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Chatterjee Receives NSF CAREER Award to Advance the Future of Medical Electronics through Body-Coupled Network of Devices

July 11, 2025

Baibhab Chatterjee, Ph.D., assistant professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Florida, has received a prestigious National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER Award, the agency’s highest honor for early-career faculty. His funded project, “MED-IoB: Transforming Medical Electronics using Distributed Internet of Bodies (IoB) for Powering, Sensing, Communication and Synchronization,” seeks to revolutionize implantable and wearable medical electronics by enabling seamless data connectivity and power in a network of devices, leveraging the conductive property of the human body.

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ECE PhD Student Receives Prestigious MTT-S Fellowship

February 26, 2025

Asif Iftekhar Omi, an ECE Ph.D. student working with Dr. Baibhab Chatterjee, has been selected to receive the IEEE MTT-S Graduate Fellowship for Medical Applications, among the most prestigious of accolades in microwave engineering.

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Khalifa Receives Prestigious NIH New Innovator Award

November 4, 2024

The National Institutes of Health has granted ECE Assistant Professor Adam Khalifa a $1.5M New Innovator Award, securing research funding that could revolutionize invasive surgical implants and improve understanding for disease detection.

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Chatterjee works to create links for wireless neural implants placed deep inside the brain

October 5, 2023

Nature Electronics highlights work on extremely energy-efficient broadband communication in distributed wireless brain implants spearheaded by Dr. Baibhab Chatterjee.

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Shreya Saxena Uses Deep Learning to Elucidate the Basis of Sensorimotor Control

October 4, 2022

ECE Assistant Professor Shreya Saxena has received funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in support of her project, “Elucidating Principles of Sensorimotor Control using Deep Learning.” The research objective of this $1M BRAIN Initiative proposal is to develop biologically-inspired goal- and data- driven artificial intelligence methods to elucidate the neurodynamical basis of sensorimotor control.

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Karim Oweiss Receives $4.2 M from DARPA

October 16, 2017

Will study the mechanisms by which cranial nerve stimulation can affect brain activity.

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