Two of my PhD students and I travelled to Baltimore this week to present our latest work at the IEEE NER Conference. It was a great conference with fascinating talks and a wonderful opportunity to get back together with the field in-person again.
CSE PhD Student Ellie Strandquist presented her Weill-Neurohub funded work developing tools to collect extensive video and patient data from study participant’s homes who are enrolled in an adaptive deep brain stimulation study. This work was performed in collaboration with Simon Little of UCSF, Jack Gallant at UC Berkeley, as well as students and research staff distributed amongst the three Universities. Her work can be read in more detail here: https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/10123851
ECE PhD student Hanbin Cho presented her work developing software interfaces for use with the CorTec Brain Interchange and demonstrated the use of closed-loop stimulation with the platform. Her work can be read in more detail here: https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/10123808