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Welcome to the homepage of Computer Laboratory of Ambient and Wearable Systems!
The work in the laboratory focuses on applications of ambient and wearable devices. Ambient intelligence shifts the computing paradigm from personal computing to pervasive computing and distributed networked intelligence. Our work covers all steps of the way: design of the miniature embedded computer platforms, wireless sensor networks, methods of signal processing, sensor fusion and pattern recognition and classification.
Many the lab's projects have applications in bioengineering where ambient devices take the shape of wearable technology which unobtrusively interacts with the user. Lab's research projects have been supported by a number of federal (National Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health, National Academies of Science) and state (New York State Energy Research and Development Authority) agencies, and private industry.
On this site you can find description of past and current Research Projects.
Look at our People.
Read most of our Publications.
Read Media Coverage of our projects.
View slides for Classes.
Download publically available data and software.
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Ambient intelligence represents a shift in paradigm from personal computing to pervasive computing and distributed networked intelligence. Development of ambient devices involves tight integration of embedded and wearable computing platforms, wireless sensor networks and development of signal processing, sensor fusion and pattern recognition methods. Many of my projects have applications in bioengineering, such as development of novel wearable devices for non-invasive monitoring of energy intake in free living population; on-body sensor network for monitoring and modification of energy expenditure behavior and on-body sensor network for monitoring of risk of falling in elderly. Other funded projects include a distributed time-synchronous sensor network for structural health monitoring and self-powered wireless sensors powered by energy harvesting devices. My research projects have been supported by a number of federal (National Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health, National Academies of Science) and state (New York State Energy Research and Development Authority) agencies, and private industry. Several of the developed technologies have been submitted for patenting and/or transferred to start-up companies.
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