重要合作者

Prof. Chung-Kang Peng, PhD

Prof. Chung-Kang Peng, PhD, is a former Co-Director at the Rey Institute for Nonlinear Dynamics and the current Director of the Center for Dynamical Biomarkers at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center / Harvard Medical School. During 2012-2014, he was on leave from Harvard and served as the founding Dean of the College of Health Sciences and Technology at National Central University (NCU) in Taiwan. He is currently the K.-T. Li Visiting Chair Professor at NCU, Visiting Chair Professor at National Chiao Tung University in Taiwan, and Visiting Professor at China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences in China.

Jointly with the HTC Corporation, Prof. Peng led a team, called Dynamical Biomarkers Group, of physicians, scientists and engineers to compete in the $10 Million Qualcomm Tricorder XPRIZE competition, the biggest biomedical prize in history. This XPRIZE brought together more than 250 teams with the goal of developing a mobile solution for end-patients to diagnose their health conditions and monitor their vital signs. The Tricorder name is based on the medical diagnostic device of Star Trek fame. The Dynamical Biomarkers Group was one of the two finalist teams that won the final awards in April 2017.

Prof. Peng has extensive expertise in statistical physics and its application to the study of physiological measures. He has been working in this field since he was a graduate student. Along with fellow collaborators he has developed a number of useful, novel techniques in this area:

· Detrended fluctuation analysis (DFA) which is based on statistical physics, measures fractal properties of physiologic signals (Phys. Rev. E. 49:1685, 1994).

· Multiscale entropy (MSE) which measures the complexity of a (physiological) time-series. (Phys. Rev. Lett. 89:068102, 2002 , Nature News Commentary).

· An algorithm, based on information theory and statistical physics, for linguistic analysis of symbolic sequences. It has been applied to bio-medical signals (Phys. Rev. Lett. 90:108103, 2003), human languages, and DNA sequences.

· A measurement of time reversal asymmetry in heart rate time series (Phys. Rev. Lett. 95:198102, 2005).

· ECG-based cardiopulmonary coupling analysis for the study of sleep (Sleep 28:1151-1161, 2005).

· An index for dynamic cerebral autoregulation (Biomed Eng Online 3:39, 2004).

Prof. Peng is one of the founding members of the PhysioNet (together with Prof. Ary Goldberger, Prof. Roger Mark, Mr. George Moody, Prof. Leon Glass, Prof. Gene Stanley). PhysioNet is the largest resource for the biomedical signal analysis community, attracting more than 1 million biomedical researchers, engineers, students to visit its website each year. The PhysioNet provides a large collection of physiologic signal databases, as well as software tools for signals processing and analysis.

Prof. Peng’s publications have been cited more than 36,000 times (h-index: 73).