期刊名称:IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON NEURAL SYSTEMS AND REHABILITATION ENGINEERING
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
The field of interest is the application of the concepts and methods of the physical and engineering sciences to biology and medicine. This field covers a very broad range from formalized mathematical theory through experimental science and technological development to practical clinical applications. It includes support of scientific, technological and educational activities.
Instructions to Authors
Submission Instructions
PDF version of this document
IEEE ENGINEERING IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY SOCIETY
Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering
Last updated December 2005
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON NEURAL SYSTEMS AND REHABILITATION ENGINEERING (TNSRE) publishes basic and applied papers dealing with biomedical engineering and applied biophysics. Acceptable papers range in content from practical/clinical applications through experimental science and technological development to formalize mathematical theory. Articles must contain original biomedical engineering content, defined as development, theoretical analysis, critical evaluation/validation of a new experimental technique, and/or model pertinent to medicine and/or biological sciences. Articles describing biological or medical devices-microsystems will be considered, provided that the designs represent innovations impacting the biomedical and clinical practice, and detailed performance characteristics are included. Articles that contain original and significant results but do not meet this criterion would not be suitable for publication in TNSRE.
Readers are encouraged to submit manuscripts as regular papers or communications. To qualify for publication, these must be previously unpublished and not be under consideration elsewhere. Unlike previous procedures, the manuscript will be evaluated under the category it has been submitted (e.g., a regular paper will be accepted or rejected, but not moved during the review from regular paper to communication). The Editor in Chief and the Associate Editor in charge will perform a quick review of the manuscript not only to propose a change in category but also to reject the manuscript if obvious pitfalls exist. Starting March 1, 2001, manuscripts will ONLY be accepted in electronic format through a new system called Manuscript Central. Please go to the Manuscript Central website at
http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/embs-ieee/
MANUSCRIPTS. For purposes of qualifying for peer review and consideration for publication, authors must submit a properly executed copyright form in favor of IEEE, sign an Author consent form, agree to a mandatory page charge for overlength manuscripts or color figures, and prepare a manuscript according to the following guidelines:
- The manuscript, may not exceed 30 double-spaced pages (one full blank line between lines of type) using a font size of 11 points or larger, having a margin of at least 1" on all sides. They should be formatted in one single column, with the figures in the back of the manuscript. The manuscripts should be converted to postscript or PDF for upload to Manuscript Central. Alternatively, Manuscript Central can convert MS Word files to PDF, but please proof-read the converted manuscript to make sure it is correct.
- The abstract must be no more than 200 words for regular papers.
- Figures should appear at the back of the text, one figure per page. A separate list of figure captions should be included, keyed to figure numbers marked on each illustration. Figures may be uploaded in a separate file, but no more than 2 files total should be uploaded (maximum one file with the text and one with the figures). It is recommended to put both the text and the figures in one file.
- References should appear in a separate reference section at the end of this paper with items referred to by numerals in square brackets. References must be complete in the IEEE style as follows:
- Style for papers: Author(s), first initials followed by last name, title, periodical, volume, inclusive page numbers, month, year.
- Style for books: Author(s), title, location, publisher, year, chapter, page numbers.
- If accepted, authors of regular papers are also requested to send biographies (no more than 100 words) and recent photographs.
- Once the paper is accepted, three copies of the manuscript must be submitted to the Editor-in-Chief in double-spaced, single column format. In addition, the author can supply a fully formatted version of the manuscript by using the style files from the IEEE Tools for Authors website:
http://www.ieee.org/organizations/pubs/transactions/information.htm If a fully formatted copy is provided, it should be signed confirming the publication length of the manuscript at submission. The signature signifies the author's confirmation that overlength page charges will be paid when billed. If a fully formatted version of the manuscript is not provided, the author should sign the page charge form which can be obtained here.
As noted below, manuscripts that exceed the seven (7) published page standard will incur payment of mandatory overlength page charges. Since changes recommended as a result of peer review may require additions to the manuscript, it is strongly recommended that authors practice economy in preparing original submissions. Exceptions to the 30-page double-spaced submission limit may be granted by the Editor-in-Chief only, and only under unusual circumstances.
Do not send original artwork until you are notified to do so, if and when your paper is accepted for publication.
COMMUNICATIONS. Short communication papers disclosing new ideas and preliminary results and manuscripts commenting critically and substantively on papers published in the TRANSACTIONS are also encouraged. Such items may not exceed seven (7) double-spaced pages using 11 point type, with margins of 1" minimum on all sides, and including: title, names and contact information for authors, abstract, text, references, and an appropriate number of illustrations and/or tables, along with a properly executed copyright form in favor of IEEE. Papers less than five printed pages will be published as Communications, but they will incur page charges above the two page limit (see page charges below).
PEER REVIEW PROCESS. With electronic submission of manuscripts and reviews the EMB society expects to reduce the time from submission to publication, and make the review process more transparent to the author by allowing electronic status checks of the review progress. Please read the Peer Review Process of TNSRE.
COPYRIGHT. By policy, IEEE owns the copyright to the technical contributions it publishes on behalf of the interests of the IEEE, its authors, and their employers; and to facilitate the appropriate reuse of this material by others. To comply with United States copyright law, authors are required to sign and submit a completed IEEE Copyright Form with their original submissions and again with the finalized manuscript prior to publication. This form, a copy of which appears in issues of the transactions, returns to authors and their employers full rights to reuse their material for their own purposes. See also
http://www.ieee.org/about/documentation/copyright/cfrmlink.htm
to obtain an electronic version of the copyright form.
AUTHOR CONSENT FORM: An Author Consent form for manuscripts that have more than one author is also required to ensure that all the authors are aware that the paper is being submitted to the Transactions. You can find a copy of this form in the forms section.
The IEEE EMB Society will apply sanctions against authors who are discovered to have made duplicate submissions to other journals. These sanctions are: (1) immediate rejection of the manuscript in question; (2) immediate return to the author and co-authors of any and all manuscripts currently under review; (3) prohibition against the authors/co-authors of any new submissions to any of the Society's journals for one calendar year from date of formal notification.
TITLE AND ABSTRACT. During the login of an electronic submission in Manuscript central, the author will be asked to enter: the title, names and contact information for all authors (full mailing address, institutional affiliations, phone, fax, and e-mail), the abstract, and the TIPS category. The name of the Corresponding Author who will serve as the main point of contact for the manuscript during the review and publication processes is entered separately. For manuscripts, an abstract of not more than 200 words is allowable. For communications, an abstract of not more than 50 words is allowable. The abstract should indicate the scope of the paper or communication, and summarize the author's conclusions. This will make the abstract, by itself, a useful tool for information retrieval. Please be ready with this information when logging in Manuscript Central.
TIPS. All submissions must be classified by the author with the Engineering TIPS (Technical Interest Profiling System) selected from the list of TIPS published in the EMBS website
http://www.embs.org
The Engineering TIPS category must be entered during login to Manuscript Central. Only one Engineering TIPS category will be considered, and it should reflect the paper focus.
ILLUSTRATIONS AND TABLES. Illustrations/tables should be placed at the end of the manuscript. However, due to production requirements, for the final submission, illustrations/tables must be submitted separately, and not interwoven with the text. In the printing process, illustrations/tables may be reduced to one-column or two-column width--as much as a 4:1 reduction from the original. In illustrations, all words (as distinct from mathematical symbols) should be in capital letters and in a type size that will reduce to a minimum of 9 points or 3/16 in. high in the printed version. Sharp, laser-printed illustrations are acceptable; however, illustrations produced on dot-matrix printers should be redrawn. Only the major grid lines on graphs should be indicated. Each figure and table should have a caption that is intelligible without requiring reference to the text. Table and illustration captions should also be typed in a separate list and appended to the manuscript. See Electronic Guidelines below for further information.
COMPUTER-GENERATED IMAGES. If a manuscript includes computer-generated images, each copy of the submitted manuscript should include originals of these images. These should take the form of gray-scale images or color images. Printing of illustrations in color will be at the expense of the author. Halftones produced by laser printers (300 dpi) generally are not of acceptable quality and are susceptible to moire patterns when re-sized and screened. To conserve space in the publication, most illustrations are reduced to single-column width. However, the quality of the published image is of paramount importance. Author guidance is sought on the image size necessary to discern the level of detail the author believes is required. Thus, for each image, please specify a suggested publication width.
PAGE CHARGES. Upon acceptance of a manuscript for publication, the author(s) or his/her/their company or institution will be asked to pay a charge of $110 per page to cover part of the cost of publication of the seven pages which comprise the standard manuscript length (two pages for communications). Upon payment of these voluntary, the author will be entitled to 100 free, black-and-white reprints (without covers).
MANDATORY PAGE CHARGES. The author(s) or his/her/their company or institution will be billed $250 per each page in excess of the first seven published pages (two for communications). These are MANDATORY charges and the author(s) will be held responsible for them. Payment of these charges is not negotiable or voluntary; the author(s) signifies willingness to pay by signing the single spaced copy of the manuscript upon requested by the Editor in Chief. Further, submission by the author of his/her manuscript to these transactions signifies acceptance of the requirement to pay mandatory page charges. The Publisher holds the right to withhold publication of the current submission or any future submissions from the author(s) if this charge is not honored. To avoid incurring mandatory page charges, the author(s) are strongly advised to practice economy in the original manuscript submission and restraint in preparation of the final manuscript following peer review.
COLOR CHARGES. Color reproduction is expensive and all charges for color are the responsibility of the author. In deciding whether to have figures reproduced in color or in black-and white, the following estimates should be considered. There will be a charge of $125 for each figure; this charge may be subject to change without notification. In addition, there are printing preparation charges which may be ESTIMATED as follows: color reproductions on four or fewer pages of the manuscript: a total of approximately $1000; color reproductions on five pages through eight pages: a total of approximately $2100; color reproductions on nine through 12 pages: a total of approximately $3200, and so on. Payment of fees on color reproduction is not negotiable or voluntary, and the author's agreement to publish the manuscript in the transactions is considered acceptance of this requirement.
ELECTRONIC GUIDELINES. Authors are requested to submit finalized manuscripts using the style files established by IEEE . Authors should follow the instructions in the booklet .Guidelines for Author-Supplied Electronic Text and Graphics, which can be downloaded from the following website:
http://www.ieee.org/organizations/pubs/transactions/information.htm
When submitting your finalized manuscript, it must be accompanied by three complete, unencoded, paper copies of your manuscript that exactly match your electronic files. Send all materials to the Editor in Chief Office at the address shown below. These copies will be used for comparison at various stages of production and to resolve questions.
Nitish V. Thakor, TNSRE Editorial Office, 720 Rutland Avenue, Traylor 701, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Instructions to Authors I1534-4320.pdf
Editorial Board
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Scientific Advisory Board Richard Andersen, Ph.D., James G. Boswell Professor of Neuroscience, California Institute of Technology, Los Angeles, USA (Neural basis of higher cognitive functions including perception, attention, decision making, intention and awareness)
Dudley S. Childress, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus, Northwestern University, Chicago, USA (Biomechanics, human walking, artificial limbs, ambulation aids, and rehabilitation engineering)
Avis H. Cohen, Ph.D., Professor, Department of Biology and Institute for Systems Research and Program in Neuroscience and Cognitive Science, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA (Motor control, spinal cord regeneration and computational neuroscience and neuromorphic engineering)
John Donoghue, Ph.D., Henry Merritt Wriston Professor and Chair Dept. Neuroscience Brown University, Director, Brain Science Program, Brown University, Providence, USA (Behavior and motor control, cells and synapses, learning, memory and neural development, theory and computation)
Todd A. Kuiken, M.D., Ph.D., Director Amputee Programs, and Associate Dean , Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, Chicago, USA (Prosthetic control systems, nerve-muscle grafts, prosthetic design, human gait, and care of the amputee)
Fred Lenz, M.D., Ph.D., Professor of Neurosurgery, Johns Hopkins Medical School, Baltimore, USA (Human single neuron and local field potentials related to sensations such as touch, cold, and pain, and control of movement, tremor, Parkinson.s Disease, or chronic pain)
Michael Merzenich, Ph.D. , Francis A. Sooy Chair of Otolaryngology, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, USA (Neural origins of higher brain functions; origins of, and remediation of, human neurological dysfunction and disability)
Miguel A. L. Nicolelis, M.D., Ph.D., Professor of Neurobiology, Duke University, Durham, USA. (Computational principles underlying the dynamic interactions between populations of cortical and subcortical neurons that mediate tactile perception)
Jose C. Principe, Ph.D., Distinguished Professor of Electrical Engineering and BellSouth Professor, University of Florida, Gainesville, USA (Adaptive signal processing, brain dynamics and learning, brain machine interfaces, information theoretic learning, and neural networks)
Senior Editors Theodore W. Berger, Ph.D., David Packard Professor of Engineering Professor of Biomedical Engineering and Neuroscience Director, Center for Neural Engineering, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA (Neurophysiology of memory and learning, nonlinear systems analysis of hippocampal network properties)
Patrick E. Crago, Ph.D., Allen H. and Constance T. Ford Professor and Chairperson, Biomedical Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, USA (Motor control, neural prostheses, neuromechanics, restoration of motor function, modeling of neuromuscular systems, motor system rehabilitation)
Rory A. Cooper, Ph.D., Distinguished Professor and FISA/PVA Chairman Director, Human Engineering Research Laboratories, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, USA (Rehabilitation engineering, robotics & mechatronics, quality of life technology design, assessment and technology transfer, biomechanics)
Neville Hogan, Ph.D., Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Brain & Cognitive Sciences, MIT, Cambridge, USA (Human performance enhancement technologies, biomechanics and neural control of movement; physical system modeling, design and control)
Gerald E. Loeb, M.D., Professor of Biomedical Engineering, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, USA (Interfaces between electronic devices and the nervous system to replace sensory and motor functions and correct dysfunctions in people with neurological problems)
Richard A. Normann, Ph.D., Professor of Biomedical Engineering, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, USA (Neuroprosthetics and sensory and motor neurophysiology, three dimensional, silicon based electrode arrays to be used to stimulate or record from the central and peripheral nervous system)
Hunter Peckham, Ph.D., Donnell Professor of Biomedical Engineering and Orthopaedics, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, USA (Rehabilitation engineering and neuroprostheses, functional restoration of the paralyzed upper extremity in individuals with spinal cord injury)
Thomas Sinkjær, Ph.D., Director and professor, Center for Sensory-Motor Interaction, Aalborg University, Denmark (Motor control and neural rehabilitation technology, interaction of central control with reflex circuitry of the spinal cord, restoration sensory-motor function through neural prostheses)
Jonathan R. Wolpaw, M.D., Professor and Laboratory Chief Laboratory of Nervous System Disorders, Wadsworth Center, Albany, NY, USA (Learning and memory in the vertebrate nervous system, brain-computer interface technology)
Associate Editors Anastasios Bezerianos, Ph.D., Professor, University of Patras, Patras, Greece (Analysis of biological time series, information measures of brain injury, modeling biological systems, and bioinformatics)
Fabio Babiloni, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Physiology, University of Rome "La Sapienza", Rome, Italy (High resolution EEG, multimodal integration of EEG, MEG and fMRI data, and brain computer interface)
Ravi V. Bellamkonda, Ph.D., Professor, Neurological Biomaterials and Therapeutics, Georgia Institute of Technology/Emory University, Atlanta, USA (Scaffolds for peripheral nerve regeneration, astro-glial scar and CNS regeneration, electrode-brain interfaces, targeted nano-scale drug delivery vehicles for the treatment of brain tumors)
Paolo Bonato, Ph.D., Assistant Professpr, Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA (Wearable technology, rehabilitation, biomechanics, and electromyography
Emery N. Brown, M.D., Ph.D., Professor of Computational Neuroscience and Health Sciences and Technology, MIT-Harvard Division of Health Science and Technology, Cambridge, USA (Neural information encoding, adaptive point process models of receptive field plasticity and statistical modeling of functional neural imaging data)
Gert Cauwenberghs, Ph.D., Professor of Biology, University of California San Diego, USA (neuromorphic engineering, micropower mixed-signal VLSI, wireless implantable bioinstrumentation, neural and brain-machine interfaces)
Stephen P. DeWeerth, Ph.D., Professor of Biomedical Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology / Emory University, Atlanta, USA (Models of neural control of movement, circuits and signal processing for neural interfacing)
Henrietta L. Galiana, Ph.D., Chair, Biomedical Engineering, McGill University, Montreal, Canada (Oculomotor control: development of binocular eye movements, systems analysis in non-linear, structurally modulated, networks, signal processing and system identification)
Prof Shangkai Gao, Professor of Biomedical Engineering, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China (EEG signal processing, brain computer interface)
Warren M. Grill, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Biomedical Engineering, Neurobiology and Surgery, Duke University, Durham, USA (Design and testing of electrodes and stimulation techniques, restoration of bladder function, deep brain stimulation, neural modeling, multi-joint limb movement)
Bin He, Ph.D., Professor of Biomedical Engineering, Neuroscience and Electrical Engineering, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA (Neuroimaging, brain mapping, multimodal imaging, EEG, MEG, and brain-computer interface)
Jiping He, Ph.D., Professor and Director Center for Neural Interface Design of the Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University, Tempe, USA (Neural interface technologies, neural control and rehabilitation, motor learning and adaptation)
Walter Herzog, Ph.D., Co-Director Human Performance Lab, Canada Research Chair in Molecular and Cellular Biomechanics, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada (Neuro-biomechanics of the musculoskeletal system growth, healing, and adaptation of soft and hard tissues)
Richard D. Jones Ph.D., Director, Christchurch Neurotechnology Research Program, Van der Veer Institute for Parkinson's and Brain Research, Christchurch, New Zealand (Human performance engineering, sensory-motor/oculomotor/cognitive dysfunction in brain disorders, neuro-rehabilitation, wake-sleep continuum, signal processing in clinical neurophysiology)
Jack W. Judy, Ph.D.,Associate Professor, University of California at Los Angeles, USA. (Neuroengineering, micromachining, microsensors, microactuators, microfluidics, MEMS, BioMEMS, NeuroMEMS, microelectrodes, microprobes, patch clamp, electrode-solution interface, neural- electronic interface, brain-machine interface, brain-computer interface, neural implants, inductive powering, wireless telemetry, integrated circuits, neural recording, neural stimulation, sensor feedback, DBS, muscle stimulation, FES, neurosurgical tools
Daryl R. Kipke, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Biomedical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA (BioMEMS technologies for basic neuroscience and neurosurgery, cortical neural prosthetic systems, biomaterials and microdevices human cortical implants)
Hermano Igo Krebs, Ph.D., Principal Research Scientist, Mechanical Engineering, MIT, Cambridge, USA (Robotics and information technology for rehabilitation -particularly neuro-rehabilitation)
Dennis McFarland, Ph.D., Laboratory of Nervous System Disorders, Wadsworth Center, Albany, NY, USA (Brain-computer interface technology and auditory processing)
Vivian K. Mushahwar, Ph.D., Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada (Spinal cord injury, intraspinal microstimulation, rehabilitation, functional electrical stimulation)
Dejan B. Popovic, Ph.D., Professor, Aalborg, Denmark (Control of movement, restoration of movement in humans with disabilities, design of medical instrumentation, and information technology in medicine)
Robert Riener, Dr.-Ing., Professor, ETH Zurich, Switzerland (Human sensory-motor control, the design of novel mechatronic machines, optimization of human-machine interaction and rehabilitation)
David J. Reinkensmeyer, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of California, Irvine, USA (Neuromuscular control, motor learning, robotics, rehabilitation, and mechatronic devices)
Ronald A. Schuchard, Ph.D. Associate Professor, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, USA (Low vision (specially retinal function and neural plasticity) and functional vision for rehabilitation)
Garrett Stanley, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Division of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, USA (Integration of experimental and theoretical approaches to sensory neurophysiology)
Shanbao Tong, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Biomedical Engineeirng, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, China (Neural signal processing and electro-neurophysiology, brain injury and its rehabilitation, functional imaging of neural systems, neurophysiology in the optic nerve visual prosthesis)
Ronald J. Triolo, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Orthopaedics and Biomedical Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, USA, (Implantable neuroprostheses for standing and functional mobility in spinal cord injuries and development of unassisted standing by FES)
Peter H. Veltink Dr.ir. Professor, University of Twente, Enschede, the Netherlands (Biomechatronics, ambulatory sensing in human movement control; Neural engineering, neurostimulation, neuromodulation)
James D. Weiland, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Biomimetic MicroElectronic Systems Engineering Research Center, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, USA, (Retinal prostheses, neural prostheses, electrode technology, visual evoked responses, and implantable electrical systems)
John A. White, Ph.D., Associate Professor and Associate Chair, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Boston University, Boston, USA, (Electrophysiological and pharmacological properties of ion channels, neuronal firing properties and information transmission in the mammalian, brain, real-time instrumentation for electrophysiology)
Our Associate Editors has proven expertise in all these fields and more. They will not only focus on carrying out expeditious reviews of these topics but also to provide leadership in promoting or developing many of these sub-fields and topics. The editorial board may invite or approve Special Issues and reviews on topics of high current interest or areas that need development and promotion in view of their future impact and growth potential.
Original contributions are invited from the entire international scientific community. The journal is dedicated to providing fair, thorough and rapid review. With the advent of electronic publishing, the articles will be made available for electronic access soon after they have been accepted and all material is received and processed by IEEE. This will greatly shorten the time to publication. In addition, it will soon be possible to add color figures and supplementary material for electronic access.
The journal is also dedicated to publishing contemporary, high-impact, and rigorous research. Achieving and increasing the impact and relevance of the journal will be the primary task of our Senior Editors and the advisory board.
Finally, as the EIC, I stand by to serve and assist all authors and contributors in making sure that their contributions receive the best possible attention by the journal. I plan to work with the editorial and advisory board to maintain the status of TNSRE as an outstanding journal in the fields of neural, rehabilitation and related interdisciplinary fields. Nitish V. Thakor, Ph.D. Editor-in-Chief
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Nitish V. Thakor, Ph.D. Professor, Biomedical Engineering Johns Hopkins School of Medicine email: nitish AT jhu.edu www.bme.jhu.edu/~nthakor
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Nitish V. Thakor received B. Tech. degree in electrical engineering from Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay, in 1974 and the Ph.D. degree in electrical and computer engineering from the University of Wisconsin, Madison, in 1981. He served on the faculty of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science of the Northwestern University between 1981 and 1983, and since then he has been with the Johns Hopkins University, School of Medicine, where he is currently serving as a Professor of Biomedical Engineering. He conducts research on neurological instrumentation, biomedical signal processing, micro and nanotechnologies, neural prosthesis, and clinical applications of neural and rehabilitation technologies. He has authored more than 160 peer-reviewed publications on these subjects. He serves on the editorial boards of several journals and takes over as the Editor in Chief of IEEE Transactions on Neural and Rehabilitation Engineering beginning January 1, 2006. He directs the Neuroengineering program at the Johns Hopkins University with the aim of carrying out interdisciplinary and collaborative engineering research for basic and clinical neurosciences. Dr. Thakor is a recipient of a Research Career Development Award from the National Institutes of Health and a Presidential Young Investigator Award from the National Science Foundation, and is a Fellow of the American Institute of Medical and Biological Engineering, IEEE and Founding Fellow of the Biomedical Engineering Society. He is also a recipient of the Centennial Medal from the University of Wisconsin School of Engineering, Honorary Membership from Alpha Eta Mu Beta Biomedical Engineering Student Honor Society and Distinguished Service Award from Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay, India. Editor-in-Chief Nitish V. Thakor Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine 720 Rutland Ave Baltimore, MD 21205, USA Phone: +1 410 955 7093 Email: nitish@jhu.edu |
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