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Strategic priorities: The future has no walls
Many of the greatest innovations of the past were driven by collaborations that reached across traditional boundaries. We believe that the most promising opportunities for discovery exist at the intersections of disciplines, and that the technologies of the next century will grow out of interdisciplinary partnerships. To guide our own growth, the dean has identified four major areas for long-term investment:
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Bioengineering | View »
A fusion of engineering and the life sciences promises new discoveries, technologies,
and therapies to improve human health and the environment. |
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Environment and Energy | View »
Meeting the needs of a growing world population in an environmentally sustainable
way is a major challenge of the 21st Century.
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Information Technology | View »
Hardware, software and communications are the pillars of information technology.
Continuing research in these fields ranges from basic science, through materials
and devices, to systems and applications. |
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Nanoscience and Nanotechnology | View »
Advancing the science and technology of very small structures holds vast opportunities for research and application development. |
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Last Modified: April 2 2008 02:50:06 PM |
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