Towards autonomous robot assisted medical interventions
PROF. BAYLE, Bernard
University of Strasbourg
Prof. Bayle is a Full Professor at the University of Strasbourg, France. He heads the Robotics, Data science and HealthCare technologies research group of ICube laboratory, Strasbourg, a team of major international impact in the field, with more than 35 permanent researchers. He also heads the HealthTech Institute of Information Sciences and Technology for Healthcare, an Excellence Initiative program of the University of Strasbourg, CNRS and INSERM. Prof. Bayle’s research interests include mechatronic design, modeling and control of robotic systems, with a special focus on medical robotics and force feedback technology.
Millimeter wave to sub-Terahertz circuit, packaging, and system
DR. KANG, Dongwoo
Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute (ETRI), Korea
Dong-Woo Kang received the B.S, M.S, and Ph.D degrees in electrical engineering from Korea KAIST, Daejeon, Korea, in 2001, 2003, and 2007, respectively. From September 2007 to September 2010, he was a Postdoctoral researcher with the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, UCSD, La Jolla. From 2010 to 2013, he worked for Samsung DMC R&D center, Suwon, Korea. As of May 2013, he is with Electronics Telecommunications Research Institute (ETRI) as a principle researcher. He has an extensive research and development experience with interest in millimeter wave circuits, phased array circuit and systems, automotive radar, ultra-high speed connectivity and mobile communications such as WiGiG and 5G, and 802.11ah for a long range IoT solution. He is one of the first researchers to design and development of CMOS phase shifter and multi-channel array chip in the field of radar and communication systems. He developed 10-15, 30-35 and 40-50 GHz 4- and 8- element phased arrays on a single silicon chip. He was with Samsung Electronics as a Senior engineer participating in the development of the 60GHz phased array transceiver for the WiHD/WiGiG standard. He has been done with an extensive research project for a sub-GHz CMOS transceiver for 802.11ah/af-based IoT, 77 GHz automotive radar chip, a high-power terahertz CMOS source, and sub-terahertz pulse radar/imaging system. His research interests include RF/millimeter-wave/Terahertz integrated circuits using CMOS/SiGe technology, antenna, antenna-in/on-package (AiP/AoP), and systems design for wireless communication and radar/sensor applications.