Carol is a fourth year Biomedical engineer with an emphasis in Biophotonics as well as Micro and Nano Technology. With four years of research in Professor Jered Haun’s nanotechnology lab and previous medical device industry experience at Medtronic, she hopes to merge her understanding of both areas in creating a wearable that is innovative, efficient, and practical for our users. Carol is not only project manager, but also is a fellow software engineer responsible for developing our ECG data acquisition and our CardiMobile mobile application coming soon.
Email: carolc6@uci.edu |
LinkedIn
Christina is a fourth year Biomedical engineer minoring in Innovation and Entrepreneurship. She combined her engineering background with her business drive to contribute to the product life cycle of CardiBeats’ first prototype. Through her four years of lab experience under Dr. Keyak and her personal product development experience for multiple start ups, Christina was able to contribute both technical and soft skills to the CardiBeats team. She utilized her background in Solidworks, arduino processes, and electronics to aid in creating the external hardware designs and the ECG circuit for the first generation prototype of the CardiGram.
Email: channa2@uci.edu | LinkedIn
Bree is a fourth year biomedical engineering major specializing in biophotonics. She utilized her previous experiences with electronics, Solidworks, MATLAB, and LabVIEW in order to help the CardiBeats team develop an innovative wearable tech device. Her specific role for the CardiGram, however, was to develop the software for the acquisition and calculation of the heart rate data.
Email: bkhannah@uci.edu | LinkedIn
Sien is a fourth year biomedical engineer with an emphasis on micro- and nano-technology. With a profound interest in the cardiovascular system after three years as an undergraduate researcher in Dr. Wendy Liu’s lab, her focus on this project was the electrical wiring and testing of the device.
Email: sient@uci.edu | LinkedIn
Sabrina is a fourth year majoring in biomedical engineering and minoring in materials science engineering. Working as a researcher in Professor Michelle Khine’s nanotechnology lab for the past two years, she is passionate about developing wearable point of care devices, like the CardiGram, that are convenient and easily accessible to users. For this project, she is responsible for standardizing the development processes, as well as testing and inspecting the quality of the product.
Email: sabrinmw@uci.edu | LinkedIn
Technical Development Program Engineer
Edwards Lifesciences
Professor, Neurology
UC Irvine School of Medicine