bioSync Tag

Our project "Preemptive Reaction: Accelerating Human Reaction using Electrical Muscle Stimulation Without Compromising Agency" has received Laval Virtual Award: VR/AR for Safety and Improvement of Work Environment on April 22, 2020. Laval Virtual 2020 was held virtually.

Our project "Preemptive Reaction: Accelerating Human Reaction using Electrical Muscle Stimulation Without Compromising Agency" has been invited to Laval Virtual 2020, which was supposed to be held in Laval, France in April 2020. Laval Virtual 2020 has been cancelled due to the declaration of a state of emergency in France.

Our abstract, which was prepared with Dr. Daisuke Tajima (Sony), Dr. Shunnichi Kasahara (Sony CSL), Prof. Pedro Lopes (UChicago) has been accepted to Vision Sciences Society 2020, which was supposed to be held in Florida, US in May 2020. Vision Sciences Society 2020 has been physically cancelled due to the declaration of a state of emergency in United States. Laval Virtual 2020 has been cancelled

I demonstrated my devices, CHILDHOOD and bioSync, at CNBC EVOLVE CHICAGO, which was held in Chicago, USA on Sept. 24, 2019. The Evolving Worker How will a new generation of wearable technology help create a more efficient, more skilled and more productive workforce? A top researcher will provide a sneak peek into his high-tech lab and demonstrate a device that could take human performance

Our full contributed paper has been presented at IEEE EMBC; 41st International Engineering in Medicine and Biology Conference, which was held in Berlin, Germany from July 23-27, 2019. J. Nishida, K. Yagi, M. Hassan and K. Suzuki, “Wearable Kinesthetic I/O Device for Sharing Wrist Joint Stiffness,” 2019 Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology, Berlin, 2019, pp. x-x. (in press)

Our project with Sony Computer Science Laboratories, Inc. has been accepted for ACM SIGGRAPH, which will be held in Los Angeles, USA from July 28 to August 1, 2019.Acknowledgements:This research has been conducted with Dr. Shunichi Kasahara when I was a Research Assistant at Sony Computer Science Laboratories, Inc.