Skip to main content
x

Omer T. Inan has received an Office of Naval Research Young Investigator Award for his research project entitled “Wearable Assessment of Warfighter Blood Volume Status using Graph Mining Algorithms.” 

In this project, Inan will investigate wearable sensing systems and modern data analytics tools for estimating blood volume status for the Warfighter in austere environments. Reduced blood volume is experienced by the modern Warfighter in a variety of circumstances ranging from exsanguination to exertional heat stress, and can ultimately lead to shock or collapse. This project can benefit the health and performance of the Warfighter by enabling proactive measures to be taken in the field to reduce preventable deaths and improve performance. The technologies developed in this work can ultimately have broad use in civilian applications as well, ranging from trauma care to predicting cardiovascular collapse in persons working in warm environments with protective clothing.

Inan has been an assistant professor at the Georgia Tech School of Electrical and Computer Engineering since 2013, where he also holds an adjunct faculty appointment in the Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering. Inan and his research team design clinically relevant medical devices and systems, and then translate them from the lab to patient care applications. They also develop new technologies for monitoring chronic diseases at home, such as heart failure.

Inan is a member of the Parker H. Petit Institute for Bioengineering and Bioscience and a program faculty member for the Interdisciplinary Bioengineering Graduate Program. His most recent honors include the Georgia Tech Sigma Xi Young Faculty Award (2017) and the Lockheed Dean’s Excellence in Teaching Award in (2016); he is also a senior member of IEEE.

Media Contact

Jackie Nemeth

School of Electrical and Computer Engineering

404-894-2906

Latest BME News

Georgia Tech grad reflects on his rookie season as a biomechanics engineer with the New York Mets

First-year students learned about the resources and support they could access during their college journey in BME.

BME assistant professor using Sloan Scholars Mentoring Network seed grant to support her lab's work

Coulter Department honors Jaydev Desai, Melissa Kemp, Gabe Kwong, and Johnna Temenoff 

Biomedical engineer will present groundbreaking mapping tool aimed at drug resistant cancers at BMES Annual Meeting

BME researcher Yue Chen using NSF CAREER Award to develop MRI-safe surgical robot

Emory-Georgia Tech team develop new tools to address parasitic infection that affects 250 million people in 78 countries

When we lose our vision, does our hearing get stronger? Ming-fai Fong is trying to find out, while enhancing lives through community-driven research