Success stories: recent research and awards
The Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering has had an excellent start to 2015.
Honours
Professor Erol Gelenbe has been elected as Foreign Member of the Royal Academy of Science, Arts and Letters of Belgium.
Dr Patrick Naylor has been chosen to lead one of four exhibitions from Imperial College at the Royal Society Summer Science Exhibition this summer.
Research awards
Dr Tim Constantinou has been awarded the EPSRC Early Career Fellowship on "Empowering Next Generation Neural Interfaces." This is a five year fellowship of £1M.
Professor Thomas Parisini has been successful in winning Stage 1 of the EU Horizon 2020 Twinning project "KIOS Research Center of Excellence for Intelligent Systems and Networks."
Dr Deniz Gunduz has won a Newton Institutional Links fund on "Harnessing Renewable Energy Sources for Communications" worth £47.6k over two years.
Dr Pantelis Georgiou, Dr Pau Herrero Vinas and Professor Chris Toumazou have been awarded an NIHR I4I grant entitled "Enhanced, Personalized and Integrated Care for Infection Management at Point of Care (EPIC IMPOC)." This is in collaboration with Prof. Alison Holmes from the Centre for Infection prevention and management. Total award to the department is approximately £418K.
Sara Ghoreishizadeh, from École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) has been awarded an Imperial College Junior Research Fellowship to work with Dr Pantelis Georgiou on the topic "Fully Autonomous Integrated Circuits to Readout and Auto-Calibrate Multi-Target Biosensor Arrays (AutoIC)."
Professor Thomas Parisini, Professor Alessandro Astolfi and Dr Paul Mitcheson have had their ABB flagship project entitled: "Increased functionality energy-autonomous sensor networks for self-monitoring industrial environments " renewed for the third year.
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