Professor Wen is an experimental biophysicist who is interested in applying physical methods to understand biological phenomena. By measuring the mechanical properties of living cells and the mechanical interaction between cells and ECM, he aims to understand how cells convert external mechanical signals to internal biochemical signals that govern cellular function, including cell morphology, migration, and differentiation. His research will help to design novel materials for wound healing, tissue engineering, and tumor treatment.
Professor Wen is leading a research group with students from both Physics and Biomedical Engineering. He enjoys interacting with students and teaches physics classes both on the freshman and advanced graduate levels. Through research advising and classroom lectures, Professor Wen tries to excite the interests of students in learning the physics that is not only required to understand our universe, but is also essential for their careers as engineers.
Professor Wen is an experimental biophysicist who is interested in applying physical methods to understand biological phenomena. By measuring the mechanical properties of living cells and the mechanical interaction between cells and ECM, he aims to understand how cells convert external mechanical signals to internal biochemical signals that govern cellular function, including cell morphology, migration, and differentiation. His research will help to design novel materials for wound healing, tissue engineering, and tumor treatment.
Professor Wen is leading a research group with students from both Physics and Biomedical Engineering. He enjoys interacting with students and teaches physics classes both on the freshman and advanced graduate levels. Through research advising and classroom lectures, Professor Wen tries to excite the interests of students in learning the physics that is not only required to understand our universe, but is also essential for their careers as engineers.
Scholarly Work
Reliable and mobile all-fiber modular optical tweezers. 2020
Heterogeneity Profoundly Alters Emergent Stress Fields in Constrained Multicellular Systems. 2020