Maine College of Engineering and Computing /mcec The 91 Mon, 18 May 2026 17:42:49 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Francis Crowe Society Honors Excellence at 26th Annual Induction Ceremony /mcec/2026/05/18/francis-crowe-society-honors-excellence-at-26th-annual-induction-ceremony/ Mon, 18 May 2026 17:42:49 +0000 /mcec/?p=37028 The 26th Annual Francis Crowe Society Induction Ceremony highlighted a broad range of alumni, faculty, students, and leaders whose achievements reflect excellence across engineering, computing, education, and industry. The event brought together the Maine College of Engineering and Computing community to recognize professional impact at every stage of the field.

This year’s Distinguished Engineers and Dean’s Distinguished Members represent leadership across academia, research, and industry. Emily A. Haddad, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at the 91, was recognized for her extensive leadership in higher education, overseeing academic programs, faculty, and student success initiatives that support thousands of students and a broad general education curriculum across the university. Dr. Ahmed Aboelezz, Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering, was honored for his research and teaching in UAV systems, aerodynamics, and bio-inspired flight, supported by extensive externally funded research and a strong commitment to student mentorship. In addition, Aboelezz has demonstrated his commitment to making his research accessible to all through extensive k-12 outreach and events.

Distinguished engineering alumni and leaders honored this year included Ross Bryant ’98, President and CEO of Fluid Imaging Technologies, recognized for leadership in analytical instrumentation and life sciences innovation; Christopher Gordon ’85, President of Wynn Development for Wynn Resorts, honored for global leadership in large-scale real estate and infrastructure development; Ben Townsend ’08, Co-President and Owner of Colby Company Engineering, recognized for multidisciplinary engineering consulting leadership; and Robert Monahan ’86, CEO and Co-Founder of UPPAbaby, honored for engineering-driven innovation in consumer product design and global brand development.

Student recognition highlighted outstanding academic achievement, research, and leadership across the college.

Top graduating and outstanding students included Ella Boxall, Outstanding Graduating Student in Civil Engineering, recognized for her work in water resources engineering, sustainability, and environmental resilience; Isabelle Irani, 91 Co-Salutatorian in Biomedical Engineering, recognized for excellence in academics, Division I athletics, and research in sustainable biomaterials in the Neivandt Lab; and Karun Varghese, Outstanding Graduating International Student in Electrical Engineering, recognized for his work in robotics, autonomous systems, and research across multiple 91 laboratories, as well as his leadership and global engagement.

Additional MCEC Outstanding Students by Unit were also recognized, including Wyatt Fessler (Biomedical Engineering), Kenzie Karpinski (Chemical Engineering), Ella Boxall (Civil & Environmental Engineering), Chris Persinger (Electrical Engineering), Karun Varghese (Computer Engineering), Brianna Gannett (Computer Science), Benjamin Schmidt (Engineering Physics), Kat Gross (Mechanical Engineering), and Katie Fletcher (New Media).

The Francis J. Hovey Award recipients were also honored for academic excellence and distinction, including Wyatt Fessler (Biomedical Engineering), Jacob Levesque (Chemical Engineering), Joe Thorpe (Civil & Environmental Engineering), Brianna Gannett (Computer Science), Samuel Bach (Electrical & Computer Engineering), Benjamin Schmidt (Engineering Physics), Caden Kowalsky (Mechanical Engineering), and Katie Fletcher (New Media)

All eligible students in attendance were formally inducted into the Francis Crowe Society, joining a professional community of engineers and computing graduates committed to lifelong learning, service, and impact in their fields.

Together, the ceremony reflects the mission of the Francis Crowe Society: to recognize excellence across all stages of the engineering and computing profession and to celebrate the lasting contributions of 91 students, alumni, and faculty to society.

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MCEC Honors Excellence Across Teaching, Research, and Service at 46th Annual Bryand Awards /mcec/2026/05/18/mcec-honors-excellence-across-teaching-research-and-service-at-46th-annual-bryand-awards/ Mon, 18 May 2026 17:37:21 +0000 /mcec/?p=37014 The Maine College of Engineering & Computing recognized outstanding alumni, faculty, staff, and students at the 46th Annual Edward T. Bryand Awards Ceremony, held April 17, 2026, at Buchanan Alumni House. The event brought together faculty, staff, industry partners, students, and families to celebrate individuals whose work and commitment continue to advance the College’s mission.

Dr. David Neivandt – Ashley S. Campbell Award
Dr. David Neivandt is a professor of chemical and biomedical engineering at the 91 whose research spans interfacial chemistry, biomaterials, and sustainable composites. His work includes innovations in engineered implants, cellulose-based materials, and environmentally friendly composites derived from biological waste. He has contributed to multiple patents and interdisciplinary advances in materials science and biomedical engineering.

Arieana Mangra – Leila C. Lowell Award for Exemplary Staff Support
Arieana Mangra, Director of Student Success and Advising Center, has led a transformation in student support at the Maine College of Engineering and Computing. Under her leadership, the college achieved its highest first- and second-year retention rates in 15 years. She is credited with building an advising program, including a new center, from the ground up and strengthening a proactive, student-centered advising model across the college.

Isaac Sewell – Graduate Teaching Assistant Award
Isaac Sewell serves as the sole graduate teaching assistant for the Mechanical Engineering capstone sequence at the 91. He manages grading, course logistics, and materials distribution for more than 80 students, consistently delivering highly organized systems and detailed feedback. His work has significantly improved course efficiency, grade accuracy, and the overall student experience.

Sandro Zier – Graduate Research Assistant Award
Sandro Zier is a Ph.D. candidate in Chemical Engineering at the 91 whose research focuses on sustainable materials and scalable manufacturing processes. He has developed roll-to-roll coating systems for cellulose nanofiber applications and pioneered innovative bio-based barrier technologies using fungal mycelium. His work bridges laboratory research and industrial-scale implementation in sustainable packaging.

Dr. Laura Gurney – Early Career Teaching Award
Dr. Laura Gurney is a lecturer in Computer Science at the 91 recognized for her commitment to student success and curriculum development. She teaches foundational programming and advanced computing courses while actively supporting student mentorship initiatives and accreditation efforts. Her leadership has contributed to improved student retention and strengthened academic pathways in computing.

Dr. Philip King – Early Career Teaching Award
Dr. Philip King is an early-career mechanical engineering faculty member at the 91 specializing in manufacturing engineering education. He has redesigned key courses to incorporate hands-on learning with modern manufacturing technologies and CAD systems. His teaching is consistently highly rated by students and supported by strong engagement in research and graduate mentorship.

Dr. Prabuddha Chakraborty – Early Career Research Award
Dr. Prabuddha Chakraborty is an Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the 91 focused on hardware security and trustworthy AI systems. He leads multiple federally funded research projects and has built a nationally recognized research program in secure microelectronics and intelligent systems. His work includes widely published research, patents, and leadership roles in major engineering conferences and journals.

Dr. Amrit Verma – Early Career Research Award
Dr. Amrit Verma is a research leader in offshore wind energy and marine operations at the 91. He founded the Wind Energy and Marine Operations Lab and has secured significant funding for research on wind turbine performance, installation, and digital twin modeling. His work has advanced both experimental testing systems and large-scale offshore wind deployment strategies.

Ashley S. Campbell Award
Recognizes a faculty member for outstanding excellence in teaching, research, and service that has brought distinction to engineering education.

Leila C. Lowell Award for Exemplary Staff Support
Honors staff members who provide exceptional service and support that significantly enhances student success and strengthens the College community.

Edward T. Bryand Distinguished Engineering Award
The College’s highest external honor, recognizing individuals whose engineering achievements, leadership, and impact bring distinction to the profession.

Early Career Research Award
Recognizes early-career faculty for exceptional research achievement, innovation, and growing national or international impact.

Early Career Teaching Award
Honors early-career faculty for outstanding and innovative teaching, strong student engagement, and contributions to curriculum and learning.

Graduate Teaching Assistant Award
Recognizes graduate students who demonstrate exceptional effectiveness in teaching, mentoring, and supporting undergraduate learning.

Graduate Research Assistant Award
Honors graduate students for outstanding research contributions, creativity, technical excellence, and scholarly impact.

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MCEC February Faculty Publications /mcec/2026/03/09/mcec-february-faculty-publications/ Mon, 09 Mar 2026 16:00:26 +0000 /mcec-new/?p=31305 Giovanna Guidoboni

  • Computational Vascular Development Model Explaining Incidence of Notch in Retinopathy of Prematurity with Ultra-Widefield Optical Coherence Tomography
    • 1; 1; 1; 3; 4; 1; 1; 1; 1; 1; 1; 5; 1; 4; 1
    • 1 Casey Eye Institute, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, Oregon, United States 
    • 2 Chicago College of Osteopathic Medicine, Midwestern University, Downers Grove, Illinois, United States
    • 3 Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts, United States 
    • 4 Maine College of Engineering and Computing, 91, Orono, Maine, United States
    • 5 National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, United States National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, United States
  • Correspondence: Benjamin K. Young, Casey Eye Institute, Oregon Health and Science University, 515 SW Campus Drive, Portland, OR 97239, USA; youngbe@ohsu.edu.

      Aaron Gallant

        • Principal Investigator: Aaron Gallant Civil and Environmental Engineering 91
        • Authors: Aaron Gallant; Sebastian Montoya-Vargas; William Davids 
        • Sponsored By: Transportation Infrastructure Durability Center
          • Principal Investigator: Aaron Gallant Civil and Environmental Engineering 91
          • Authors: Aaron Gallant; Sk Belal Hossen; Warda Ashraf; Luis Zambrano-Cruzatty; Temitope Omokinde; Andres Espinosa 
          • Sponsored By: Transportation Infrastructure Durability Center

          Shaleen Jain

            • Alisha Shrestha, Tora Johnson, Shaleen Jain, and Jessica Jansujwicz
            • Alisha Shrestha 91 and Maine Sea Grant, alisha.shrestha1@maine.edu 
            • Tora Johnson Sunrise County Economic Council, tjohnson@sunrisecounty.org 
            • Shaleen Jain 91, shaleen.jain@maine.edu Jessica Jansujwicz Maine Sea Grant, jessica.jansujwicz@maine.edu 

            Caitlin Howell

            • Liquid-infused Silicone Catheters Reduce Fungal Burden and Inflammation in Candidozyma auris Bladder Infections
              • Alyssa Ann La Bella1, Hope Akegbe1, Caitlin Howell2,3, Felipe H. Santiago-Tirado1*, Ana L. Flores-Mireles1*
              • 1 Department of Biological Sciences, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN, 46556, USA
              • 2 Department of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering, 91, Orono, ME, 04669, USA
              • 3 Graduate School of Biomedical Science and Engineering, 91, Orono, ME, 04669, USA
              • *Co-corresponding author: afloresm@nd.edu

            Donald Hummels

            • PALLAVI GHIMIRE1 , SAMIP POUDEL1 , MARIKO SHIRAZI2 , DONALD HUMMELS1 , AND REINALDO TONKOSKI1,3 1Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, 91, Orono, ME 04469, USA 2Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, AK 99775, USA 3Chair of Electrical Power Transmission and Distribution, Technical University of Munich, Munich, Germany Corresponding author: Pallavi Ghimire (e-mail: pallavi.ghimire@ieee.org).

            Lauren Ross

              • Taylor Bailey a, Lauren Ross a, Sean M.C. Smith a b c d, Sohaib Alahmed e
              • a 91, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, United States of America
              • b 91, School of Earth & Climate Sciences, United States of America
              • c 91, Center for Sustainability Solutions, United States of America
              • d 91, Darling Marine Center, United States of America
              • e Anchor QEA, United States of America
              • Patricio A. Díaz a b, Gonzalo Álvarez c d e f, Iván Pérez-Santos a g, Michael Araya d, Lauren Ross h, Ángela M. Baldrich a, Osvaldo Artal g i, Daniel Varela a, Sergio A. Rosales j, Camila Schwerter a, Camilo Rodríguez-Villegas a, Valentina Iturra k, Manuel Díaz l, Bárbara Cantarero a j, Rosa I. Figueroa m
              • a Centro i∼mar, Universidad de Los Lagos, Casilla 557, Puerto Montt, Chile
              • b Centro Interdisciplinario para la Investigación Acuícola — Investigación Aplicada (INCAR2), Universidad de Concepción, Concepción, Chile
              • C Departamento de Acuicultura, Facultad de Ciencias del Mar, Universidad Católica del Norte, Larrondo 1281, Coquimbo, Chile
              • D Centro de Investigación y Desarrollo Tecnológico en Algas (CIDTA), Facultad de Ciencias del Mar, Larrondo 1281, Universidad Católica del Norte, Coquimbo, Chile
              • e Center for Ecology and Sustainable Management of Oceanic Islands (ESMOI), Departamento de Biología Marina, Facultad de Ciencias del Mar, Universidad Católica del Norte, Coquimbo, Chile
              • f Centro de Innovación Acuícola AquaPacífico, Larrondo 1281, Coquimbo, Chile
              • g Center for Oceanographic Research COPAS COASTAL, Universidad de Concepción, Chile
              • h Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, 91, Orono, ME, USA
              • i Geodel Laboratory, Departamento de Ingeniería en Obras Civiles, Facultad de Ingeniería y Ciencias, Universidad de La Frontera, Temuco, Chile
              • j Programa de Doctorado en Biología y Ecología Aplicada, Universidad Católica del Norte, Larrondo 1281, Coquimbo, Chile
              • k Departamento de Geofísica, Universidad de Concepción, Concepción, Chile
              • l Programa de Investigación Pesquera, Universidad Austral de Chile, Puerto Montt, Chile
              • m Centro Oceanografico de Vigo, Instituto Español de Oceanografía (IEO-CSIC), Subida a Radio Faro 50, 36390, Vigo, Spain

            Jon Ippolito

            Babak Hejrati

              • by Ines Khiyara 1,*,Ben Sidaway 2 andBabak Hejrati 1
              • 1 Biorobotics and Biomechanics Laboratory, Department of Mechanical Engineering, 91, Orono, ME 04469, USA
              • 2 School of Physical Therapy, Husson University, Bangor, ME 04401, USA
              • * Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
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            MCEC January Faculty Publications /mcec/2026/02/04/mcec-january-faculty-publications/ Wed, 04 Feb 2026 14:38:31 +0000 /mcec-new/?p=31156 Babak Hejrati

              • Ali Faeghinejad,Liam Hawthorne and Babak Hejrati *Biorobotics & Biomechanics Laboratory, Mechanical Engineering Department, 91, 75 Long Road, Orono, ME 04469, USA
                *Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.

            Masoud Rais Rohani

              • Troy Zangle, Brett Ellis and Masoud Rais-Rohani

            David Neivandt

              • by Mahbuba Daizy 1,Yu Zhang 2,Douglas W. Bousfield 1,Ling Li 2,Jinwu Wang 3 andDavid J. Neivandt 1,*
                1 Department of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering, 91, 5737 Jenness Hall, Orono, ME 04469, USA, 2 School of Forest Resources, 91, 5755 Nutting Hall, Orono, ME 04469, USA, Forest Products Laboratory, U.S. Forest Service, 1 Gifford Pinchot Drive, Madison, WI 53726, USA
                * Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.

            Evan Wukcik

              • Sara Maslaczynska-Salome, Arya Ajeev, Theodore Warfle, Behrokh Shams, Colton Duprey, Evan K. Wujcik

            Karissa Tilbury

            • (PREPRINT!!)
              • Jordan N. Miner1, Christopher L. Emmerling1, Joshua D. Hamilton1, Joseph Raite1, Zoe Vittum1, Peter C. Brooks2, Andre Khalil1, Karissa Tilbury1
                1 91, 2 MaineHealth Institute for Research

            Yifeng Zhu

              • Qiang Zou, Yuhui Deng, Yifeng Zhu, Yi Zhou, Jianghe Cai, Shuibing He, and Lina Ge
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            NCEES Awards Funds to 91 for Working Surveyors to Continue Their Surveying Education /mcec/2026/01/20/ncees-awards-funds-to-umaine-for-working-surveyors-to-continue-their-surveying-education/ Tue, 20 Jan 2026 16:55:00 +0000 /mcec-new/?p=30931 The 91’s Surveying Engineering Technology program has been awarded $100,000 in scholarships from the NCEES Foundation to support working surveyors pursuing their education. The program serves more than 400 students across 45 states, with 96% studying online while advancing their careers in surveying. Students are enrolled in a variety of undergraduate and graduate degree and certificate programs, all designed to prepare them for professional licensure and leadership in the field.

            These scholarships will provide $1,000 awards to one hundred  deserving undergraduate students, helping them continue their studies, achieve licensure, and advance in their surveying careers. 

            To learn more about the Survey Engineering Technology program, visit our website.

            Contact: Taylor Ward,taylor.ward@maine.edu

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            Distinguished Lecturer Series – Dr. Raymond Pettit /mcec/2025/11/19/distinguished-lecturer-series-dr-raymond-pettit/ Wed, 19 Nov 2025 21:31:21 +0000 /mcec-new/?p=30479

            Broadening the Dimensions of AI Application: Implications for Commerce, Industry, and Education


            Date:Dec 4, 2025 | Time: 2:00 – 3:30pm | Location:Ferland Welcome Center


            Biography: 

            Dr. Raymond Pettit has blended a 20+ year career as an advanced analytic consultant and trainer in business and industry with academic appointments at UCSD, UNH, and Northeastern University. Most recently he was named Director of the Institute for Experiential AI housed at the Roux Institute in Portland, ME. Currently, Ray is Chief AI Officer at Neuro-AI Design, where he has created and curated course, curriculum, practicums and workshops on the foundations and principles of AI; AI + Leadership; Practical Applications of AI; and the Statistical Foundations of AI. In addition, he co-created and is co-teaching AI and Marketing at The College of NJ in the winter, 2026 semester.

            Ray is a proud alum of the U of Michigan and the U of Illinois, where he received his doctoral degree in 1996.

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            Electronics for Extreme Environments: 91 Pushes Sensors Beyond Limits /mcec/2025/11/12/electronics-for-extreme-environments-umaine-pushes-sensors-beyond-limits/ Wed, 12 Nov 2025 18:53:00 +0000 /mcec-new/?p=30406

            ORONO, Maine — Imagine sensors that don’t just survive extreme heat — they turn it into power. 91 engineers have built a simple wireless circuit that can operate from room temperature to more than 550 degrees Fahrenheit, opening the door to rugged, self-powered monitoring systems in environments such as jet engines, oil wells and spacecraft.

            In a breakthrough with sweeping industrial implications, 91 researchers designed a minimalist oscillator that enables sensors to transmit critical data wirelessly in environments where people, and conventional electronics, cannot survive.

            “This work is important because of the potential applications, especially in terms of industrial safety. Not only does constant monitoring in industrial applications allow for more efficient operation with minimal production time loss, but it maximizes safety for human operators by removing the possibility of a surprise failure” said lead author Jude Zanoni, an electrical engineering graduate student and lead author on the study. “By using commercial components, we also demonstrated a potential avenue for cheap development of this technology.”

            The research contributes to solving a decades-old problem: how to keep electronics stable in extreme heat without complex biasing, bulky power supplies or fragile components. Traditional silicon devices fail well below 300 degrees, forcing industry to rely on expensive, short-lived or wired systems in high-temperature operations. 91’s solution is different — a single-supply oscillator built with one silicon carbide transistor, delivering more than 12 dBm of output power to extend detection range and reliability.

            “This is about building electronics that don’t just survive the heat, they could make it useful,” Zanoni. “The circuit produces the same amount of power as a pair of Bluetooth earbuds — but it keeps working at more than 570 degrees Fahrenheit.”

            By reducing parts and stabilizing operation under uniform high-temperature testing, the 91 circuit produced up to nine times the power of previous designs at room temperature and nearly doubled at nearly 500 degrees. In practical terms, that’s like turning a walkie-talkie that only works across your yard into one that can reach across your neighborhood. At extreme heat, it still boosts detection range by about 50 percent, meaning problems can be spotted earlier and from farther away. Because the design can be paired with thermoelectric generators, these sensors could power themselves from the very heat they monitor, which eliminates the need for batteries or wires and makes them easier to deploy in remote or dangerous places.

            Zanoni, originally from Lubec, Maine, came to 91 where he participated in a Research Experience for Undergraduates program introducing him to this research. He continued on to complete his undergraduate Honor’s Thesis on this topic and will continue to study  high temperature, harsh environment sensing in pursuit of a PhD at 91. 

            The research, demonstrating robust modeling and successful fabrication under realistic harsh-environment testing, was recently published in IEEE Access under the title “”

            Contact: Taylor Ward, taylor.ward@maine.edu

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            MCEC October Faculty Publications /mcec/2025/11/05/mcec-october-faculty-publications/ Wed, 05 Nov 2025 19:07:16 +0000 /mcec-new/?p=30163 Aaron Gallant:

            Chakraborty Prabhuda:

            Caitlin Howell:

              • Published on October 9th and included CS undergraduate student Bradan Craig as well as graduate students both Biomedical Engineering.

            Kimberly Huguenard

            Roberto Lopez Anido

            Lauren Ross

            Samuel Davis

              • Sewell, I.D., Verma, A.S. and Goupee, A.J., (2025). Undisturbed wave elevation estimation: Correcting for radiation and diffraction effects in measured data near floating wind turbines. Ocean Engineering, 342(Part 2), 122863

            Evan Wujcik

            Caitlin Howell

              • Wyatt Fessler, 1± Liza R. White, 1,2± Sandro Zier,1 Juan L. Aragones, 3 Laura R. Arriaga, 3 and Caitlin Howell*1,2
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            Guidoboni appointed Interim Vice President For Research, will continue as MCEC Dean /mcec/2025/11/04/guidoboni-appointed-interim-vice-president-for-research-will-continue-as-mcec-dean/ Tue, 04 Nov 2025 13:54:50 +0000 /mcec-new/?p=30130 Guidoboni appointed Interim Vice President For Research, will continue as MCEC Dean 

            The 91 has appointed Giovanna Guidoboni as interim vice president for research while she continues to serve as the inaugural dean of the Maine College of Engineering and Computing (MCEC). In this dual leadership role, Guidoboni will help fostereducation, research, and innovation at the 91 while strengthening collaboration across the 91 System and state.

            As dean of MCEC, Guidoboni leads one of the university’s largest academic units, home to more than 2,600 students and a key driver of the UMS TRANSFORMS initiative, a systemwide effort to expand engineering and computing education, research and workforce development in Maine. Under her leadership, the college has bridged disciplines, strengthened research and innovation,  fostered statewide partnerships, modernized labs and built new buildings to prepare the next generation of innovators and problem solvers. 

            In her interim vice-presidential role, Guidoboni will oversee 91’s research enterprise, support faculty and student scholarship, and build new opportunities for collaboration with industry, government and community partners. Her appointment reflects 91’s continued commitment to advancing discovery and innovation that serve Maine and the world.

            A world-renowned expert in ocular biomechanics and mathematical modeling, Guidoboni directs the Laboratory for Computational and Mathematical Modeling in Medicine, Engineering and Technology (CoMET Lab) at 91. Her research combines mathematics, physics and engineering to understand ocular diseases such as glaucoma, using computational tools to explore the connections between fluid dynamics, vision loss and intraocular pressure. Her work has been supported by the National Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health and European Commission.

            “My passion has always been connecting people and ideas across fields to make something greater than any one discipline alone,” Guidoboni said. “I believe everyone should have access to research whether they are students just beginning their journey or faculty leading major projects. Together we can continue to grow a culture of innovation as a learner-centered R1 institution that reaches every corner of the University and beyond.”

            Guidoboni joined 91 in 2023 after serving as associate dean for research and professor of mathematics, electrical engineering and computer science at the University of Missouri. She holds a Ph.D. in mathematics and a master’s in engineering of materials from the University of Ferrara in Italy. Guidoboni is an Elected Member of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts and holds a joint faculty position at the Department of Ophthalmology of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai (NY).

            Contact: Taylor Ward, taylor.ward@maine.edu

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            When engineering, medicine and artificial intelligence see as one, vision takes place /mcec/2025/10/20/when-engineering-medicine-and-artificial-intelligence-see-as-one-vision-takes-place/ Mon, 20 Oct 2025 21:01:15 +0000 /mcec-new/?p=29965

            Oct. 17 marked the inaugural meeting of the Society for Artificial Intelligence in Vision and Ophthalmology (SAIVO), a new global organization bringing together leaders in artificial intelligence, vision science and clinical care. During the meeting, the journal entitled Artificial Intelligence in Vision and Ophthalmology (AIVO) — cofounded and edited by Maine College of Engineering and Computing Dean Giovanna Guidoboni — was officially announced as the society’s journal of record, marking an important step in advancing the safe, ethical and effective use of AI in eye and vision research.

            AIVO is the first international journal exclusively dedicated to the convergence of AI and vision science. It provides a first-of-its-kind platform for interdisciplinary research spanning ophthalmology, optometry, computer science, physics, clinical science, mathematics, engineering and physiology to improve understanding and treatment of the visual system. 

            “Over the last decade, AI has moved from a computational curiosity to a clinical necessity, and this journal stands on the front lines leading that transition,” Guidoboni said. 

            The journal dates back to 2014, when the Journal for Modeling in Ophthalmology (JMO) was founded by Guidoboni; Alon Harris, professor of ophthalmology, professor of artificial intelligence and human health, Co-Director of the Barry Family Center for Ophthalmic Artificial Intelligence & Human Health at Mount Sinai Hospital; and Simon Bakker, managing director of Kugler Publications, to promote mathematical and computational modeling in ophthalmology. Based on the growing relevance and rapidly expanding role of AI in vision science, JMO evolved into Modeling and Artificial Intelligence in Ophthalmology in 2021, then transitioned to its current title, AIVO.

            At the time, most mathematical and computational approaches to vision did not neatly fit into existing research or publishing categories. Recognizing that along with the need for a new vision and new mathematics to understand biological and clinical systems, a new venue for these ideas to converge needed to be created. The journal was founded to be a place where research at the crossroads of disciplines could be shared.  

            “The transformation from JMO to AIVO represents more than a name change.​​ It mirrors the evolution and interdisciplinary nature of our field,” said Guidoboni, who also serves as editor-in-chief. 

            The formation of SAIVO adds to the momentum. Established independently by researchers and clinicians worldwide, SAIVO encourages collaboration and transparency in AI applications for ocular care. Its partnership with AIVO creates a natural alignment between technology, the people advancing science, research and the platform sharing it, thereby creating a unique environment to move innovation forward.  

            “This journal and SAIVO were born from the same need to bring together the people researching and the platform needed to share research,” said Harris. “With SAIVO and AIVO now formally aligned, the field has both a home for collaboration and a voice for discovery.”

            Published by Kugler Publications under the leadership of Managing Director Simon Bakker, AIVO features an international and interdisciplinary editorial board of leaders in ophthalmology, AI, and computational modeling. 

            “Our shared goal has always been to elevate the field through quality, but always focusing on accessibility,” said Bakker. “AIVO’s partnership with SAIVO creates a powerful bridge between cutting-edge research and the global community working to apply it. Especially in an inherently interdisciplinary field that didn’t have a natural publishing fit.”

            For Guidoboni and Harris, the journal’s interdisciplinary mission reflects their own research philosophy and work using engineering, physics, mathematics and AI to model complex biological systems from the eye to the cardiovascular and urinary systems. Each holds a faculty appointment at the other’s university, reflecting their ongoing interdisciplinary collaboration  Their research group was the first to quantify retinal venous susceptibility to collapse due to blood and intraocular pressure, later validated in a population study of nearly 20,000 eyes in Singapore, and to develop digital twins of both the eye and the lower urinary tract.

            “The human body is one of the greatest engineers of all,” said Guidoboni. “My passion for research and for inspiring the next generation of scientists comes from seeing how technology, physics, and biology converge to help people. This journal is the ultimate embodiment of this collaborative, cross-disciplinary vision.”

            Through her leadership at 91, Guidoboni continues to expand access to research opportunities for Maine students at all levels, emphasizing the human side of AI and the power of interdisciplinary collaboration including bringing high school students to international conferences — meeting with Harris and other industry leaders. The partnership between AIVO and SAIVO represents a defining moment for the global vision science community—one that unites people, purpose, and innovation to shape the future of artificial intelligence in vision and ophthalmology.

            Contact: Taylor Ward, taylor.ward@maine.edu

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