Tzu-Jen (Felix) Kao maintains broad expertise in feasibility studies, conducting experiments, algorithm development, and clinical data analysis for bioelectronics and bioinstrumentation. His experience spans over eighteen years in developing reconstruction algorithms for noninvasive biomedical instrumentation, including impedance tomography, multiple model system design and phantom studies, and three years clinical research experience in cancer detection using a noninvasive bio-impedance technique.
Dr. Ghaemi received the Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering and the M.S. degree in mathematics from University of Michigan in 2010 and 2009 respectively. He was a visiting scholor at ETH in 2008. From 2010 to 2012 he was a post-doctoral associate in the Mechanical Engineering department at MIT, researching supervisory control of order-preserving systems and stochastic analysis of biological systems.
Matthew Seidel graduated from Clarkson University with a B.S. in Electrical Engineer and Physics. After graduating, Matthew has gained over 5 years of embedded system design experience in both the commercial and defense sectors. His areas of specialization are in FPGA design, high speed digital board design, and embedded programming.
Currently, Matthew is helping in the areas of hardware cyber security, machine learning, and high speed image acquisition.