![]() Besio is a co-founder of the URI Interdisciplinary Neuroscience Program that spawned the new Ryan Institute for Neuroscience with a gift. ![]() This work involves unique patented concentric electrodes for neuromodulation and brain computer interfacing (bidirectional). Besio specializes in research to develop innovative biomedical instrumentation for diagnosis and therapies for enhancing the lives of persons with neurological disease and disability. Besio worked 12+ years in the biomedical device and electronics industries. in electrical engineering from the University of Central Florida. degrees in biomedical engineering from the University of Miami and a B.S. Besio is a Professor in the Department of Electrical, Computer, and Biomedical Engineering at the University of Rhode Island (URI). She is a member of the BioImaging and Signal Processing (BISP) Technical Committee of the IEEE Signal Processing Society.ĭr. She has co-authored more than 70 papers and over 80 international conference papers. Her current research interests include the biomedical signal processing field, especially in the analysis of the dynamics and interactions of cardiovascular and respiratory signals, for the assessment of autonomic nervous system in applications such as stress and depression monitoring, sleep apnea identification, sports performance assessment, drivers’ drowsiness detection, asthma risk monitoring. degree in Biomedical Engineering from Zaragoza University. degree in Telecommunication Engineering and the Ph.D. She is also a member of the Spanish Center for Biomedical Engineering, Biomaterial and Nano-medicine Research (CIBER-BBN). Raquel Bailón is Associate Professor, holding the Spanish ANECA accreditation for Full Professor, in the Department of Electronic Engineering and Communications at the Engineering School, as well as a researcher at the Aragon Institute for Engineering Research (I3A), both at Zaragoza University. Amini has been on the editorial board of IEEE Transactions On Medical Imaging since 1999 and the editorial board of Elsevier’s journal of Computerized Medical Imaging and Graphics since 2012. He is a Distinguished Lecturer of EMBS and a Fellow of the IEEE. He served as the chair of SPIE Medical Imaging Conference on Physiology, Function, and Structure from Medical Images between 2002-2006 and co-chaired the SPIE Medical Imaging Symposium in 2007. Amini received the National Institutes of Health FIRST Award in 1998 and University of Louisville Faculty Favorite Award in 20 for his course on medical imaging. His prior faculty appointments were at Yale (1992–1996) and Washington University in St. degrees from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, in 19, respectively. degree with high honors from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst in 1983, where at 18 he was the youngest member of his graduating class, and the M.S. ![]() ![]() Amir Amini is Professor and Endowed Chair in Bioimaging at the University of Louisville. ![]()
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