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Table of Contents Preface................................................................................................................................................xvii Volume I Section 1 Fundamental Concepts and Theories Chapter 1 ConvergenceofNanotechnologyandMicrobiology.............................................................................. 1 Mussrat Fayaz Khanday, Annamalai University, India Chapter 2 ABriefInsightintoNanorobotics......................................................................................................... 23 Sanchita Paul, Birla Institute of Technology, India Chapter 3 NanobiotechnologyandTherapeutics................................................................................................... 75 Vikrant, Avvaiyar Government College for Women, India Chapter 4 TheNeedforGlobalStandardsinBiomedicalEthicsandtheQualitativeMethodology.................. 100 F. Sigmund Topor, Keio University, Japan Section 2 Development and Design Methodologies Chapter 5 TextMiningonBigandComplexBiomedicalLiterature.................................................................. 129 Boya Xie, East Carolina University, USA Qin Ding, East Carolina University, USA Di Wu, Drexel University, USA Chapter 6 NucleicAcids-BasedNanotechnology:EngineeringPrincipalsandApplications............................ 155 Robert Penchovsky, Sofia University “St. Kliment Ohridski”, Bulgaria Chapter 7 Modeling,MathematicalandNumericalStudiesofaNewBiventricularModelforArtificialHeart PoweredbyanElectromagnetSubjectedtoSinusoidalandSquareVoltages.................................... 172 Paul Woafo, University of Yaoundé I, Cameroon Abobda Theodore Lejuste, University of Yaoundé I, Cameroon Chapter 8 Population-BasedFeatureSelectionforBiomedicalDataClassification........................................... 199 Seyed Jalaleddin Mousavirad, University of Kashan, Iran Hossein Ebrahimpour-Komleh, University of Kashan, Iran Chapter 9 Two-DirectionalTwo-DimensionalPrincipalComponentAnalysisBasedonWavelet DecompositionforHigh-DimensionalBiomedicalSignalsClassification......................................... 232 Hong-Bo Xie, Queensland University of Technology, Australia Tianruo Guo, The University of New South Wales, Australia Chapter 10 CreativityDevelopmentThroughInquiry-BasedLearninginBiomedicalSciences......................... 255 Gemma Rodríguez, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain Josep-Eladi Baños, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain Mar Carrió, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain Chapter 11 Up-ConvertingNanoparticles:PromisingMarkersforBiomedicalApplications.............................. 278 Livia Petrescu, University of Bucharest, Romania Speranta Avram, University of Bucharest, Romania Maria Mernea, University of Bucharest, Romania Dan Florin Mihailescu, University of Bucharest, Romania Chapter 12 Re-EngineeringaMedicalDevicesManagementSoftwareSystem:TheWebApproach................. 312 P.G. Malataras, University of Patras, Greece Z.B. Bliznakov, University of Patras, Greece N.E. Pallikarakis, University of Patras, Greece Chapter 13 NBIC-ConvergenceandTechnoethics:CommonEthicalPerspective............................................... 323 Elena Grebenshchikova, Institute for Scientific Information on Social Sciences of RAS, Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University, Russia Chapter 14 FunctionalCoatingsforBoneTissueEngineering............................................................................. 332 M Tarik Arafat, University of Leeds, UK Xu Li, A*STAR (Agency for Science, Technology & Research), Singapore Chapter 15 QualityofServiceandRadioManagementinBiomedicalWirelessSensorNetworks..................... 357 Carlos Abreu, Instituto Politécnico de Viana do Castelo, Portugal Francisco Miranda, Instituto Politécnico de Viana do Castelo and CIDMA of University of Aveiro, Portugal Paulo M. Mendes, Universidade do Minho, Portugal Chapter 16 BaselineDriftRemovalofECGSignal:ComparativeAnalysisofFilteringTechniques.................. 379 Akash Kumar Bhoi, Sikkim Manipal Institute of Technology (SMIT), India Karma Sonam Sherpa, Sikkim Manipal Institute of Technology (SMIT), India Bidita Khandelwal, Central Referral Hospital and SMIMS, India Chapter 17 HumanVoiceWaveformAnalysisforCategorizationofHealthyandParkinsonSubjects................ 397 Saloni Saloni, National Institute of Technology, Kurukshetra, India Rajender K. Sharma, National Institute of Technology, Kurukshetra, India Anil K. Gupta, National Institute of Technology, Kurukshetra, India Section 3 Tools and Technologies Chapter 18 Signal-AdaptiveAnalog-to-DigitalConvertersforULPWearableandImplantableMedical Devices:ASurvey.............................................................................................................................. 413 Nabi Sertac Artan, New York Institute of Technology, USA Chapter 19 BiomechanicalPropertiesoftheFootSoleinDiabeticMellitusPatients:APreliminaryStudyto UnderstandUlcerFormation............................................................................................................... 444 V. B. Narayanamurthy, Indian Institute of Technology, Madras, India Richa Poddar, Sundaram Medical Foundation, India R. Periyasamy, National Institute of Technology Raipur, India Chapter 20 MineralizedNanofibersforBoneTissueEngineering........................................................................ 461 Ozan Karaman, Izmir Katip Celebi University, Turkey Volume II Chapter 21 Self-AssembledBiomimeticScaffoldsforBoneTissueEngineering................................................ 476 Ozan Karaman, İzmir Katip Celebi University, Turkey Cenk Celik, Ege University, Turkey Aylin Sendemir Urkmez, Ege University, Turkey Chapter 22 ACaseStudyofaLaboratoryInformationSystemDevelopedattheInstituteforCancerResearch atCandiolo.......................................................................................................................................... 505 Alessandro Fiori, Candiolo Cancer Institute – FPO, IRCCS, Italy Alberto Grand, Candiolo Cancer Institute – FPO, IRCCS, Italy Piero Alberto, Candiolo Cancer Institute – FPO, IRCCS, Italy Emanuele Geda, Candiolo Cancer Institute – FPO, IRCCS, Italy Francesco Gavino Brundu, Politecnico di Torino, Italy Domenico Schioppa, Politecnico di Torino, Italy Andrea Bertotti, Candiolo Cancer Institute – FPO, IRCCS, Italy & University of Torino, Italy Chapter 23 VentricularAssistDeviceandItsNecessityforElderlyPopulation................................................... 532 Md. Shamsul Arefin, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia Nasser K. Awad, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia Chandra Prakash Rathore, Oracle India Private Limited, India Anupam Shukla, ABV-Indian Institute of Information Technology and Management Gwalior, India Yosry S. Morsi, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia Chapter 24 UMLSSemanticNetworkasaUMLMetamodelforImprovingBiomedicalOntologyand ApplicationModeling......................................................................................................................... 553 Rishi Kanth Saripalle, NetVision Resources, USA Chapter 25 Uberveillance,Standards,andAnticipation:ACaseStudyonNanobiosensorsinU.S.Cattle......... 577 Kyle Powys Whyte, Michigan State University, USA Monica List, Michigan State University, USA John V. Stone, Michigan State University, USA Daniel Grooms, Michigan State University, USA Stephen Gasteyer, Michigan State University, USA Paul B. Thompson, Michigan State University, USA Lawrence Busch, Michigan State University, USA Daniel Buskirk, Michigan State University, USA Erica Giorda, Michigan State University, USA Hilda Bouri, Michigan State University, USA Chapter 26 UnifiedWaveletTransformAnalysisAdaptedtoDifferentBiomedicalApplications....................... 597 Girisha Garg, BBDIT, India Vijander Singh, NSIT, India Chapter 27 -BiomedicalWatermarking:AnEmergingandSecureToolforDataSecurityandBetterTele DiagnosisinModernHealthCareSystem.......................................................................................... 618 Koushik Pal, University of Calcutta, India Goutam Ghosh, University of Calcutta, India Mahua Bhattacharya, Indian Institute of Information Technology and Management, India Chapter 28 HybridIntegrationTechnologyforWearableSensorSystems........................................................... 647 Li Xie, Thin Film Electronics ASA, Sweden Lirong Zheng, Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden Geng Yang, Zhejiang University, China Chapter 29 InformationServicestoBiomedicalScienceThroughMobileTechnologyApplications................. 679 John Paul Anbu, UNISWA, Swaziland Chapter 30 ParameterEstimationofNonlinearBiomedicalSystemsUsingExtendedKalmanFilter Algorithm:DevelopmentofPatientSpecificModels......................................................................... 690 Kamalanand Krishnamurthy, Anna University, MIT Campus, India Chapter 31 ExtendingLifetimeofBiomedicalWirelessSensorNetworksusingEnergy-AwareRoutingand RelayNodes........................................................................................................................................ 714 Carlos Abreu, Instituto Politécnico de Viana do Castelo, Portugal Paulo M. Mendes, DEI, Universidade