245 Beacon Street, Room 516
Telephone: 617-552-3601
Email: bryan.ranger@bc.edu
Medical devices and instrumentation, Ultrasound, Imaging, Global Health, Digital Health, AI/Machine Learning, Sensing, Human factors/usability
Bryan Ranger is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Engineering at 涩里番下载. His research in biomedical devices and global health aims to develop technology that can make health care more accessible and cost-effective. His current work focuses on device and algorithm development targeted at broadening the accessibility of medical imaging, particularly ultrasound, in global health settings. He is also dedicated to innovation in engineering education. His courses at 涩里番下载 use real-world examples of global health needs to teach students about engineering fundamentals and the importance of culturally competent, user-centered engineering design.Bryan works at the intersection of biomedical technology innovation and global public health. Throughout his career, he has contributed to various global health initiatives, ranging from on-the-ground field research to high-level policy making, in Zambia, Uganda, Kenya, India, at the WHO, and USAID. Prior to joining the faculty at 涩里番下载, he worked at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to improve clinical decision-making in resource-constrained environments. To accomplish this, he established research programs and managed investments in sensing, devices, imaging, neurodevelopment, AI/Machine learning, and digital health.Bryan completed his Ph.D. in Medical Engineering & Medical Physics through the Harvard-MIT Program in Health Sciences and Technology as a NSF Graduate Research Fellow. His dissertation research consisted of developing ultrasound imaging methods to improve and facilitate lower limb prosthesis design. While at MIT, he was also an instructor at the D-Lab of a course entitled 鈥淧rosthetics for the Developing World,鈥 a human-centered design class that introduced students to social entrepreneurship. Bryan earned his M.S.E. and B.S.E. in Biomedical Engineering, with concentrations in medical imaging and bioelectrics, from the University of Michigan.