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42 - Electronic systems for health management

from Part VIII - Future perspectives

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 September 2015

Giovanni De Micheli
Affiliation:
École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
Sandro Carrara
Affiliation:
École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
Krzysztof Iniewski
Affiliation:
Redlen Technologies Inc., Canada
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Summary

Introduction

Several important societal and economic world problems can be addressed by the smart use of technology. The past 40 years have witnessed the realization of computational systems and networks, rooted in our ability to craft complex integrated circuits out of billions of electronic devices. Nowadays, the ability to master materials at the molecular level and their interaction with living matter opens up unforeseeable horizons. Networking biological sensors through body-area, ad hoc and standard communication networks boosts the intrinsic power of local measurements, and allows us to reach new standards in health management. The Swiss Nano-Tera program addresses applications of nanotechnologies to health management, and it has been instrumental in fostering research and innovation in this domain.

The Nano-Tera program

Nano-Tera addresses system engineering research that leverages micro-, nano-, information, and communication technologies. The broad objectives of the program are both to improve quality of life and security of people across different levels of education, wealth and age, and eventually to create innovative products, technologies and manufacturing methods, thus resulting in job and revenue creation. Although the principal application domains are health and environment, energy and security issues are also investigated as support areas. The intrinsic value of the underlying research is to bridge traditional disciplines, including electrical engineering, micro/nano-mechanical systems engineering, biomedical sciences, and computer/communication sciences, with the objectives of (i) deepening the understanding of enabling technologies, (ii) reducing scientific concepts to practice, and (iii) mastering the novel challenges of designing large-scale complex systems.

Type
Chapter
Information
Handbook of Bioelectronics
Directly Interfacing Electronics and Biological Systems
, pp. 543 - 549
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2015

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