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Institute of Communications and Connected Systems

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Dr Sara Ghoreishizadeh

Profile Picture of Sara Ghoreishi

Lecturer in Bioelectronics

E: s.ghoreishizadeh@ucl.ac.uk
T: +44(0)20 8016 8589 

Research group
Sensors Systems and Circuits

Medical electronics | Anologue integrated circuit | Wearable biosensors

Biography 

Dr Sara Ghoreishi is a lecturer in Bioelectronics at Dept of Electrical and Electronic Eng., University College London (UCL) where she leads an interdisciplinary team on CMOS biosensors and Integrated systems and circuits (analogue and mixed signal) for medical applications. 

She received a PhD in the field of integrated circuits and instrumentation for implantable biosensors, from Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland in 2015. During 2015-2018 she was with the Dept. of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Imperial College as a Imperial College Research Fellow working on her proposed research of autonomous readout circuit development for electrochemical biosensors. She joined the UCL Faculty of medical science in 2018 as a lecturer in wearable electronics before moving to UCL Dept of Electronic and Electrical Engineering in 2021. 

Dr Ghoreishi is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (FHEA) and a senior member of IEEE. She is an associate editor of the IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Circuits and Systems (BioCAS) and IEEE Sensors Letters, and has been elected (by the international IEEE CAS Society) to the IEEE CAS Board of Governors (BoG) for the period of 2020-2022. She is also an elected member of the IEEE Biomedical Circuits and Systems Technical committee and has (co-)organised, or been on the technical programme committee (TPC) of several IEEE conferences, including BioCAS 2019-2023, ICECS 2018-2022, and IEEE Biosensors 2023.
 
Dr Ghoreishi’s current research focuses on developing fundamental tools and techniques to create new diagnostic tools such as point-of-case and wearable devices. She develops the technologies for real-time quantitative analysis of health conditions such as physiological stress, acute pain, and oral health. In collaboration with clinical scientists she also investigates biomarkers of such health conditions and diseases in non-blood biofluids, such as saliva and sweat. Her research at UCL has been supported by the EPSRC (New Investigator award, 2020-2023) and UCL Welllcome Trust (Institutional Strategic Support fund, 2019-2021).

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Publications

RPS Widget Placeholderhttp://research-reports.ucl.ac.uk/RPSDATA.SVC/pubs/SSGHO93