Toronto Biomedical Engineering Conference
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Since its inception in 1985, the Toronto Biomedical Engineering Conference (ToBE) has proudly held the distinction of being the longest-running student-run conference, serving as a testament to its enduring legacy of excellence and innovation. Held annually at the University of Toronto, ToBE has established itself as a premier platform for the exchange of knowledge and ideas within the biomedical engineering community. Each year, ToBE attracts internationally renowned speakers who share their expertise and insights with attendees, enriching the conference experience and inspiring the next generation of biomedical engineers. Moreover, students affiliated with the biomedical engineering community at the University of Toronto get the opportunity to present their research and projects, showcasing their contributions to the advancement of the field and fostering meaningful collaborations and discussions among peers and professionals alike.
May 25th 2026, Hart House
Interested in attending the conference?
Want to attend the dinner award reception?
2026 Conference Schedule
| Time (24:00) | Event | Location |
|---|---|---|
| 8:30 - 9:00 | Check-in, Poster set-up, Breakfast | Quad |
| 9:00 - 9:10 | Conference Welcome from BME Director and ToBE Chair | Great Hall |
| 9:10 - 10:10 | Keynote Speaker 1: Prof John Rogers | Great Hall |
| 10:10 - 11:10 | Workshop 1: Industry Panel | Great Hall |
| 11:10 - 11:20 | Break | |
| 11:20 - 12:20 | Keynote Speaker 2: Prof. Gordana Vunjak-Novakovic | Great Hall |
| 12:20 - 13:30 | Lunch/Poster Session | Lunch: Quad Poster: Music & Burwash Rooms |
| 13:30 - 13:40 | Break | |
| 13:40 - 14:30 | Workshop 2: AI in BME | Debate Room |
| 14:30 - 15:30 | Concurrent session 1: Student Oral Presentation- Molecular | Debates Room |
| Concurrent session 2: Student Oral Presentation- Cell and Tissue | East Common Room | |
| Concurrent session 3: Student Oral Presentation- Clinical | Great Hall | |
| 15:30 - 15:40 | Break | |
| 15:40 - 16:40 | Keynote Speaker 3: Prof Amy Herr | Great Hall |
| 16:40 - 16:50 | Closing Remarks | Great Hall |
| 18:00 - 22:00 | Celebratory Dinner; Student Oral & Poster Awards | Arcadian Loft |
2026 Keynote Speakers
Dr. John A. Rogers
Dr. Amy Herr
Dr. Gordana Vunjak-Novaković
2026 Student Presentations
At the Toronto Biomedical Engineering Conference (ToBE), students affiliated with the Institute of Biomedical Engineering at the University of Toronto are provided with a unique opportunity to showcase their cutting-edge research through engaging poster presentations or informative oral sessions. This platform not only allows students to share their innovative findings and insights with a diverse audience of peers, faculty, and industry professionals but also fosters valuable networking opportunities and constructive feedback exchanges. Through these presentations, students contribute to the vibrant academic discourse surrounding biomedical engineering, enriching the conference experience and furthering the collective knowledge base of the field.
Rules of Submission
- Word Limit: The text must be within the 300 word limit.
- Please draft your abstract with the following 4 subsections in mind:
- Rationale & Objectives
- Methods
- Results
- Conclusions & Significance
- Writing Style: The University of Toronto BME community consists of individuals with diverse expertise and levels of experience. To help make your exciting work accessible to our entire community, we are requesting that all abstracts be written in a language that is easy to understand by multiple audiences. Please also minimize the use of highly technical terms or field-specific jargon.
- Abstracts must be submitted through the online form available below:
Abstract submissions open on February 9, 2026 and close on March 16, 2026 at 11:59 PM. Students will be notified of the outcome by Friday April 17, 2026.
Interested in presenting at the conference?
Resources
2026 Workshops
Workshop 1: Industry Panels
Andrea Wurster
Andrea Wurster is Vice President at Silverts Adaptive Clothing & Footwear, where she brings a background in gerontology and dementia care to the forefront of inclusive product innovation. With a deep understanding of accessibility, Andrea blends empathy, creativity, and practical insight to design adaptive clothing that enhances dignity, independence, and quality of life.Driven by a commitment to improving everyday experiences for older adults and those who support them, Andrea focuses on solutions that are both functional and empowering. She serves as an Advisor to AgeTech Connect Toronto, helping bridge investors and entrepreneurs shaping the future of aging, and is a member of the Women’s Brain Health Initiative’s Brain Suite Social Cabinet, where she supports initiatives that promote brain health through education, social connection, and innovative engagement.
Robin Quirk
Robin Quirk is Vice President, Technology Sourcing & Venture Development at the Centre for Commercialization of Regenerative Medicine (CCRM), Toronto. Here, Rob leads a business unit focused on identifying and progressing promising technologies from concept to spin-out. Activities include technology sourcing and evaluation, intellectual property management, company concept generation, incubation of new company ideas, proof of concept study planning and execution, technology in-licensing, fundraising, and leadership identification. Rob is an industry-trained pharmacist with a PhD in tissue engineering and an MBA in healthcare management, both from The University of Nottingham, UK. He has previously co-founded and led two UK regenerative medicine start-ups; RegenTec Ltd. (tissue engineering contract research organisation) and Locate Bio Ltd. (developing orthobiological combination products, now clinical stage).
Phillip Mohabir
Phillip Mohabir is the Co-Founder and CEO of Vivo Surgery, an AI-powered surgical video company building the intelligence layer for the next generation of surgical workflows. Vivo Surgery recently completed Creative Destruction Lab: Computational Health, sharpening its vision for the future of surgical AI. Phillip is a proud University of Toronto alumnus, earning an Honours Bachelor of Science in 2008 with a focus in molecular biology and neuroscience. He later completed his Executive MBA at Rotman in 2019, graduating as a Bregman Scholar for academic standing. Before founding Vivo Surgery, Phillip was hired into an operational role at IMAX before completing undergrad, was promoted into senior management, and went on to work across FP&A, investor relations, and strategic growth. He also serves as a consultant instructor for Stanford Graduate School of Business.
Workshop 2: Responsible AI Deployment in Healthcare: Safety, Trust, and Real-World Impact
Rooted in hands-on experience developing and deploying AI at the Peter Munk Cardiac Centre within one of Canada’s leading hospital networks (UHN), this workshop will examine the principles and practical decisions that underpin the development and deployment of safe, trustworthy, and clinically meaningful AI in healthcare. Leveraging biological foundation models for cardiovascular diseases as an example, we will walk participants through the full lifecycle of responsible AI. In this context, we explore how population differences fundamentally shape model design, data strategy, risk profiles, and the need for careful ongoing evaluation of AI models after deployment.
Briana Layard
Briana Layard is a Registered Nurse at UHN, currently serving as Clinical Lead for Research and AI at the Peter Munk Cardiac Centre. She focuses on patient-centered AI integration into cardiac care, the co-designing of AI tools, and education programs to enhance clinical adoption. With a strong foundation in patient care delivery and clinical research, Briana completed her Master of Health Science in Health Administration in 2024 at the University of Toronto and has more recently joined the 2025 cohort of the AMS Fitzgerald Fellowship in AI and Human-Centred Leadership, bringing together health system leaders to work towards the advancement of digital transformation while preserving human connection at the heart of care.
Dr. Vallijah Subasri
Vallijah is an AI Scientist at Peter Munk Cardiac Centre where she leverages AI for precision medicine in cardiovascular diseases. Previously she completed a PhD at the University of Toronto and Hospital for Sick Children where she used germline multi-omics and machine learning to understand the clinical heterogeneity of paediatric cancers and develop risk prediction models for personalized patient management. During that time she also worked at the Vector Institute on building guardrails to ensure the responsible deployment of clinical AI models. She is passionate about improving patient outcomes through the use of AI-enabled precision medicine technologies, in a safe and responsible manner.
About the Organizers
2026 Organizing Team
Chair
Amy Huang (MASc 2nd year)
Publication Coordinators
- Tasnia Nabil (PhD 1st year)
- Maha Mian (PhD 3rd year)
- Atousa Assadi (PhD 5th year)
Sponsorship Coordinators
- Samantha Rahamatali (MEng 1st year)
- Zion Park (MASc 1st year)
- Rosemond Tawiah (MEng 1st year)
Treasurer
Kaiwen Liu (PhD 2nd year)
Marketing Coordinator
Valerie Kwong (PhD 2nd year)
Workshop Coordinators
- Madhumitha Ramamurthy (MASc 2nd year)
- Charlie Lake (PhD 1st year)
Programs Coordinators
- Sajida Chowdhury (MASc 2nd year)
- Patrick Bonsu (MEng 1st year)
- Aden Wong (MASc 1st year)
2026 Sponsors
Gold Sponsors
Silver Sponsors
Bronze Sponsors