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Facilities

<h2>Descriptions</h2>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Kwabena Boahen -&nbsp;</strong><a href="#KW1">&quot;<cite>Modeling Sensorimotor Circuits for Eye Movements</cite>&quot;</a></li>
<li><strong>David Camarillo -&nbsp;</strong><a href="#DC1">&quot;<cite>Human Brain System Identification through Finite Element Modeling</cite>&quot;</a></li>

As part of the university-wide Bio-X community, Biodesign includes faculty and students from over 40 departments across the Schools of Business, Engineering, Humanities & Sciences, Law and Medicine.

The Stanford Biofilm Research Center is a campus-wide research facility for studies on microbial biofilms, and houses an upright Leica confocal microscope.

We have the ability to work with many different systems. The upright scanhead and water immersion objectives allow imaging of films without removal from growing media.This allows you to set up your experiments here in our facility and image real time in-situ.  

The Computational Services and Bioinformatics Facility provides a wide array of software and hardware resources to support scientific research at Stanford.

The Cell Sciences Imaging Facility (CSIF) is a university service center that provides high-resolution, state-of-the-art light and electron microscopy technologies for imaging and analyzing the molecular and structural organization of cells, tissue and bioengineered materials.  

The CSIF operates two sites at Stanford University: The SOE Shriram Center CSIF and the SOM Beckman Center CSIF. Both facility sites are open to all members of the Stanford community as well as to external academic and industry researchers (with approval of the facility director).

The iconic form of Clark Center embodies the collaborative spirit of Bio-X. Sweeping windows reveal open lab spaces which dissolve the walls between labs, people and ideas. Researchers flow through this nexus that blends traditional departments, schools and areas of study.

Stanford Bio-X supports research and educational opportunities that cross disciplines between the biological or biomedical sciences and fields of engineering, physics and computational science.

Under the direction of Dr. Vinod Menon, the SCSNL investigates human cognition and learning using a systems neuroscience approach. 

The Stanford Functional Genomics Facility (SFGF) is a service center in the Stanford School of Medicine.

The laboratory is named in honor of a generous gift from Vincent and Stella Coates, given through the Stanford School of Medicine to support the mass spec & proteomics facility as a shared core resource.

The Stanford Functional Genomics Facility (SFGF) provides microarrays and microarray services to researchers within the Stanford community and beyond.

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