About

With a rising population across the globe, many societies are struggling to meet healthcare demand.   Digital health care interventions are key to tackling this issue and help to enhance the efficiency, delivery and security of services to patients, and supporting care in the community. 

But with so many new digital technologies available and the immediate access to massive data sets how can we harness this information to ensure it makes a real difference to society?  And how do we overcome the challenges of privacy and personal data protection? 

Southampton scientists across medicine and electronics and computer science are combining machine learning,  genome sequencing and other computational methods to develop new digital health interventions to help healthcare professionals and patients to manage illness and promote health and wellbeing.   This includes both hardware and software solutions including using Internet of Things smart devices, wearable devices and monitoring sensors.    

Our teams are also using digital health technologies to analyse already available data sets to establish trends of behaviour and decision patterns with the aim of predicting future healthcare needs as well as examining the role data protection plays in this ever-expanding research field. 

A medical illustration showing the upper body of a person with the lungs highlighted in orange. The trachea, bronchi and branching airways are visible inside the ribcage.

Transforming chronic respiratory disease care

Groundbreaking sticker could monitor breathing and help save lives.

People, projects and publications

People

Dr Daniel Stabler

Lecturer in Plant-Organism Interactions

Accepting applications from PhD students

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Dr Danielle Schoenaker BSc, MSc, FHEA, PhD

Senior Research Fellow

Research interests

  • Preconception health
  • Developmental Origins of Health and Disease
  • Maternal, paternal and child health

Accepting applications from PhD students

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Professor Dankmar Böhning

Professor of Medical Statistics

Research interests

  • Meta-analysis
  • Application of capture-recapture methods in Health and Social Science

Accepting applications from PhD students

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Dr Dave Rowe

Senior Research Fellow
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Professor David Simpson

Prof of Biomedical Signal Processing

Research interests

  • Biomedical signal processing with applications in neurophysiology and cardio-vascular and cer…
  • Blood flow control in the brain (how does the brain regulate is own blood supply and how to d…
  • Auditory evoked potentials (methods to detect the small electrical responses of the brain to …

Accepting applications from PhD students

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Professor David Toal

Professor

Research interests

  • Design optimisation & automation
  • Machine learning & deep learning
  • Computer aided design
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Dr David Tumbarello

Lecturer in Biomedical Sciences

Research interests

  • Membrane Trafficking
  • Autophagy
  • Mitochondrial Quality Control

Accepting applications from PhD students

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Professor Davide Filingeri BSc, MSc, PGCAP, PhD

Professor

Research interests

  • Davide’s original research programme investigates:
  • i) the biophysical and physiological mechanisms that allow humans to sense changes in the tem…
  • ii) the role of these mechanisms in body temperature regulation and the initiation of thermal…

Accepting applications from PhD students

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Dr Dean Bryant BSc Hons, PhD, FHEA

Associate Professor

Accepting applications from PhD students

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Age Chapman
Professor of Computer Science
True interdisciplinary research, in which collaborators share the challenges and strengths of different domains is more than just applying one domain’s techniques to another area’s problems. Interdisciplinary research opens up new and exciting research opportunities in both domains by changing the shape of the problem and highlighting why existing approaches are not fit for use.

Related research institutes, centres and groups

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