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DESCRIPTION:Title: Physiological Radar for Biomedical Monitoring and Smart 
 Buildings\n\nProf. Victor Manuel Lubecke\nDepartment of Electrical and Com
 puter Engineering\nUniversity of Hawaii at Manoa\, Honolulu\, HI 96822\, U
 SA\n\nAbstract: Doppler radar technology can measure human physiological a
 ctivity for a wide range of biomedical needs. Compact economical radar sys
 tems have been demonstrated as a non-invasive means of measuring vital sig
 ns through clothing and bedding\, including heart and respiratory rates an
 d signatures\, activity\, sleep posture\, tidal respiratory volume\, and p
 ulse pressure. The value of such physiological monitoring extends beyond h
 ealthcare for applications including search and rescue\, secure authentica
 tion\, and smart buildings. This talk will provide an overview of state of
  the art in Doppler radar physiological monitoring and related application
 s.\n\nBio: Victor Manuel Lubecke received the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in el
 ectrical engineering from Caltech in 1990 and 1995\, respectively\, and th
 e B.S. degree from Cal Poly Pomona in 1986. He is currently a professor of
  electrical and computer engineering at the University of Hawaii at Manoa.
  He was previously with Bell Laboratories\, Lucent Technologies\, where hi
 s research focused on remote sensing and microelectromechanical systems fo
 r biomedical and industrial applications. Before that\, he was with NASA J
 PL\, and RIKEN\, where his research involved terahertz and MEMS technologi
 es for space remote sensing and communications. He has authored over 250 p
 eer-reviewed publications\, holds eight U.S. patents\, and co-founded two 
 start-up companies. He is an IEEE Fellow\, a Fulbright Senior Scholar and 
 an emeritus Distinguished Microwave Lecturer (DML) IEEE MTT-S.\n\nCo-spons
 ored by: IEEE MTT-S\n\nSpeaker(s): Victor Manuel Lubecke\n\nRoom: SEO 636\
 , Bldg: Science and Engineering Offices (SEO) Building\, 851 S Morgan St\,
  Chicago\, Illinois\, United States\, 60607
LOCATION:Room: SEO 636\, Bldg: Science and Engineering Offices (SEO) Buildi
 ng\, 851 S Morgan St\, Chicago\, Illinois\, United States\, 60607
ORGANIZER:pychen@uic.edu
SEQUENCE:11
SUMMARY:IEEE MTT-S Speakers Bureau &amp; IEEE Chicago APS/MTT Chapter Distingui
 shed Seminar
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/443104
X-ALT-DESC:Description: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;div dir=&quot;auto&quot;&gt;\n&lt;div dir=&quot;auto&quot;&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Tit
 le: &lt;/strong&gt;Physiological Radar for Biomedical Monitoring and Smart Build
 ings&lt;/div&gt;\n&lt;div dir=&quot;auto&quot;&gt;&amp;nbsp\;&lt;/div&gt;\n&lt;div dir=&quot;auto&quot;&gt;Prof.&amp;nbsp\;&lt;sp
 an class=&quot;il&quot;&gt;Victor&lt;/span&gt;&amp;nbsp\;Manuel Lubecke&lt;/div&gt;\n&lt;div dir=&quot;auto&quot;&gt;De
 partment of Electrical and Computer Engineering&lt;/div&gt;\n&lt;div dir=&quot;auto&quot;&gt;Uni
 versity of Hawaii at Manoa\, Honolulu\, HI 96822\, USA&lt;/div&gt;\n&lt;div dir=&quot;au
 to&quot;&gt;&amp;nbsp\;&lt;/div&gt;\n&lt;div dir=&quot;auto&quot;&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Abstract: &lt;/strong&gt;Doppler rada
 r technology can measure human physiological activity for a wide range of 
 biomedical needs. Compact economical radar systems have been demonstrated 
 as a non-invasive means of measuring vital signs through clothing and bedd
 ing\, including heart and respiratory rates and signatures\, activity\, sl
 eep posture\, tidal respiratory volume\, and pulse pressure. The value of 
 such physiological monitoring extends beyond healthcare for applications i
 ncluding search and rescue\, secure authentication\, and smart buildings. 
 This talk will provide an overview of state of the art in Doppler radar ph
 ysiological monitoring and related applications.&lt;/div&gt;\n&lt;div dir=&quot;auto&quot;&gt;&amp;n
 bsp\;&lt;/div&gt;\n&lt;div dir=&quot;auto&quot;&gt;&lt;span class=&quot;il&quot;&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Bio:&lt;/strong&gt; Victor
 &lt;/span&gt;&amp;nbsp\;Manuel Lubecke received the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in electr
 ical&amp;nbsp\; engineering from Caltech in 1990 and 1995\, respectively\, and
  the B.S.&amp;nbsp\; degree from Cal Poly Pomona in 1986. He is currently a pr
 ofessor of&amp;nbsp\; electrical and computer engineering at the University of
  Hawaii at&amp;nbsp\; Manoa. He was previously with Bell Laboratories\, Lucent
  Technologies\,&amp;nbsp\; where his research focused on remote sensing and mi
 croelectromechanical&amp;nbsp\; systems for biomedical and industrial applicat
 ions. Before that\, he was&amp;nbsp\; with NASA JPL\, and RIKEN\, where his re
 search involved terahertz and MEMS&amp;nbsp\; technologies for space remote se
 nsing and communications. He has&amp;nbsp\; authored over 250 peer-reviewed pu
 blications\, holds eight U.S. patents\,&amp;nbsp\; and co-founded two start-up
  companies. He is an IEEE Fellow\, a Fulbright Senior Scholar and an emeri
 tus Distinguished Microwave Lecturer (DML) IEEE&amp;nbsp\; MTT-S.&amp;nbsp\;&lt;/div&gt;
 \n&lt;div class=&quot;yj6qo ajU&quot;&gt;&amp;nbsp\;&lt;/div&gt;\n&lt;/div&gt;
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