Welcome to
Biomedical Engineering

95%

Of Ph.D. Students are Fully Funded

$77k+

Average Starting Salary for BME Undergraduates

65%

Of Undergraduate Students Participate in Research

Research Interests

  • Neural engineering
  • Brain-machine interfaces
  • Neurotherapeutic devices
  • Neuromodulation

Research Focus
Research in the Santacruz lab focuses on the engineering advancement of neuroprosthetics and their therapeutic application to a growing range of neurological disorders. To advance future generations of neuroprosthetics, the lab investigates neuroscientific questions related to understanding how neural patterns or states are learned and how to manipulate these processes. This work will lay the foundation for the development of new neurotechnologies and paradigms in the lab to expand the set of neurological disorders treated with brain-machine interfaces and neuroprosthetic devices.

Santacruz and her team utilize a number of techniques within in vivo experiments to examine and modulate neural states. The lab performs offline analysis to model induced state changes and evolution of neural patterns, within and across a variety of brain regions, using signal processing and machine learning methodologies. These analyses serve to both elucidate the mechanisms supporting relevant neural processes, as well as to develop hypotheses regarding neurotherapies that can be subsequently tested in vivo. The lab also works on developing neural interfaces used for neuroprosthetics and stimulation-based neuromodulation therapies.

Related Websites
Santacruz Lab

SELECT PUBLICATIONS

Upcoming Events

Thursday, October 16

How Can the Health Humanities Contribute to Improving Health?

3:30PM - 5:30PM

Thursday, October 23

Dr. Ahmad Ahmadi, Avante Plastic Surgery

3:30PM - 5:30PM

Thursday, November 06

Dr. Elena Zannoni, Assistant Professor, Biomechanical and Biomedicine Engineering

3:30PM - 5:30PM

LinkedIn logo

Follow us on LinkedIn for updates and to connect with our community.

Follow BME on LinkedIn

News

Texas Biomedical Engineering professor Nicholas Peppas stands in front of a bookcase.

The Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine International Society (TERMIS) will present a Lifetime Achievement Award to biomedical engineering professor Nicholas Peppas.

Professor Tom Yankeelov stands with a student in front of a screen showing computational models of breast cancer research.

Can mathematics help physicians make better decisions for cancer patients? A new study led by professor Tom Yankeelov, Director of the Center for Computational Oncology at the Oden Institute for Computational Engineering and Sciences, suggests the answer is, “yes.”

Originally published by the Oden Institute for Computational Engineering & Sciences.

The exterior of The Department of Biomedical Engineering building at UT Austin.

The Department of Biomedical Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin is ranked as one the nation’s top ten undergraduate biomedical engineering programs. The Cockrell School of Engineering finished 11th in the nation in the 2025-2026 U.S. News & World Report undergraduate engineering rankings (No. 6 among public universities and No. 1 in Texas).

Published by the Cockrell School of Engineering

 

Research Areas

Spotlights

Discover what's happening at Texas BME

Panda And Researchers NEW

From Lab to Lives: Advancing Pediatric HIV Care in Nigeria

Learn more

undergrad rankings BME

Biomedical Undergraduate Program Among Top 10 in Country

Learn more