The biggest difficulty in the postgraduate entrance examination of imaging technology comes from the examination policy. The construction of the real master of imaging technology has just started, and the choice is very narrow.
The old master's degree in imaging is wonderful: most of the majors named "medical imaging technology" are specialized subjects, and only five-year medical undergraduates are allowed to apply; "Imaging medicine and nuclear medicine" is divided into master's degree and master's degree, mainly imaging diagnosis. Bachelor of Science can apply for a degree, but there are many undergraduates in diagnostics, and the competition pressure is great.
Cross-examination of biomedical engineering, which is better, taking mathematics, English, politics, and many professional courses: signal and system, computer, clinical medicine ... avoiding the competition of diagnostic undergraduates, and choosing more majors at the same time.
If our school has an enrollment point for imaging technology, our school is preferred. My personal experience is that protectionism in our school is very serious. If the cross-school postgraduate entrance examination is a school that can be found by some research and recruitment networks, you will have almost no chance to re-examine-there are so many people enrolled in our school, and candidates from other schools must be among the best in the initial test.