do you have the clarkson gene?

Stephanie Schuckers
Associate Professor
136 CAMP
Clarkson University
PO Box 5720
Potsdam, NY 13699-5720
Phone: 315-268-6536
Fax: 315-268-7600
E-mail: sschucke@clarkson.edu
Web page
Educational Background
Ph.D., The University of Michigan
M.S.E., The University of Michigan
B.S.E., The University of Iowa
Research Interests
My research focuses on processing and interpretation of signals which arise from the human body. Signals include the electrocardiogram, biometric signals like fingerprints, pulse oximetry, respiration, and electroencephalograms. These signals are used to predict and detect various cardiovascular diseases (sudden cardiac death, heart failure, sudden infant death), to perform identification for security applications/health care, or to study learning and memory. Methods involve classic signal processing, statistical techniques, pattern recognition, algorithm development and evaluation, data mining, and image processing. Data is collected from cadaver, human, and animal studies and all work involves the analysis of real data (as opposed to simulated).
136 CAMP
Clarkson University
PO Box 5720
Potsdam, NY 13699-5720
Phone: 315-268-6536
Fax: 315-268-7600
E-mail: sschucke@clarkson.edu
Web page
Educational Background
Ph.D., The University of Michigan
M.S.E., The University of Michigan
B.S.E., The University of Iowa
Research Interests
My research focuses on processing and interpretation of signals which arise from the human body. Signals include the electrocardiogram, biometric signals like fingerprints, pulse oximetry, respiration, and electroencephalograms. These signals are used to predict and detect various cardiovascular diseases (sudden cardiac death, heart failure, sudden infant death), to perform identification for security applications/health care, or to study learning and memory. Methods involve classic signal processing, statistical techniques, pattern recognition, algorithm development and evaluation, data mining, and image processing. Data is collected from cadaver, human, and animal studies and all work involves the analysis of real data (as opposed to simulated).
