IEEE Lille - Conference - Circuits and technologies for implantable biomedical devices
Online streaming : https://www.youtube.com/@lilleieeestudentbranch2992/
The IEEE Lille Student Branch is honored to welcome Mme. Carolina Mora Lopez from IMEC, Leuven for a presentation entitled "Circuits and technologies for implantable biomedical devices".
Carolina Mora Lopez (Senior Member, IEEE) received the Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering from the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven in 2012. She is currently the head of the of the circuits for neural interfaces team with IMEC (the world-leading R&D and innovation hub in nanoelectronics and digital technologies) and her research interests include analog and mixed-signal circuit design for sensor, bioelectronic and neural interfaces.
The conference will take place Thursday 12th January between 2pm and 3pm at ISEN Lille (41 Boulevard, 59000 Lille) in amphiteater JND C404 as well as online on our youtube channel . Presentation will be followed by a coffee and discussion.
Registration is free and open to everyone.
This conference is sponsored by the IEEE Solid-State Circuits Society (SSCS) distinguished lecturer program.
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- 41 Boulevard Vauban
- Lille, Nord-Pas-de-Calais
- France 59000
- Building: ISEN LILLE
- Room Number: amphiteater JND C404
- Click here for Map
Speakers
Carolina Mora Lopez of IMEC Leuven, IEEE SSCS
Circuits and technologies for implantable biomedical devices
Biological processes such as neuronal signaling and cell growth are among the most complex micro- and nano-scale processes in nature. Historically such processes have been studied at system level because there were no tools available to study individual components of the process. However, cellular-level interfacing is needed to provide better understanding of the brain and to develop more advanced prosthetic devices and brain-machine interfaces. With semiconductor technology innovations, much recent work has been focused on unraveling biological complexity, but also on driving new diagnoses, treatments and therapies that are tailored to the individual. One of the drivers behind those innovations is novel CMOS circuits enabling multi-modal, high-precision data collection and analysis at ultra-low power consumption. In this talk, I will present recent biomedical developments based on silicon technology, and I will discuss the requirements, materials, circuit techniques and design challenges of their ASIC and SoC platforms.
Biography:
Carolina Mora Lopez (Senior Member, IEEE) received the Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering from the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Leuven, Belgium, in collaboration with Interuniversity Microelectronics Centre (IMEC), Leuven, Belgium, in 2012. From 2012 to 2018, she was a Researcher and Analog Designer with IMEC, where her work was focused on interfaces for neural-sensing applications. She is currently the Principal Scientist and the Team Leader of the Circuits for Neural Interfaces Team, IMEC. Her research interests include analog and mixed-signal circuit design for sensor, and bioelectronics and neural interfaces. She is currently on the technical program committee of the VLSI Circuits Symposium, ISSCC SRP, and ESSCIRC conference