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Nigel H. Lovell

Researcher at University of New South Wales

Publications -  678
Citations -  19383

Nigel H. Lovell is an academic researcher from University of New South Wales. The author has contributed to research in topics: Retinal ganglion & Blood pump. The author has an hindex of 58, co-authored 634 publications receiving 16465 citations. Previous affiliations of Nigel H. Lovell include NICTA & AmeriCorps VISTA.

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Patent

Electroporation system for controlled localized therapeutics delivery

TL;DR: In this paper, an electroporation system comprising an electrophoration probe having at least two contiguous electrodes configured to be inserted into the biological tissue for electroboration treatment, and a pulse generator electrically connected to the probe and configured to drive the probe using a sequence of one or more electric pulses to cause current transmission through the probe, and induce a non-uniform electric field in the tissue proximate the probe electrodes.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Database replication and synchronization for longitudinal monitoring of ECG

TL;DR: A web-based ECG monitoring application in which database replication is used to provide an offline review and acquisition facility, and confidentiality of patient data is maintained by creating partial replicas and by one-way synchronization.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Linear predictive modelling of gait patterns

TL;DR: The relationship between accelerometry signals and human gait is analysed using a linear prediction (LP) model and it is shown that an overall accuracy of 93% can be achieved using features derived from the cepstral coefficients for the five different walking patterns.
Journal ArticleDOI

Development and performance of a biomimetic artificial perilymph for in vitro testing of medical devices.

TL;DR: It was established that this six component BAP provided competitive and complex adsorption behaviours consistent with biologically derived complex fluids and resulted in a change in polarisation impedance consistent with that observed for the cochlear device in vivo.