Meeting
Place & Time: Office Hours: EEF 7205 only by appointment either by e-mail to cilesiz[at]itu.edu.tr or by phone to 212 285 67 73
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BYM501E Fundamentals of Biomedical Engineering
(CRN: 14632) Grading: Participation 15%; Midterm Exam 15%; Group Project 15%; Term Project 15%; Final Exam 40%
Ninova page at https://ninova.itu.edu.tr/Ders/3772 |
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Course Objectives:
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1. Introduction of basic concepts needed for analysis and design of biomedical instruments 2. To develop an understanding for the generation of biological signals in human body 3. To develop basic skills for modeling, sensing and processing of biological signals, and to review basic methods and instrumentation used in medical environment
4. Electrical safety in clinical
environment. |
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Course Description:
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Application of electronics engineering techniques to analysis
and instrumentation in biological/medical sciences, physiological systems of
the human body, modeling of biological systems, measurement of bioelectrical
signals, pressure, flow, volume, and temperature on living systems;
biomedical transducers, instrumentation electronics, electrical safety.
Recent developments in biomedical instrumentation.
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Participation/Assignments:
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1. As part of in-class participation each student will do at least two short (10 minutes max) minute presentations on a topic assigned by the instructor. Check Sensors in Biomedical Applications for your first round! IMPORTANT GUIDELINES 2. Groups of a minimum of two to three students will build a biomedical device to measure a biological signal (such as, EKG, EEG) of their choice and will present their results with a demonstration and in laboratory report format. As a preparation groups need to do a comprehensive Analog Noise Analysis using 3 different OPAMPs.
3. Groups of a minimum
of two to three students shall
identify an unmet clinical/medical need and develop an innovative technical
solution. SEE Group Project below. |
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Tentative Course Plan: |
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Textbooks: |
"Medical Instrumentation: Application and Design," John G. Webster (Ed.) John Wiley and Sons (WIE), 2009, ISBN 978-0-471-67600-3. 4th Ed. BOOK ERRATA "Introduction to Biomedical Equipment Technology, 4/E," Carr & Brown, Prentice Hall, May 2000, ISBN: 0-13-010492-2. (on 2h reserve in the ITU library) "Biomedical Technology and Devices Handbook" James Moore and George Zouridakis (Eds.) CRC Press LLC, 2004, ISBN: 0-8493-1140-3. "Biomedical Engineering Fundamentals" Joseph D. Bronzino (Ed.) CRC Press LLC, 2006, ISBN: 0-8493-2121-2. Do not FORGET to check out this link.
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Group project: |
Identify and understand
an unmet clinical need, and develop an innovative technical solution You may check out these websites for ideas: Design of Medical Devices and Implants
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Term project: |
An in depth review on a special topic and instrumentation not covered in class including a 15-20 minute in-class oral presentation on the last two weeks of classes (7,5 %) and an accompanying 10 page word-processed report submitted the day of oral presentation (7,5 %) Principles, instrumentation, and devices on the market (technical data, specifications, approximate retail prices, competing companies and/or products) are to be covered. Reports without (i) identification of its author, (ii) a reference list, and (iii) numerous spelling errors (please run spell-check) lead to "reduced" grades. Mot-a-mot copied (i.e., copy/paste) reports are not favored! For information on how to write an effective report and make an effective presentation consult "Scientific and Technical Writing" lectures notes.
Topics may be found in the following online
books
ANYTHING ELSE NOT COVERED IN CLASS, but INTERESTING TO YOU.
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Interesting
Links: |
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For more
info on class visit previous years' web sites in the archives... |
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