
Miss Immi Biswas
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Research interests
Project Summary:
The first goal of my PhD project is to understand the experience of sleep monitoring using wearable Actigraph and Electroencephalogram (EEG) headbands in clinical research for Neurodegenerative patients. There is a paucity of tests for monitoring sleep in Dementia. The gold standard method to monitor sleep using polysomnography (PSG) is conducted in a sleep laboratory which does not always give an accurate representation of sleep cycles. Therefore, I hope to explore various digital measures to capture digital metrics of disease testing and progression in patients. This will enable us to understand biological rhythms and how it affects long-term memory in the progression of developing dementia. To facilitate remote testing and assistance, the Dignio mobile application will be used. This will help to deliver personalised treatment for Dementia by identifying early biomarkers for clinicians. The project is part of the Bristol Brain Centre (ReMemBr Group) at Southmead Hospital.
My second goal is to use the empirical data to ideate and develop digital tangible soft robotics prototypes to aid mental health and wellbeing. Research has shown an association between sleep disturbance on mental health and neurodegenerative disorders. I will use participatory approaches working closely with patients, caregivers, social workers and relatives to design digital solutions. This work will not only help with design contributions from the human-computer-interaction aspect, but it will also improve clinical care planning, both now, and in the future. Peripheral to my project, I am also broadly interested in the transformation in patient care and how technology can improve health systems as well as influence policymaking. My current research interests lie within robotics, multimodal sensor arrays to improve patients with cerebrovascular and neurodegenerative diseases.
General Profile:
I graduated with a 1st Class BSc (Hons) in Neuropsychology, specifically in Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience, from the University of Central Lancashire. My dissertation focused on the influence of sleep on the ability to recognise human emotional voices using EEG. During my undergraduate, I was awarded a 50% bursary every year towards my tuition fee and elected to be on Dean's List. Following that, I undertook an MSc at the University of Nottingham, focused on computational and cognitive neuroscience. My project involved developing a multimodal imaging protocol as a potential risk factor for cerebrovascular diseases. During my time on the MSc I achieved the Nottingham Advantage Award and also continued to work in collaboration with Nottingham Medical School in the systematic reviewer team for Neuroepidemiology, psychiatry and global ageing. My professional and work experience roles exposed me to psychiatry, neurology, neurosurgery, neuroimaging, counselling, primary school, care, and community organisation. These experiences taught me to be resilient and confident when dealing with individuals with challenging conditions. It also initiated my interest in MedTech and its future in practice. I also completed a placement in Bangladesh where I worked in a government hospital within the Psychiatry Department which enabled me to gain hands-on experience of working with people with diverse mental health needs. I hope to continue working in a clinical setting by applying my knowledge of digital health and develop my own start-up business in the future.
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
An Autoethnography of Living with a Sleep Robot
Description
Soft robotics are used in real-world clinical situations including surgery, rehabilitation, and diagnosis. However, several challenges
remain to make soft robots more viable, especially for clinical intervention such as improving sleep…Managing organisational unit
Department of Electrical & Electronic EngineeringDates
01/08/2022 to 01/10/2022
Perspective of soft robotics for people with neurodegenerative diseases: Can we develop robotic solutions using soft material?
Description
In this paper we investigate perceptions of soft robotic technology in people with neurodegenerative diseases. Technologies which
incorporate soft robotics is a fast-emerging field in medicine and has many applications…Managing organisational unit
Department of Electrical & Electronic EngineeringDates
01/12/2021 to 08/07/2022
Publications
Recent publications
03/12/2024Impaired Recovery Sleep in Individuals with Alzheimer’s Disease – The RESTED Study
Alzheimer's and Dementia
Remote Evaluation of Sleep and Circadian Rhythms in Older Adults With Mild Cognitive Impairment and Dementia
JMIR Research Protocols
Remote evaluation of sleep to enhance understanding of early dementia due to Alzheimer’s Disease (RESTED-AD): an observational cohort study protocol
BMC Geriatrics
An Autoethnography of Living with a Sleep Robot
An Autoethnography of Living with a Sleep Robot