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Featured in CBS News: Fitness Trackers Could Interfere with Pacemakers

Digital Health
Health Technologies
Digital Sensors
Clinical AI
Physiological Monitoring
Biomarkers
Computational Modeling
About The Lab

Developing technologies to monitor and improve human health

Our research develops wearable biosensors and digital health technologies to better monitor and manage human health. By studying the electrical properties of biological tissues, we design devices to better stage, diagnose, treat, and monitor disease in both clinical and everyday environments.

We design wearable systems that continuously measure physiological signals and provide insights into human health.

Our work develops biomedical devices that improve disease detection and enable monitoring in clinical and real-world settings.

Our Mission

Developing biomedical technologies that help monitor, measure, and improve human health.

Fields of Impact

Research Impact

Cardiology

Developing wearable and bioelectrical technologies to monitor cardiac function and cardiovascular health.

Oncology

Electrical impedance technologies for detecting and monitoring cancer-related tissue changes.

Neurology

Studying neural and muscular bioelectrical signals to understand neurological disorders.

Sleep

We develop AI-based speech tools to enable fast, non-invasive screening for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) using vocal biomarkers.
OUR team

Lets meet our team

team-member

Zhuyun Xie

PhD in Electrical and Computer Engineering

team-member

Jake McCoy

PhD in Electrical and Computer Engineering

team-member

Albert Fabregas Ribo

PhD in Electrical and Computer Engineering

team-member

Elaine Wong

PhD in Electrical and Computer Engineering

IN THE MEDIA

Our Lab in the News

Forbes

Wearable gadgets could interfere with cardiac electronic devices, according to recent biomedical research.

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Fox News

Wearable fitness trackers with sensing technology could interfere with implantable cardiac devices.

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Sky News

Smartwatches and fitness trackers could trigger heart problems in vulnerable patients.

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The Guardian

Wearable fitness trackers could interfere with cardiac devices, researchers warn.

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The Independent

Fitness trackers may interfere with pacemakers, raising concerns for cardiac patients.

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The Telegraph

Researchers warn that smartwatch technology could interfere with pacemakers.

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British Heart Foundation

Smartwatch technology could interfere with pacemakers according to emerging research.

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Yahoo News

Wearable fitness trackers may interfere with pacemakers and other cardiac devices.

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Funding & Media Coverage