About me

Hello! I’m Wei Wang (汪巍), currently a Ph.D. student in Physics at Johns Hopkins University. My main research interest lies at the interface between physics and living systems.

Education

  • Ph.D. in Physics, Johns Hopkins University2020–2026
    • Advisor: Brian A. Camley
  • B.S. in Physics, Tongji University (同济大学)2016–2020

Selected Publications

Ruptures and tissue size control

What controls whether cells - or clusters of cells - break off from an invading cancerous front? We use a phase field model exploring how confinement, adhesion, and chemotaxis drive cell dissociation that can lead to metastasis - capturing behavior observed in experiments with microfluidic channels.

Confinement, Jamming, and Adhesion in Cancer Cells Dissociating from a Collectively Invading Strand

W. Wang, R. A. Law, E. P. Ipiña, K. Konstantopoulos, and B. A. Camley
PRX Life 3, 013012 (2025)

Controlling tissue size by active fracture

W. Wang and B. A. Camley
arXiv:2503.03126 [physics.bio-ph] (2025)

Divergence of detachment forces in the finite-Voronoi model

W. Wang and B. A. Camley
Manuscript in preparation (2026)

Cell sensing under noise

How precisely can a cell detect when it runs into another cell? This question is fundamental for understanding how single cells coordinate navigation and decision-making, with implications for immune surveillance and cancer invasion.

Limits on the accuracy of contact inhibition of locomotion

W. Wang and B. A. Camley
Phys. Rev. E 109, 054408 (2024)