Welcome to
Biomedical Engineering

95%

Of Ph.D. students are fully funded

2,000+

Texas Biomedical Engineering alumni around the world

81%

Of undergraduate students participate in research
Research Interests
  • Computational imaging, image formation, and inverse problems
  • Medical imaging, magnetic resonance imaging, and spin physics
  • Statistical inference, machine learning, and optimization
     
Selected Publications
Research Focus

Professor Zhao's research focuses on computational imaging and medical imaging, with an emphasis on the modality of magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. Specifically, he focuses on developing novel mathematical models, computational algorithms, and data acquisition schemes to address inverse problems in MR imaging. His group takes unique approaches that synergistically integrate spin physics, information processing, and advanced computing to push the performance limits of MR imaging systems. He has been recognized with several awards, including an NIH Pathway to Independence Award and an NIH Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award Fellowship.   

News

A group of biomedical engineering graduate students work in a lab.

Biomedical Engineering Graduate Program Among Top 20 in U.S. Yet Again

The University of Texas at Austin’s Department of Biomedical Engineering graduate program ranked No. 19 in U.S. News & World Report’s 2025-2026 graduate engineering program rankings, released on Tuesday.

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FRI Biobricks and Microbe Hackers stream students work in the lab.

Pharmacoengineering Program Enables Advanced Drug Development and Delivery

Graduate students at The University of Texas at Austin have a new opportunity to revolutionize how medicines are developed and delivered. The graduate portfolio program in pharmacoengineering is an interdisciplinary effort that bridges expertise in pharmaceutics, chemistry, engineering, biochemistry, biologics and drug metabolism.

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Jeongwook "Luke" Yun stands in front of computer servers

5 Questions With Jeongwook "Luke" Yun: An Austin Inno Under 25 Recipient

Jeongwook “Luke” Yun, a senior in The University of Texas at Austin's Department of Biomedical Engineering, is being recognized for his passion, dedication and transformative work involving the intersection between artificial intelligence (AI) and health care.

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Research Areas

Spotlights

Discover what's happening at Texas BME

Dell Medical School Building

Dell Medical School Broadens Biomedical Opportunities

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Biomedical Engineering Lobby

Biomedical Undergraduate Program Among Top 15 in Country

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