Skip to content

Eno Ebong for Northeastern Global News

Northeastern students and faculty recognized for scholarship, research, leadership and innovation at 15th Academic Honors Convocation
President Aoun applauds as Matthew Miller holds an award.

Northeastern students and faculty recognized for scholarship, research, leadership and innovation at 15th Academic Honors Convocation

Northeastern’s highest achievers across its 13 global campuses were celebrated at the 15th annual Academic Honors Convocation.
Two Northeastern professors receive prestigious early-career awards for pioneering bioengineering research
Portrait of Eno Ebong (left) and Ambika Bajpayee (right).

Two Northeastern professors receive prestigious early-career awards for pioneering bioengineering research

Ambika Bajpayee and Eno Ebong both received the prestigious award for their innovative work in bioengineering.
14th annual Academic Honors Convocation recognizes Northeastern students and faculty for their scholarship, research, leadership and innovation
Students and faculty standing on stage at Blackman auditorium.

14th annual Academic Honors Convocation recognizes Northeastern students and faculty for their scholarship, research, leadership and innovation

The event recognized members of the Northeastern community for their scholarship, research, leadership and innovation.
 Three Northeastern professors recognized for extraordinary achievement in the field of medical and biological engineering
Headshots of three Northeastern professors, from left to right: Mansoor Amiji, Eno E. Ebong, Yun Raymond Fu.

 Three Northeastern professors recognized for extraordinary achievement in the field of medical and biological engineering

The Northeastern researchers were inducted March 25 into the prestigious American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering.
Research to prevent, treat vascular disease garners NIH award

Research to prevent, treat vascular disease garners NIH award

Eno Ebong, an assistant professor of chemical engineering, harnesses the power of multiple fields—from chemical engineering to nanomedicine—to lay the groundwork for treating vascular disease.
Take 5: Questions of the heart

Take 5: Questions of the heart

From studying the physics of a heartbeat to designing new cardiac disease detection methods, these five researchers have the heart on the brain.
A storm in our veins

A storm in our veins

New assistant professor Eno Ebong studies the effect of mechanical flow on the vascular system with the hope of finding new targets for preventing, diagnosing, or treating vascular disease.