E M Drakakis is an academic member of staff of the Department of Bioengineering at Imperial College London, where he joined in October 2001. He has studied Physics (4-year degree) at Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (AUT) - Macedonia - Hellas, Electronic Physics and Radioelectrology (2.5-year MPhil degree) at the same university, and earned his PhD in Analog IC design under the supervision of Dr. Alison Payne from the Department of EEE-Imperial in May 2000 where he also conducted EPSRC-sponsored post-doctoral research. He has founded the Bioinspired VLSI Circuits and Systems Group whose research activities revolve around two axes: a) \”Circuits for Biology\” (inspiration drawn by the need for innovative instrumentation as dictated by a specific biological problem or application) and b) \”Circuits from Biology\” (inspiration drawn by operational, architectural and/or anatomical characteristics encountered in natural information processing systems). E M Drakakis is an academic member of staff of the Department of Bioengineering at Imperial College London, where he joined in October 2001. He has studied Physics (4-year degree) at Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (AUT) - Macedonia - Hellas, Electronic Physics and Radioelectrology (2.5-year MPhil degree) at the same university, and earned his PhD in Analog IC design under the supervision of Dr. Alison Payne from the Department of EEE-Imperial in May 2000 where he also conducted EPSRC-sponsored post-doctoral research. He has founded the Bioinspired VLSI Circuits and Systems Group whose research activities revolve around two axes: a) \”Circuits for Biology\” (inspiration drawn by the need for innovative instrumentation as dictated by a specific biological problem or application) and b) \”Circuits from Biology\” (inspiration drawn by operational, architectural and/or anatomical characteristics encountered in natural information processing systems).
Biosensors,Biomedical Engineering