Dr. Betty Li
Adjunct Research Professor, P.Eng
- Ph.D. (The University of Western Ontario)
- Email Dr. Betty Li
PhD in Biomedical Engineering, 2018
The University of Western Ontario, London Ontario
Master of Engineering Science, 2013
Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering, The University of Western Ontario
Bachelor of Applied Science (Major in Nanoengineering), 2011
Division of Engineering Science, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario
BIO
Dr. Betty Li is a Research Officer at the National Research Council of Canada (Human Health Therapeutics Research Centre) and an Adjunct Professor in the 杏吧原创 University Department of Systems and Computer Engineering. She received her BASc in Engineering Science (Nanoengineering) from the University of Toronto and her MASc in Chemical and Biochemical Engineering from Western University. She completed her PhD focusing on the synthesis and characterization of natural polymer鈥揵ased biomaterials for tissue regeneration and biomedical device applications.
Dr. Li leads interdisciplinary efforts at the interface of biomaterials, stem cell engineering, and microphysiological systems. She established advanced 3D bioprinting and organ-on-chip platforms to develop human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-based tissue models to enable predictive disease modeling and drug assessment. By improving model fidelity and assay robustness, her work aims to de-risk preclinical drug discovery pipelines, accelerate translational research, and reduce reliance on animal models. Her research integrates human stem cell technology, synthetic and hybrid biomaterials, microfluidic design, and microfabrication to recapitulate the structural and functional complexity of human tissues in vitro.
Research Interests
- Biomaterials for neural and vascular applications
- D tissue modeling, 3D bioprinting and biofabrication
- 3, organ-on-chip (OOC) and microphysiological systems (MPS)
- Blood-Brain-Barrier (BBB) Modeling
- Immuno-engineering and therapeutic screening
- Stem cell engineering and iPSC technologies
- Translational Bioengineering and Preclinical Models