21st IEEE Interregional NEWCAS Conference

University of Edinburgh John McIntyre Conference Centre, Pollock Halls, 18 Holyrood Park Road, Edinburgh

The 21st IEEE Interregional NEWCAS Conference will be oriented towards advanced research in adaptive systems which constitutes the highlights of the NEWCAS conference, but also areas related to analog and digital signal processing, low power consumption, sustainable circuits, and systems.

Women in Circuits and Systems | NEWCAS 2023

University of Edinburgh John McIntyre Conference Centre, Pollock Halls, 18 Holyrood Park Road, Edinburgh

The Women in Circuits and Systems committee is pleased to invite you to a themed panel titled "There's More Than One Way to a STEM Career" on Monday 26th June at 09:30, the first day of NEWCAS 2023.

IEEE UK and Ireland CAS Chapter Seminar | Shared Control: From Smart Wheelchairs to Brain-Machine Interfaces

University College London Room 807, Roberts Building, Malet Place, London

The principles of shared control integrate the best of both worlds: the fast, reliable and precise task execution capabilities of automation with the complementary inventive, adaptive and interactive task execution skills of humans. In this seminar we explore the progress made in shared control systems applied to assistive robots, such as smart wheelchairs.

IEEE Circuits and Systems UK & Ireland Chapter Event | Developments in Real-Time Wearable Airborne Particulate Matter Detection and Analysis

University College London Room 807, Roberts Building, Malet Place, London

This presentation will address various challenges in developing a fully functional personal particulate matter (PM) monitoring system, from the design of specialised electrochemical instrumentation to modern microfluidic fabrication techniques using 3D printing to enhance performance.

IEEE UK and Ireland Circuits and Systems Chapter Tutorial | High-fidelity Sensing and Manipulation of Brain Neurochemistry

University College London Room 807, Roberts Building, Malet Place, London

New enabling technologies for real-time, high-fidelity sensing and manipulation of brain neurochemistry at microscopic scales can provide the framework for ultimately developing new neuromodulation devices that impose therapeutic neurochemical profiles or maintain optimal neurochemical levels in disease states via real-time feedback control.

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