This degree is a 12-month, three semester program with a rigorous curriculum. This degree option combines a collaborative research component with individual areas of imaging and therapeutic sciences. Students choose to study one following magnetic resonance imaging, nuclear medicine technology, and radiation therapy. The program includes a required Masters Seminar course each semester which will contain an advanced scholarly component designed to enhance the content of other courses in their chosen area of study. The Masters Seminar courses are completed under the direction of a scholarly mentor and will result in a scholarly project suitable for publication in a peer reviewed journal, professional presentation or scholarly equivalent by program completion. By the end of graduate program, the student will be required to have completed all graduate course credit, including all scholarly projects presented. The professional graduate student will be expected to integrate the knowledge of both chosen medical imaging majors into their project, possibly producing ground-breaking research not previously explored or published and suitable for journal publication.