Category Archives: General

Scholarship Accepted

EURO-DOTS

In order to improve my Analog CMOS IC
design skills I decided I would like to follow a course on Analog
CMOS IC design. To do this, however, mostly you need to bring a big
bag of money with you to register for such a course. This is a
problem for me as poor PhD student.

To solve this problem, a few weeks ago
I applied for a scholarship from the EURO-DOTS institute. This
institute gives a limited amount of scholarships to european PhD
students giving them the ability to follow high quality courses which
fulfill the accreditation criteria.

Today I got an email from them in which
they told me that my request is accepted! This means that in August I
will follow a one week course on Advanced Analog CMOS IC Design in
Lausanne, Switzerland organized by MEAD education. The instructors of
this course are: Eric Vittoz, Lanny Lewyn, Willy Sansen, Rinaldo
Castello, Herman Casier and Gabor Temes.

Im looking forward to go there 😀

Cees-Jeroen

The Biomedical Electronics Foundation

It is with some pride that I introduce you here the official opening of the Biomedical Electronics Foundation. 

The Biomedical Electronics Foundation aims at the improvement of education, research and valorization in the field of biomedical electronics, the discipline of electronic engineers, who, in close collaboration with doctors, hospitals, manufacturers and industry, work on the next generation of devices for medical diagnostics, monitoring and therapy. Examples of such devices are:

  • monitoring systems for adequate diagnosis, e.g., the readout of ECG, EEG or EMG;
  • pacemakers and defibrillators for the treatment of cardiac arrhythmias;
  • cochlear implants to enable (renewed) hearing for the deaf;
  • neurostimulators for the treatment of a broad range of brain related disorders, like tinnitus, Parkinson, OCD, Tourette’s syndrom, manic depression, cluster headache, etc.;
  • neurostimulators for the treatment of disorders of the central or peripheral nervous system, like chronic pain, phantom pain, etc.

Important medical breakthroughs in the 21st century are the results of improved medical devices and thereby better insight into the workings of the human body and better diagnosis and treatment methods. The Biomedical Electronics Foundation aims at speeding up the development of medical devices and the development of the field of biomedical electronics by, a.o.:

  • offering scholarships to talented students in the field of biomedical electronics;
  • offering travel grants to talented students and junior scientists to attend a leading conference or workshop in the field of biomedical electronics;
  • supporting students and junior scientists in the valorization of their greatest idea in the field of biomedical electronics;
  • supporting students and junior scientists in publishing scientific papers;
  • offering tools to students and junior scientists;

The Biomedical Electronics Foundation has been registered at the Chamber of Commerce (KvK No. 45288517) and is being supported by donations, gifts and legacies. 

The most direct way to support our work is by making a donation to bank account no. 555947203, attn. St. Biomedische Elektronica, Leiden.

Please visit the web site at: http://stichtingbme.nl

Put up the banners!

It is with deep regret and shame that I have to read in the news today in the Telegraaf of January 24, 2012, that the Board of Directors of Delft University of Technology appears to have declared more than the maximally allowed costs for reimbursement for many years in a row. According to the newspaper (not the best in the Netherlands, but still…): "Together, the three directors declared more than 1 million Euro (!) between 2008 and 2011."

What makes matters even worse is that, instead of showing remorse and promising to improve on themselves they state that such an offense would be "common practice for all employees." This is so untrue! As dedicated and committed professor I have never ever in my whole life travelled business class, even not on long-distance flights. Whereas companies such as Analog Devices allow their employees to travel business class on long-distance flights. 

When I travel by train, I save money for my university by putting my personal 40% discount card (‘kortingskaart’) to good use.

And when I travel by car, even when my car is stuffed with students, I get only 19 cents per kilometer. Parking costs and tollway costs are not reimbursed. Last Friday I went to the Erasmus Medical Center to visit the Neuroscience Department. We went by car as this was the cheapest and the fastest. Parking costs were 6 Euro; the distance: 15.6 km. When my travel expenses will have been processed I will receive only 5.89 Euro, which is even less than the actual and factual parking costs.

I knew it. I should have never become a university professor but a university director instead. 

Wouter

Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) to cure depression

Brain

In order to deliver electrical (deep) brain stimulation therapy, neurostimulators are used. These are implanted inside the body by a neurosurgeon and used to deliver electrical pulses in safe and controled way. The pulses will block unwanted brain activity associated with neural disorders which will result in improving quality of life for patients.

DBS is currently used to treat many neurological movement and affective disorders like Parkinson’s disease, tremor, dystonia and chronic pain.

However, a recent study, published in the Archives of General Psychiatry, shows that DBS can be used safely and effectively to treat depression. After two years of active stimulation, the succes rate achieved was 92%, which is very high. After stopping the treatment there was no spontaneous relapse.

Senad

Happy New Year!

Happy New Year

Frequent readers of the this blog may have noticed that there has been hardly any blogging activity during last month. Main reason for this is that most of us have been busy with work- and family-related matters. December is a busy time of the year, with Sinterklaas, Santa Claus, the traditional Christmas drink of the Department of Microelectronics, the ELCA Christmas lunch (for which this year PhD and MSc students together prepared dishes from their home country) and … the rehearsals for the ELCA Festival.

Speaking of which, the ELCA Festival has been rescheduled to March 9. On stage will be 3 bands, Ignoramus, Three and the ELCA band and various other acts, performed by members of the Electronics Research Laboratory and a few from other directions at Delft University of Technology. So, make sure that you mark your calendar, if you are around. Entrance is free; good mood obligatory. 

Other things that are cooking are, a.o.,

  • that 6 papers (!) have been accepted for presentation at ISCAS 2012, the IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems, the flagship conference of the Circuits and Systems Society, May 20 — 23, Seoul, Korea,
  • that Marijn and Wouter are working hard on their second patent to valorize their new neurostimulator circuits better,
  • that Cees-Jeroen, Wannaya, Marijn and Fatih are looking into whether current neurostimulators can actually deliver the range of currents that they promise in their user manuals,
  • that June and Senad are currently measuring the 3 chips that they designed that comprise circuits for cochlear implants,
  • that Yongjia will probably set for a full differential version of his level-crossing ADC and tape out two designs,
  • that Yao is about to define a better (i.e., lower NF and/or lower power consumption) interface between the antenna and the LNA for body area networks (BAN) that involve implantable devices,
  • that Duan is preparing for measurements on his subsampling receiver IC,
  • that Wannaya is generating the layout of a biphasic neurostimulator IC for cochlear implants,
  • that Mark soon will have his design review of an RF energy harvester that is more sensitive than any previously reported RF energy harvester,
  • that Rachit soon will start his PhD studies at IMEC,
  • that Wouter will have an invited talk at Sense of Contact in Soesterberg, April 11, in Soesterberg, the Netherlands,
  • that the Biomedical Electronics Foundation has been created with the notary and that all paperwork with the Chamber of Commerce will be completed soon,
  • and that next month Vincent will graduate.

So, stay tuned and check us out regularly.

Happy New Year!

Wouter

Fanmail from China

Today, we received the following feedback on the course Analog Integrated Circuit Design (ET4252), which is available under the Open CourseWare program:

 

Name:

student ding

E-mail:

<email address removed>

Where are you from?

CN

You had a(n):

Idea

What was your feedback about?

Analog Integrated Circuit Design

Your Feedback was:

The video is so cool that I love it very much. IT seems doesn’t contain all
lectures, I am really want to see all the lectures in video.
I am a senior in university from China.
Thank you very much.

Thank you very much, Ding! You definitely make my day.

Wouter

BioCAS comes to the Netherlands in 2013

From Flits, the newsletter of the faculty of EEMCS of Delft University of Technology:

"Wouter Serdijn has successfully won the chairmanship and organisation of BioCAS 2013 for TU Delft. The annual IEEE Biomedical Circuits and Systems (BioCAS) Conference is the premier forum for bringing together scientists, engineers, medical researchers, and health care practitioners to drive these advances and share in cross-cutting research at the interface between circuits, systems, biology, and medicine."

The complete organizing team comprises international established and future leaders in the field, a.o. Firat Yazicioglu, Gianluca Setti, Tor Sverre Lande, Sylvie Renaud, Andreas Demosthenous, Ralph Etienne Cummings, Pau-Choo (Julia) Chung, Marion de Vlieger, Marijn van Dongen, Mark Stoopman and Senad Hiseni.

Objective measurement of the severity of tinnitus

Last Tuesday, dear Readers, Senad Hiseni, honorary member of the Biomedical Electronics Groups (as he seems to have good contacts with Barak Obama), won the Best Poster Award at the annual ICT.Open in Veldhoven, the Netherlands. The jury decided that the poster contained just the right amount of information, was very informative and nicely laid out, but also well presented by its presenter.

The poster is entitled "A Nano Power CMOS Tinnitus
Detector for a Fully Implantable Closed-Loop Neurodevice
" and has been derived from a paper that recently appeared in the proceedings of the 2011 BioCAS symposium, held in San Diego, November 10–12. 

Coauthors of the paper and poster are: Senad Hiseni, Chutham Sawigun, Sven Vanneste, Eddy van der Velden, Dirk de Ridder and Wouter A. Serdijn.

Congratulations!

Wouter

Gambatte ne!!!!

If you can still remember the ELCA festival, last time we made a donation for Japan and we played a song for Japanese friends.

This time the disaster moved to Thailand. Almost half of the country is being submerged and sadly it will last for more than a month from now.

Japanese friends also play a song for Thai people. It’s called ‘Gambatte ne’ which means ‘keep fighting.’

This is to warm up our ELCA festival 2012. We will have a brand new ELCA song and a special song for Thailand as well.

Again, we r not going to drink for nothing but part of our drinks will go for recovering Thailand and to tell Thai people ‘Gambatte ne!!!"

Be prepared for the first rehearsal.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a26iWmQ6U8w&feature=player_embedded

Advancing frontiers without borders

"In today’s global village, access to the latest and
greatest advancements in science and engineering is only affordable to
one percent of the world population. Imagine what discoveries and
inventions could be made if instead everybody would have access to this
information. Open CourseWare is one of the ways to make the right
progress in this direction."

Wouter Serdijn, TU Delft Open CourseWare ambassador, since today

Link: http://ocw.tudelft.nl/