200922_esfandyarpour-_5386_sz-768x505.jpg

“Our work has potential applications in single-cell studies, in tumor heterogeneity studies and, perhaps, in point-of-care cancer diagnostics – especially in developing nations where cost, constrained infrastructure and limited access to medical technologies are of the utmost importance,” says co-author Rahim Esfandyarpour, UCI assistant professor of electrical engineering & computer science as well as biomedical engineering. Steven Zylius / UCI