The Arizona Imaging and Microanalysis Society hosts an annual conference every spring. This annual meeting provides a forum for members to discuss research and exchange ideas, as well as an opportunity for learning about new techniques and concepts. At other […] Read more »
2011 AIMS Annual Conference
Download the 2011 AIMS Conference Program for details. Read more »
2010 AIMS Annual Conference
Download the 2010 Conference program (PDF) for details. Read more »
2009 AIMS Annual Conference
The annual AIMS meeting for 2009 will be held in the spacious Student Union at the University of Arizona. Each poster presenter had two minutes to introduce their topic from the podium, and cash awards were presented for the best student poster in both the physical and biological sciences. Read more »
2008 AIMS Annual Conference
Keynote speaker William Landis, PhD, presents "Tissue engineering of models of human digits and ears". Read more »
2007 AIMS Annual Conference
Keynote speaker Carolyn Larabell, Head of the National Center for X-ray Microscopy, presents "Cat Scans of Single Cells at Better than 50 nm Resolution." Read more »
2006 AIMS Annual Conference
The annual AIMS meeting for 2006 was held in the spacious Student Union at the University of Arizona. Each poster presenter had two minutes to introduce their topic from the podium, and cash awards were presented for the best student poster in both the physical and biological sciences. Read more »
2005 AIMS Annual Conference
AIMS' annual meeting was held on March 24, 2005 on ASU's Tempe campus Read more »
2004 AIMS Annual Conference
The 2004 invited speakers covered a range of budding techniques as applied to both physical and biological problems. Two cash awards were presented for the best poster at the end of the meeting. Read more »
2003 AIMS Annual Conference
The 2003 annual AIMS meeting was held in the spacious new Student Union at the University of Arizona. Invited speakers only, with a full schedule of exciting and informative topics in the works. Each poster presenter had two minutes to introduce their topic from the podium, and cash awards were presented for the best student poster in both the physical and biological sciences. Read more »