Introduction to our Graduate Program

Graduate Students in Biophysics
The Michigan Biophysics Graduate Program (MBGP) was established in 1949, making it one of the first such programs in the world. The intellectual base of the program was significantly broadened during the 1980s when faculty members from a number of other units on campus were invited to join. Currently over forty faculty members from a variety of disciplines, schools and departments on campus participate as mentors for the Ph.D. students enrolled in the MBGP and provide our students with rich opportunities for academic learning and research.
 
The MBGP has two main objectives: 1. to provide graduate students with both the intellectual and technical training in modern biophysics, 2. to sensitize our students to the power and unique opportunities of interdisciplinary work and thinking so as to train them to conduct research that crosses the boundaries between the biological and physical sciences. The program offers students opportunities to conduct research in a variety of areas of contemporary biophysics including structural biology, single molecule spectroscopy, spectroscopy and its applications, computational biology, membrane biophysics, neurobiophysics and enzymology. The MBGP offers a balanced curriculum that aims to provide our students with a strong academic base and, at the same time, accommodate their different academic backgrounds.
 
Judging the past performance of the program through the success of its former students , the MBGP has been highly successful, and there is every reason to believe that strong training in the biophysical sciences, as provided by the MBGP, will become even more valuable in the future both in the academic and the industrial settings.
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