ABET Accredited Programmes of Biomedical Engineering in USA
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TWO DAYS WORKSHOP ON
Wireless Physiological Monitoring Systems and
Neurofeedback- Biofeedback Systems
Date: 28th& 29th October 2011
Venue: B S Narayan Hall, PG Block, BMSCE, Bangalore
Organized by
Department of Medical Electronics,
B M S College of Engineering, Bangalore.
In Collabration with
Gunjan Human Karigar Pvt Ltd, (an ISO 9001:2008 company),
New Delhi.
OBJECTIVE OF THE WORKSHOP
1.To demonstrate latest Wireless Physiological Monitoring System
2. To provide hands-on experience on wireless physiological monitoring system
3. Introduce qEEG, Brain Mapping, Wireless Physiological Monitoring
TOPICS TO BE COVERED IN THE WORKSHOP
“BME Innovations”
In Association with BMEjobs.co.in– India’s only Biomedical Job portal brings India’s Unique for fostering innovations among young Biomedical Engineering students (1st and 2nd Year Students only). We will be providing platform for them to work in research field from the beginning and thereby encouraging them to grow high, increase their knowledge and turn their ideas into a Successful product. We will be consulting them, guiding them to core, supporting, incubating and generating leads so that by the time, they complete their bachelors, they can broadcast their talent, their innovation of science in the field of Biomedical Engineering.
Biomedical students are spread around the world but very few find their field Biomedical Engineering satisfactory,
Today, I wish to present a story of Biomedical Engineer who is satisfied with is job and wants new Biomedical Engineers to join this field
About Saurabh Fatehpur
Post-graduate Biomedical Engineer from MANIPAL Institute of Technology (India) with his bachelors in Biomedical Engineering from Bundelkhand University, Jhansi, India.
Presently working in GE Healthcare as Process Engineer, working in CT Scan module.
An active person on twitter & facebook
Article By Saurabh Fatehpur
Two unconnected things occurred simultaneously – one was the mixed feelings to diversify my writings and other was invitation by Kush Tripathi to write for his Biomedikal blog. I promised myself to complete both but as I started, the lazy part of mine promptly suggested me to mix the two and present a single dish (whose taste you readers have to rate at the end of the article). Kush Tripathi, my pen friend, (in today’s term a Facebook or a Twitter friend), a post-graduate student in biomedical pinged me one fine evening and insisted to pen down my opinions on biomedical engineering. I thought the task would be quite easy as I am a post graduate in the same field with lots of personal desire to study the subject, but Kush added a trouble and challenged me to give the article an informal touch – a personal touch rather than a technical write-up which is commonly available on a Google search. At that time I almost overlooked his expectations but as I started to cook the dish I realized its importance. Any article when written with personal experience adds readers.
Warren Grill was given a challenge in 2002. His soon-to-be business partner, Geoff Thrope, asked the Duke University Addy Professor of Biomedical Engineering: “You know, Warren, you’re doing a great job of being an academic biomedical engineer and publishing papers that end up in journals on a shelf. But is that sufficient?”
Since then, Grill (ENG’89) has risen to the challenge, translating fundamental research to several technologies with significant clinical impact. He and Thrope cofounded medical device start-up NDI Medical, LLC, a technology incubator that partners with academic researchers and supports in-house scientists and engineers in developing high-growth companies focused on innovative neurostimulation technologies. In recognition of his many innovations, Grill was named Neurotech Business ReportNeurotechnology Researcher of the Year in 2003, and in 2007 received the College of Engineering Distinguished Alumni Award for Service to the Profession.
Biomedical Engineering has knocked the doors of innovation constantly in past 1 year. Here we summarise the role of some major ones there are many more innovations as well, These are the major ones which changed the whole scenario of Medicine & healthcare around the world
After seeing all of them I hope you will say
I AM PROUD TO BE A BIOMEDICAL ENGINEER
With a great leap in the field of science and technology at the beginning of the 21st century, people were able to witness the appearance of numerous inventions some of which are already helping patients worldwide, while other devices could lead to serious innovations in the near future.