Professor Risto Ilmoniemi
Risto
Ilmoniemi, Ph.D. is
Academy Professor, Professor of Engineering and Physics, Department of
Biomedical
Engineering and Computational Science (BECS), Aalto University School of
Science, Finland.
Risto is one of the world’s leading experts
in MEG and TMS techniques.
During his term as Academy Professor,
he is developing completely new brain imaging
methods, the most ambitious of which is simultaneous MEG and
MRI. Other brain imaging methods include multichannel TMS, various
hybrid techniques that involve infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) as well as
MRI-guided, high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU), which can be used
for bloodless brain surgery.
Upon completion of his doctorate at Helsinki University of Technology
(TKK), Risto took up a post-doctoral research position in the United
States in 1985–1987, and then returned to the TKK Low Temperature
Laboratory as Senior Assistant. At this time, Professor Olli Lounasmaa
was conducting leading-edge research at the laboratory to develop the
revolutionary new technique of magnetoencelography (MEG). The laboratory
achieved world fame, and Risto was prominently involved in the
research effort. In 1994, he was appointed Director of the BioMag
Laboratory at Helsinki University Hospital. He then moved into the
private sector as Managing Director of Nexstim, a spin-off company he
founded himself. The company’s main business was to commercialize the
transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) system that he had
pioneered. In 2004, the company won the Innofinland Prize and in 2006,
the European IST Prize. In September 2006, he returned to TKK as
Professor of Engineering Physics, having gained valuable industrial
experience.
Risto’s project for his term as Academy Professor is
described as pioneering, innovative, multidisciplinary and
scientifically highly challenging. It is expected to have substantial
social impact. It will pave the way to new, highly effective methods in
the diagnosis and treatment of several serious diseases, including
neoplasms, stroke, epilepsy, Parkinson’s disease, depression, and
tinnitus. His research also has industrial value since its
ultimate goal is to develop new instruments with commercial application.
The project has the backing of SalWe Ltd., the Strategic Centre for
Science, Technology, and Innovation in Health and
Well-Being.
Read
Unprecedented accuracy in locating brain electrical activity with new
device.
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