Matthew S. Rosen is an American physicist and professor.
After graduating from The Knox School in St. James, New York, in 1988, Rosen completed a bachelor's degree in physics at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, followed by a doctorate in the same subject at the University of Michigan.[1][2] Rosen was elected a fellow of the American Physical Society in 2021,[3] for his research on "medical imaging through the development and commercialization of low field human MRI scanners,[4][5][6] for the development of automated transform by manifold approximation (AUTOMAP), a general AI-based image reconstruction framework,[7] and for unique spin hyperpolarization techniques." In 2021, he gave the Paul Callaghan prize lecture at ISMAR.[8] He is a faculty member at the Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging and an Associate Professor[9] at Harvard Medical School. He is the Kiyomi and Ed Baird MGH Research Scholar.[10]
In 2014, Rosen, Dr. Jonathan Rothberg, and Professor Ronald Walsworth founded Hyperfine to develop the world's first portable MRI scanner.[4][11][12]