@article{a674973047264f1db891fa79947bfe10,
title = "Editorial",
author = "Mauro Ferrari",
note = "Funding Information: Daniel J. Laser received the Ph.D. degree in Mechanical Engineering from Stanford University, where he was a Semiconductor Research Corporation Graduate Fellow. His dissertation work focused on modeling electroosmotic flow in high-density slit capillary arrays and on the development of novel thin film processes for leakage current reduction in silicon-core slit capillary array micropumps. While at Stanford, he was the recipient of a Department of Mechanical Engineering Graduate Fellowship Engineering Merit Award and was a MacArthur Affiliate at Stanford{\textquoteright}s Center for International Security and Cooperation. He has held engineering positions in the telecommunications and energy sectors and, as an undergraduate at Northwestern University, conducted research in haptic interfaces for teleoperative microsurgery robotics. Dr. Laser is currently the chief executive officer of Wave 80 Biosciences, Inc., a company developing novel bioassay methods and devices with an emphasis on static-interface assay cartridge technologies, particularly for resource-limited settings. At Wave 80, he directs research programs in flow chamber microarray enhancement, novel immunocytometry methods, and slit capillary array micropump optimization. He led Wave 80{\textquoteright}s development of a fully automated, highly portable assay system for cartridge-format multiplexed quantitation of the malarial antigens HRP-II and aldolase. He is the first author of eight journal articles and conference papers and holds three issued patents.",
year = "2007",
month = apr,
doi = "10.1007/s10544-007-9065-3",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "9",
pages = "101--104",
journal = "Biomedical Microdevices",
issn = "1387-2176",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "2",
}