Body-centric wireless communications
Prospective authors should submit their full papers by Friday 27 March 2009.
Date 20 April 2009
Time
This event runs from 09:00 – 17:00
Location
The IET, Savoy Place, London, UK
Sponsors
Exhibitors | |||
About the event
The seminar will be highly interactive with a high level of participation and an exchange of ideas. In addition to formal seminar activities, exhibitors can take advantage of the networking opportunities during refreshment breaks and lunch to interact with this key audience.
Body-centric communications can mean an RF sensor is placed on the body, but think broader than that – consider its applications in personal healthcare, in the smart home, in terms of personal entertainment solutions and identification systems, in terms of space tourism and in the battlefield, and suddenly this area of technology is something we should all be getting excited about...
Also of interest
The European School of Antennas course on: Antennas and Propagation for Body-Centric Wireless Communications (ESoA)
20 – 24 April 2008
Queen Mary, University of London, London, UK
ESoA registrants attend the IET Seminar on Antennas & Propagation for Body-Centric Wireless Communications on 20 April as day one of the ESoA course. Registration fees for the IET seminar are included in the ESoA course fee.
For more information see the event brochure or visit the course page.
Programme
The programme for the event can be viewed or downloaded as a PDF using the link menu to the right.Find out more about the subject matter to be covered and the poster presenters exhibiting via the 'about the seminar' link menu to the right.
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- Body-centric wireless communications
- Poster presenters
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Online registration
- About the seminar
Downloads:
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Printable programme
(48 k)
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A new technique for numerical simulation of BANs
Professor Raj Mittra, Electrical Engineering, The Pennsylvania State University, USA
PDF (4225 k) Updated April 2009
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On body channel modelling: diversity, MIMO, interference reduction and depolarisation
Professor Peter Hall, Professor of Communications Engineering, University of Birmingham, UK
PDF (381 k) Updated April 2009
