2025 IMS Virtual Distinguished Lecturer Webinars
Starting in 2025, Distinguished Lecturers have resumed recording their lectures in the form of video Distinguished Lectures, expanding access to high-quality technical content beyond the live webinar format. Each video lecture is structured in two parts, with each part lasting approximately 15 minutes.
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Non-invasive Biomarkers Measurement by Electromagnetic Means
The full lecture is available in two parts on our YouTube channel.
The complete e-class, including references, is available on the IEEE ILN.
Carlos G. Juan
About Carlos G. Juan's Webinar
In recent years, we have witnessed unprecedented advances in electronic technology across multiple application domains, particularly within the biomedical field. Among the countless possibilities, technologies based on the propagation of electromagnetic fields, such as microwaves or millimeter waves, are emerging as potential instruments for the non-invasive measurement of specific biomarkers. In this tutorial, we will acquaint ourselves with the fundamental operating principles of these measurement technologies, illustrating them specifically through the measurement of blood glucose concentration, an essential biomarker for diabetes. This tutorial will review the fundamentals of remote measurement via electromagnetic means and the main detection approaches. Then, a practical example will be shown with valuable design and implementation hints, with special emphasis on the right selection of measurement metrics. Finally, some recent works exploiting this measurement approach will be discussed, underscoring the current challenges and enticing future prospects of this technology.
Applied Metrology for Novel Human-Computer Interaction
The full lecture is available in two parts on our YouTube channel.
The complete e-class, including references, is available on the IEEE ILN.
Antonio Esposito
About Antonio Esposito's Webinar
Brain-Computer Interfaces (BCIs) are a novel means of human-computer interaction relying on the direct measurement of brain signals. Possible applications consist of replacing, restoring, improving, enhancing and supplementing the natural outputs of the central nervous system, as well as for brain functions investigation. In considering daily-life constraints, researchers are exploring the possibility to provide visual stimuli by means of smart glasses or visors, which are increasingly exploited in extended reality (XR). Moreover, to detect the elicited potentials, commercial devices for electroencephalography (EEG) are considered. Nevertheless, those studies were more application-oriented, and they did not deal with a metrological characterization of the stimulation and detection equipment.
In bridging this gap, applied metrology was considered for a significant enhancement of the BCI systems both in terms of designing and in operational understanding. It was demonstrated that, although often overlooked, metrological characterization plays an important role in this field. Indeed, if the stimulation and detection equipment is not fully characterized, the measures of interest for the brain-computer interface system may result in misleading interpretation of the brain functioning. Instead, by means of the mentioned results, one can compare the measured brain signals with the behavior of the equipment in the time and frequency domains, so to correctly identify the contribution of the “human transducer” in the BCI measurement chain. This was particularly applied to the investigation of amplitude spectra for generated stimuli and latency measurement related to EEG acquisitions.