Photo Gallery
- At our 1st Annual Invented at Duke Celebration, Professor Ravi Bellamkonda, Dean of the Pratt School of Engineering chats with a Duke Alumni and a member of the local community about inventions, innovation and entrepreneurship.
- OTC Executive Director, Robin Rasor chats with President Price about the many innovations coming out of Duke this year. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Ravi Bellamkonda, Dean of the Pratt School of Engineering, and Kip Frey, Interim Director for the the Duke Innovation & Entrepreneurship Initiative listen to President Price speak about the positive energy coming out of Duke. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Chancellor Washington introduces President Price at the 1st Annual Invented at Duke celebration. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Professor of Biomedical Engineering
- Suyash Kunar and other members of the kelaHealth team explain how a group of surgeons, statistician, and engineers have set out to improve surgery outcomes through predictive data analysis. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Marybeth Tetlow, a clinical nurse on the Duke Pediatric Blood and Marrow Transplant Unit, shows off her Line Snugglers waterproof sleeves she invented and made to help protect IV tubing from contamination and entanglement to Chancellor Eugene Washington and Dennis Gilmore of RTI International during Invented at Duke’s 1st Annual Celebration event at the Washington Duke Inn. Tetlow’s innovation also decreases the anxiety of patients, families, and nurses, as children actively go through intense treatment for life-threatening illnesses.The 1st Annual Celebration, Invented at Duke: Celebrating Invention, Entrepreneurship & Innovation, at Washington Duke Inn. With over 300 inventions, 85 issued patents, and 11 new start-ups this year, Duke is turning world class research into viable commercial products. University researchers talk about their commercializing technologies, such as a puncture proof vascular graft, silicone microspheres, improved eye disease imaging, and many other cutting-edge innovations generated by the more than $1 billion in research conducted annually at Duke.Hosted by Duke OTC and Duke I&E, #InventedatDuke Celebration brings together leaders from local industries, business, and venture capitalists, researchers and community, to celebrate the many accomplishments of Dukeís innovators. President Vincent Price makes remarks to highlight the breadth of Duke discoveries. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Nimmi Ramanujam, Professor of Biomedical Engineering, talks with President Vincent Price about a novel pocket colposcope she developed to make cervical cancer screening easier and more sustainable in low-to-middle-income countries.
- Marybeth Tetlow shows off her invention to Chancellor Washington. Line Snugglers are waterproof sleeves and adjustable vests that provide a means to protect IV lines in infants and children. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Innavasc Senior Development Engineer, Criag Nichols and founder, Shawn Gage show off their puncture proof vascular graft to President Price. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Encapsio CEO Nick Kirby and CTO Wyatt Shields met with President Price to explain how their innovative silicone microspheres can be used in a variety of applications. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Adam Wax, PhD, Professor of Biomedical Engineering explains to President Price how Lumedica has made Optical Coherence Tomography small and affordable. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Dr. Howie Levinson shows off his hernia mesh design to President Price. Deep Blue is addressing the unacceptably high rate of hernia occurrence and recurrence. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Marybeth Tetlow shows off her invention to Chancellor Washington. Line Snugglers are waterproof sleeves and adjustable vests that provide a means to protect IV lines in infants and children. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Nimmi Ramanujam, Professor of Biomedical Engineering, talks with Suresh Balu, Director of DIHI, Prof. Jesko VonWindheim from the Nicolas School, and members from the local community about a novel pocket colposcope she developed to make cervical cancer screening easier and more sustainable in low-to-middle-income countries. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Dr. Brown explains how Lumedica has made Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) small and affordable. OCT is the gold standard for detecting retinal eye diseases like Macular degeneration and Diabetic retinopathy. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Encapsio CEO Nick Kirby and CTO Wyatt Shields met with President Price to explain how their innovative silicone microspheres can be used in a variety of applications. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Dr. Howie Levinson shows off his hernia mesh design to members of the local community. Deep Blue is addressing the unacceptably high rate of hernia occurrence and recurrence. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Nimmi Ramanujam, Professor of Biomedical Engineering, talks about a novel pocket colposcope she developed to make cervical cancer screening easier and more sustainable in low-to-middle-income countries, during Invented at Duke’s 1st Annual Celebration event at the Washington Duke Inn. The 1st Annual Celebration, Invented at Duke: Celebrating Invention, Entrepreneurship & Innovation, at Washington Duke Inn. With over 300 inventions, 85 issued patents, and 11 new start-ups this year, Duke is turning world class research into viable commercial products. University researchers talk about their commercializing technologies, such as a puncture proof vascular graft, silicone microspheres, improved eye disease imaging, and many other cutting-edge innovations generated by the more than $1 billion in research conducted annually at Duke. Hosted by Duke OTC and Duke I&E, #InventedatDuke Celebration brings together leaders from local industries, business, and venture capitalists, researchers and community, to celebrate the many accomplishments of Dukeís innovators. President Vincent Price makes remarks to highlight the breadth of Duke discoveries.
- The kelaHealth team chats with members of the local community about how a group of surgeons, statistician, and engineers have set out to improve surgery outcomes through predictive data analysis. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Dr. Brown explains how Lumedica has made Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) small and affordable. OCT is the gold standard for detecting retinal eye diseases like Macular degeneration and Diabetic retinopathy. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Nimmi Ramanujam, Professor of Biomedical Engineering, talks about a novel pocket colposcope she developed to make cervical cancer screening easier and more sustainable in low-to-middle-income countries, during Invented at Duke’s 1st Annual Celebration event at the Washington Duke Inn. The 1st Annual Celebration, Invented at Duke: Celebrating Invention, Entrepreneurship & Innovation, at Washington Duke Inn. With over 300 inventions, 85 issued patents, and 11 new start-ups this year, Duke is turning world class research into viable commercial products. University researchers talk about their commercializing technologies, such as a puncture proof vascular graft, silicone microspheres, improved eye disease imaging, and many other cutting-edge innovations generated by the more than $1 billion in research conducted annually at Duke. Hosted by Duke OTC and Duke I&E, #InventedatDuke Celebration brings together leaders from local industries, business, and venture capitalists, researchers and community, to celebrate the many accomplishments of Dukeís innovators. President Vincent Price makes remarks to highlight the breadth of Duke discoveries.
- Nimmi Ramanujam, Professor of Biomedical Engineering, talks about a novel pocket colposcope she developed to make cervical cancer screening easier and more sustainable in low-to-middle-income countries, during Invented at Duke’s 1st Annual Celebration event at the Washington Duke Inn. The 1st Annual Celebration, Invented at Duke: Celebrating Invention, Entrepreneurship & Innovation, at Washington Duke Inn. With over 300 inventions, 85 issued patents, and 11 new start-ups this year, Duke is turning world class research into viable commercial products. University researchers talk about their commercializing technologies, such as a puncture proof vascular graft, silicone microspheres, improved eye disease imaging, and many other cutting-edge innovations generated by the more than $1 billion in research conducted annually at Duke. Hosted by Duke OTC and Duke I&E, #InventedatDuke Celebration brings together leaders from local industries, business, and venture capitalists, researchers and community, to celebrate the many accomplishments of Dukeís innovators. President Vincent Price makes remarks to highlight the breadth of Duke discoveries.
- Suyash Kunar and other members of the kelaHealth team explain how a group of surgeons, statistician, and engineers have set out to improve surgery outcomes through predictive data analysis. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Suyash Kunar and other members of the kelaHealth team explain how a group of surgeons, statistician, and engineers have set out to improve surgery outcomes through predictive data analysis. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Encapsio CEO Nick Kirby and CTO Wyatt Shields met with President Price to explain how their innovative silicone microspheres can be used in a variety of applications. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Encapsio CEO Nick Kirby and CTO Wyatt Shields met with President Price to explain how their innovative silicone microspheres can be used in a variety of applications. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Encapsio CEO Nick Kirby and CTO Wyatt Shields met with President Price to explain how their innovative silicone microspheres can be used in a variety of applications. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Adam Wax, PhD, Professor of Biomedical Engineering explains to President Price how Lumedica has made Optical Coherence Tomography small and affordable. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Adam Wax, PhD, Professor of Biomedical Engineering explains to President Price how Lumedica has made Optical Coherence Tomography small and affordable. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Adam Wax, PhD, Professor of Biomedical Engineering explains to President Price how Lumedica has made Optical Coherence Tomography small and affordable. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Marybeth Tetlow shows off her Line Snuggers to President Price
- Marybeth Tetlow shows off her Line Snuggers to President Price
- Marybeth Tetlow shows off her Line Snuggers to President Price
- Nimmi Ramanujam, Professor of Biomedical Engineering, talks with President Vincent Price about a novel pocket colposcope she developed to make cervical cancer screening easier and more sustainable in low-to-middle-income countries, during Invented at Duke’s 1st Annual Celebration event at the Washington Duke Inn. The 1st Annual Celebration, Invented at Duke: Celebrating Invention, Entrepreneurship & Innovation, at Washington Duke Inn. With over 300 inventions, 85 issued patents, and 11 new start-ups this year, Duke is turning world class research into viable commercial products. University researchers talk about their commercializing technologies, such as a puncture proof vascular graft, silicone microspheres, improved eye disease imaging, and many other cutting-edge innovations generated by the more than $1 billion in research conducted annually at Duke. Hosted by Duke OTC and Duke I&E, #InventedatDuke Celebration brings together leaders from local industries, business, and venture capitalists, researchers and community, to celebrate the many accomplishments of Dukeís innovators. President Vincent Price makes remarks to highlight the breadth of Duke discoveries.
- Nimmi Ramanujam, Professor of Biomedical Engineering, talks with President Vincent Price about a novel pocket colposcope she developed to make cervical cancer screening easier and more sustainable in low-to-middle-income countries, during Invented at Duke’s 1st Annual Celebration event at the Washington Duke Inn. The 1st Annual Celebration, Invented at Duke: Celebrating Invention, Entrepreneurship & Innovation, at Washington Duke Inn. With over 300 inventions, 85 issued patents, and 11 new start-ups this year, Duke is turning world class research into viable commercial products. University researchers talk about their commercializing technologies, such as a puncture proof vascular graft, silicone microspheres, improved eye disease imaging, and many other cutting-edge innovations generated by the more than $1 billion in research conducted annually at Duke. Hosted by Duke OTC and Duke I&E, #InventedatDuke Celebration brings together leaders from local industries, business, and venture capitalists, researchers and community, to celebrate the many accomplishments of Dukeís innovators. President Vincent Price makes remarks to highlight the breadth of Duke discoveries.
- Nimmi Ramanujam, Professor of Biomedical Engineering, talks with President Vincent Price about a novel pocket colposcope she developed to make cervical cancer screening easier and more sustainable in low-to-middle-income countries, during Invented at Duke’s 1st Annual Celebration event at the Washington Duke Inn. The 1st Annual Celebration, Invented at Duke: Celebrating Invention, Entrepreneurship & Innovation, at Washington Duke Inn. With over 300 inventions, 85 issued patents, and 11 new start-ups this year, Duke is turning world class research into viable commercial products. University researchers talk about their commercializing technologies, such as a puncture proof vascular graft, silicone microspheres, improved eye disease imaging, and many other cutting-edge innovations generated by the more than $1 billion in research conducted annually at Duke. Hosted by Duke OTC and Duke I&E, #InventedatDuke Celebration brings together leaders from local industries, business, and venture capitalists, researchers and community, to celebrate the many accomplishments of Dukeís innovators. President Vincent Price makes remarks to highlight the breadth of Duke discoveries.
- Innavasc Senior Development Engineer, Criag Nichols and founder, Shawn Gage show off their puncture proof vascular graft to President Price. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Innavasc Senior Development Engineer, Criag Nichols and founder, Shawn Gage show off their puncture proof vascular graft to President Price. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Innavasc Senior Development Engineer, Criag Nichols and founder, Shawn Gage show off their puncture proof vascular graft to President Price. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Innavasc Senior Development Engineer, Criag Nichols and founder, Shawn Gage show off their puncture proof vascular graft to President Price. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Dr. Howie Levinson shows off his hernia mesh design to President Price. Deep Blue is addressing the unacceptably high rate of hernia occurrence and recurrence. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Dr. Howie Levinson shows off his hernia mesh design to President Price. Deep Blue is addressing the unacceptably high rate of hernia occurrence and recurrence. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Dr. Howie Levinson shows off his hernia mesh design to President Price. Deep Blue is addressing the unacceptably high rate of hernia occurrence and recurrence. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Members of Nimmi Ramanujam’s team talk about a novel pocket colposcope she developed to make cervical cancer screening easier and more sustainable in low-to-middle-income countries. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- OTC Team members, Bryan Bains and Dinesh Divakaran, chat with Rob Lindberg, VP of the NC Biotechnology Center.
- Members of Nimmi Ramanujam’s team talk about a novel pocket colposcope she developed to make cervical cancer screening easier and more sustainable in low-to-middle-income countries. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- OTC Executive Director, Robin Rasor, chats with Chief of the Division of Cardiology, Manesh Patel, and Marat Fudim from the Dept. of Cardiology about innovation and entrepreneurship. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- InnAVasc’s President and CEO, Joe Knight, chats with OTC Mentor-in-Resident Fred Kornahrens and OTC New Venture’s Assoc. Dir., Rob Hallford. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Adam Wax, PhD, Professor of Biomedical Engineering explains to President Price how Lumedica has made Optical Coherence Tomography small and affordable. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Innavasc Senior Development Engineer, Craig Nichols talks about InnAVasc’s puncture proof vascular graft Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Dr. Howie Levinson shows off his hernia mesh design to members of the local community. Deep Blue is addressing the unacceptably high rate of hernia occurrence and recurrence. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Dr. Brown explains how Lumedica has made Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) small and affordable. OCT is the gold standard for detecting retinal eye diseases like Macular degeneration and Diabetic retinopathy. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Members of the kelaHealth team explain how a group of surgeons, statistician, and engineers have set out to improve surgery outcomes through predictive data analysis. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Members of the kelaHealth team explain how a group of surgeons, statistician, and engineers have set out to improve surgery outcomes through predictive data analysis. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- The 1st Annual Celebration, Invented at Duke: Celebrating Invention, Entrepreneurship & Innovation, at Washington Duke Inn. With over 300 inventions, 85 issued patents, and 11 new start-ups this year, Duke is turning world class research into viable commercial products. University researchers talk about their commercializing technologies, such as a puncture proof vascular graft, silicone microspheres, improved eye disease imaging, and many other cutting-edge innovations generated by the more than $1 billion in research conducted annually at Duke. Hosted by Duke OTC and Duke I&E, #InventedatDuke Celebration brings together leaders from local industries, business, and venture capitalists, researchers and community, to celebrate the many accomplishments of Dukeís innovators. President Vincent Price makes remarks to highlight the breadth of Duke discoveries.
- Professor Ravi Bellamkonda, Dean of the Pratt School of Engineering, chats with Trustee Bill Hawkins
- Nimmi Ramanujam, Professor of Biomedical Engineering, talks with President Vincent Price about a novel pocket colposcope she developed to make cervical cancer screening easier and more sustainable in low-to-middle-income countries, during Invented at Duke’s 1st Annual Celebration event at the Washington Duke Inn. The 1st Annual Celebration, Invented at Duke: Celebrating Invention, Entrepreneurship & Innovation, at Washington Duke Inn. With over 300 inventions, 85 issued patents, and 11 new start-ups this year, Duke is turning world class research into viable commercial products. University researchers talk about their commercializing technologies, such as a puncture proof vascular graft, silicone microspheres, improved eye disease imaging, and many other cutting-edge innovations generated by the more than $1 billion in research conducted annually at Duke. Hosted by Duke OTC and Duke I&E, #InventedatDuke Celebration brings together leaders from local industries, business, and venture capitalists, researchers and community, to celebrate the many accomplishments of Dukeís innovators. President Vincent Price makes remarks to highlight the breadth of Duke discoveries.
- President Vincent Price makes remarks to highlight the breadth of Duke discoveries. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Innavasc Senior Development Engineer, Craig Nichols talks about InnAVasc’s puncture proof vascular graft Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- At our 1st Annual Invented at Duke Celebration, Professor Ravi Bellamkonda, Dean of the Pratt School of Engineering, chats with a Duke Alumni and a member of the local community about inventions, innovation, and entrepreneurship. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- OTC Team Member, Rob Hallford, chats with a Duke Alumni and a member of the local community about inventions, innovation, and entrepreneurship. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Featured Innovators from Pocket Colposcope and kelaHealth chat with each other about their innovations. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Innavasc Senior Development Engineer, Craig Nichols talks about InnAVasc’s puncture proof vascular graft Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Innavasc President & CEO, Joe Knight, along with Senior Development Engineer, Craig Nichols and founder, Shawn Gage met with President Price to show him InnAVasc’s puncture proof vascular graft. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Dr. Howie Levinson shows off his hernia mesh design to President Price. Deep Blue is addressing the unacceptably high rate of hernia occurrence and recurrence. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Fuqua MBA Devaunt LeClaire chats with OTC’s Bryan Baines about an idea for a new venture. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Dr. Howie Levinson shows off his hernia mesh design to President Price. Deep Blue is addressing the unacceptably high rate of hernia occurrence and recurrence. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography
- Chancellor Washington introduced President Price, expressing his excitement to see so much energy being generated by this event. Photo by Jared Lazarus/Duke Photography