Special IEEE CASS/IEEE Systems Council Webinar: Brain-Machine Interface Systems for Interacting with Robotic Exoskeletons
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Talk Title: Brain-Machine Interface Systems for Interacting with Robotic Exoskeletons
This talk will take place on 24 October 2024 at 10:00 AM EDT (-04:00 UTC) and features a talk by Jose Maria Azorin Poveda, titled "Brain-Machine Interface Systems for Interacting with Robotic Exoskeletons".
Registration for this series is entirely free and will be limited to the first 1,000 registrants per event. If you cannot register, you can also attend the webinar via LinkedIn Live. Following the webinar, the recording will be available on the CAS Resource Center and as a lesson in the CASS Microlearning (CASS MiLe) e-learning platform. In CASS MiLe, interested practitioners can learn through short didactic units (micro-lessons) with practical questions, and upon lesson completion, learners receive digital badges/certificates.
Biography:
Jose Maria Azorin Poveda is the Director of the Brain-Machine Interface Systems Lab and Full Professor of the Systems Engineering and Automation Department at Miguel Hernández University of Elche (Spain). In addition, he is the Director of the International Affiliate BRAIN (Building Reliable Advances and Innovation in Neurotechnology) Site at UMH, which is the only site of the BRAIN center in Europe (industry-university collaborative research center funded by National Science Foundation from USA). He holds a M.Sc in Computer Science from the University of Alicante (1997, Spain) and a Ph.D. from Miguel Hernández University of Elche (Award for the Best Thesis of the Department) (2003, Spain). He has been a visiting professor at the University of Houston (USA) and at Imperial College London (United Kingdom). His current research interests are Brain-Machine Interfaces, Neurorobotics and Rehabilitation Robotics. Over the last years, his research has been funded by prestigious grants from the European Union, other international government agencies, and Spain. He has been the PI of more than 20 research projects, and his research has resulted in more than 200 technical papers and 3 patents. Currently, he is a Distinguished Lecturer of the IEEE Systems Council.