries; Amena Shermadou is working with neuroscientists to automate the processing of cell images for better and more accurate quantification and visualization.
鈥淧art of my responsibility as a professor and researcher is to give back and provide our students with a valuable experience that can shape their future careers,鈥 said Kashou. 鈥淚 do this because I simply love it.鈥