Roger D. Kamm, PhD

Cecil H. Green Distinguished Professor, Emeritus

Research Highlights

Elucidate the fundamental nature of how cells sense and respond to mechanical stimuli, and use this knowledge to understand cell population behaviors such as emergence of form & function.

Contact

Office Phone 617.253.5330
MIT Address NE47-321
Lab Website Mechanobiology Lab

Research:

An overriding objective of the Mechanobiology Lab is to elucidate the fundamental nature of how cells sense and respond to mechanical stimuli, and to employ the principles revealed by these studies to seek new treatments for neurological disease and cancer, and to develop tissue constructs for drug and toxicity screening.

Both experimental and computational approaches are employed in a manner that encourages the constant interplay between the two for purposes of model validation, direct measurement of critical parameters, and identifying new hypotheses to be tested through experiment.

The Kamm research group works on five broad areas: Biological Machines/Microfluidics, Angiogenesis/Vasculogenesis, Neurological Diseases, Cancer, and Simulation and modeling.

Biography:

Professor Kamm began his career at Northwestern University earning a degree in Mechanical Engineering. He subsequently earned both a Master’s and a PhD in Mechanical Engineering at MIT. Since 1978, he has been a professor of Mechanical Engineering at MIT. Professor Kamm was one of the founding members of the Biological Engineering Department when it was created in 1998.