Monthly Archives: June 2014

Medtronic Wants to Implant Sensors in Everyone

In the next few decades, implantable electronics could shift the focus of medical care from reactive, symptom-based diagnosis to early detection or prevention. Heralding that future is the Linq, a new cardiac monitor from medical device giant Medtronic. The company is already envisioning future versions of the implantable gadget, studded with sensors that will give doctors and patients reams of biometric information. The sensors could someday help athletes fine-tune their bodies for improved performance or let an elderly person live independently while his or her vitals are monitored remotely. Medtronic believes that it will eventually be seen as negligent not to have these sensors installed—whether you’re elderly and infirm, or young, fit, and healthy.

Read more on:

http://spectrum.ieee.org/tech-talk/biomedical/devices/medtronic-wants-to-implant-sensors-in-everyone/?utm_source=techalert&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=061214

Book “Ultra Low-Power Biomedical Signal Processing” 3894 chapter downloads

Since its online publication on May 26, 2009, there has been a total of 3894 chapter downloads for the book “Ultra Low-Power Biomedical Signal Processing”, authored by Sandro Haddad and Wouter Serdijn.
More information can be found on the book’s web page: http://www.springer.com/engineering/signals/book/978-1-4020-9072-1.

Book by Haddad and Serdijn