OUR Research

Our Research Areas

Developing electrical measurement techniques to characterize biological tissues and monitor physiological changes.

Using electrical impedance and imaging methods to study muscle and nerve health.

Designing algorithms to analyze physiological signals such as ECG and impedance measurements.

Creating wearable and IoT technologies for continuous physiological monitoring.

Evaluating how wearable technologies interact with pacemakers and other implantable cardiac devices.

Developing methods to image electrical and mechanical properties of tissues.

OUR PRODUCTION

Our Research Workflow

01

01

Research Idea

Identifying important healthcare problems and developing new research questions.

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02

Technology Development

Designing biomedical sensing systems and digital health technologies.

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03

Clinical Research

Testing and validating our technologies through clinical studies and collaborations.

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04

Real-World Impact

Translating research into tools that improve healthcare and patient monitoring.

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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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Research Support

Funding & Media Coverage