About the Workshop
The last decade has witnessed a rapid surge of interest
in new sensing and monitoring devices for healthcare and the use of
wearable/wireless devices for clinical applications. One key
development in this area is implantable in vivo monitoring and
intervention devices. While the problem of long-term stability and
biocompatibility is being addressed, several promising prototypes are
starting to emerge for managing patients with acute diabetes, for
treatment of epilepsy and other debilitating neurological disorders and
for monitoring of patients with chronic cardiac diseases. Despite the
technological developments of sensing and monitoring devices, issues
related to system integration, sensor miniaturization, low-power sensor
interface circuitry design, wireless telemetric links and signal
processing have still to be investigated. Moreover, issues related to
Quality of Service, security, multi-sensory data fusion, and decision
support are active research topics. The aim of the workshop is to
address general issues related to using wearable/wireless and
implantable sensors and to bring together scientists from computing,
electronics, bioengineering, medicine and industry in order to discuss
the latest technological developments and clinical applications of
body-sensor networks.
Areas of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Novel bioelectrical, biochemical, biophysical, and
mechanical sensors
- Hardware considerations: low power RF transceiver,
energy scavenging, battery technology, miniaturisation, system
integration, process and cost of manufacturing
- Biocompatibility and materials
- Context awareness and multi-sensor data fusion
- Quality of service and security issues
- Standards and light-weight communication protocols
- Link to environment sensing, smart dwellings, and
home monitoring
- Wearable and implantable sensor integration and
development platforms
- Applications of body-sensor networks
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