|
楼主 |
发表于 2022-3-15 10:30:45
|
显示全部楼层
Professor Chris Toumazou, Regius Professor of Engineering, Chair in Biomedical Circuit Design, Director of the Centre for Bio-Inspired Technology and Founder and Chief Scientist for the Institute of Biomedical Engineering at Imperial College. He is also Founder, Chairman or CEO of two successful Medical Device Companies (Toumaz Technology and DNA Electronics) and Chief Scientific Advisor to GENEU. He is distinguished for his innovative silicon technology and integrated circuit design for electronic device in the field of devices for medical diagnosis and therapy. Professor Toumazou is pre-eminent amongst the global community of contemporary medical engineers. In 1994 Toumazou was appointed the youngest Professor ever to be appointed at Imperial College, at the age of 33. In 2013 he became London’s First Regius Professor of Engineering conferred to Imperial College during the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee.
He is the recipient of the 2005 Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) CAS Education Award for pioneering contributions to biomedical circuits and systems. In 2006 he founded (IEEE BIOCAS). He received the UK Royal Academy of Engineering Silver Medal in 2007 for pioneering contributions to British industry and the UK Institute of Engineering Technology (IET) Premium best paper award and the IEEE CAS outstanding young author award. He was elected in 2006 to Academia Europea. In 2008 he was appointed to the Fellowship of the Royal Academy of Engineering and the Fellowship of the Royal Society, which is the highest honour in UK science. He was appointed a Fellow of Academy of Medical Sciences in 2013 and is now one of the few who is a Fellow of three premium societies.
Chris received in 2009 the World Technology Award, sponsored by Time Magazine, for Health & Medicine; In 2011 he received the JJ Thompson IET Achievement Award for major contributions to the low power medical electronics industry. In 2010 Toumazou received the Times Higher Education Innovation Award for his founding of the Institute of Biomedical Engineering at Imperial College. The Institute was formally opened by Her Majesty The Queen in 2009. In addition Toumazou previously created and founded one of the largest technology transfer laboratories in the field of radio frequency (RF) semiconductors for international collaboration. HRH Princess Ann formally opened the laboratory in 1996. In 2009 his commercial laboratories at DNA Electronics Ltd were used to launch the Government’s Life Sciences blueprint and were visited by a ministerial delegation led by the Prime Minister. In 2011 he was invited to speak at the prestigious TEDMED conference in San Diego. His lecture was entitled the “Biological IP Address”. He also won the 2013 Gabor Medal of the Royal Society for his invention of semiconductor based genetic testing.
In June 2014 Chris won the European Inventor Award of the European Patent Office and has become the first British winner of a prize in this contest since 2008.
Awards
2016 Elektra Lifetime Achievement Award
Winner of the IEEE Biomedical Engineering Award
Winner of The IET 2014 Faraday Award
Winner of 2014 European Inventor Award, European Patent Office here
2013 Awarded Regius Professorship here
2013 Gabor Medal: "for success in applying semiconductor technology to biomedical and life-science applications, most recently to DNA analysis, Royal Society, 2013
e-Legacy Award for Medical Advances - DNA Electronics Ltd., voted by Electronic Product Design Readers and Electronic
IET Innovation Awards in Electronics, Emerging Technologies and Healthcare - DNA Electronics Ltd., 2010
Innovation Award, Times Higher (THES), 2009
Best British Inventions, BBC Focus Magazine, 2009
European Electronics Industry Award for R&D - DNA Electronics Ltd., Elektra09, 2009
Emerging Technology of the Year Award, National Microelectronics Institute, 2009
Winner of the World Technology Award for Health and Medicine, Sponsored by Time Magazine, World Technology Network, 2009
Innovation in Engineering Award, Institution of Engineering and Technology, 2008
Silver Medal for Pioneering Contributions to British Industry, Royal Academy of Engineering, 2007
Start-Up of the Year Award, National Microelectronics Institute, 2007
Outstanding Innovation Award, Oracle, 2006
IEEE Circuits and Systems Education Award for pioneering contributions to telecommunications and biomedical circuits and system, IEEE, 2005
The Clifford Patterson Lecture Prize Bronze Medal, The Royal Society, 2003
Recipient of the IEE Electronics Letters Premium Award, IEE, 1993
Recipient of the Outstanding Young Author Award, IEEE CAS, 1992
Recipient of the IEE Rayleigh Best Book Award, Imperial College is recognition of research in the Department of Electrical Engineering, 1991 |
|