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Dr Udantha Abeyratne
Dr

Udantha Abeyratne

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Overview

Background

Recent News

August, 2019: Post Doctoral Researchers/Resercah Associates/PhD Candidates

A/Prof Abeyratne is accepting (2021) post-doctoral researchers/covering the areas of: pattern recognition, machine learning, respiratory sound analysis, digital signal processing and smart phone programming. Qualified students are invited to apply for PhD scholarships on a competitve basis.

June 2021:

Snore sound based Sleep Apnea diagnostics intellectual property developed by Dr. Udantha Abeyratne and his team are available for commercialisation. The technology is the culmination of 20 years of ground breaking work leading to four patent applications including two granted ones in the USA (the rest are under examination at various stages) and a large portfolio of peer reviewed publications in international scholarly journals. A Matlab implementation of re-trainable technology and performance comparions against American Academy of Sleep Medicine scoring critera of 2007 (AASM 2007) are available. Prior comparisons on Chicago Criteria ("AASM 1999") are also available via peer-reviewed literature. Our software models indicate that the technology can diagnose sleep apnea at a sensitivity and specificity approching that of a standard facility-based polysomnography (sensitivity, specificity around 90%, 90%-- cross validation studies). Note that the model development data sets available to us (n=100 approx) had been scored per AASM 2007 clinical criteria. Thus, the resulting models require a straight-forward re-training (re-calibration) process on AASM 2012 data before they can be used on subjects diagnosed under AASM 2012 criteria (which is the clinical scoring standard in effect since 2012).

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Assoc./Prof. Udantha Abeyratne is the inventor of the cough-sound based respiratory diagnosis technology (ResApp Health Ltd. (ASX: RAP)) and snore sound based sleep apnea diagnosis technology SnoreSounds.

He earned a PhD (Biomedical Engineering) from Drexel University, USA, and MEng and BScEE degrees in Electrical & Electronic Engineering from Tokushima U, Japan and U Peradeniya, (video here) Sri Lanka respectively. He also received formal post-graduate training in Higher Education (Grad Cert , U of Queensland, Australia) and Paediatric Sleep Science (Grad Cert., U of Western Australia, Australia). He is a Senior Member of the Institute of Electrical & Electronic Engineers (IEEE, USA), and a full Member of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM).

​Dr. Abeyratne started his research career with a paper on coding techniques for low-bandwidth communication channels. His master's thesis was on a machine learning approach to the human brain activity analysis using electroencephalography (EEG, Brain Waves) and evoked potentials. This approach won the best paper award in ISBET Brain Topography Conference (Osaka, Japan, 1990) and also placed Dr. Abeyratne as a finalist at the Young Investigators' Competition in IFMBE World Congress on Medical Physics and Biomedical Engineering, 1991 (Kyoto, Japan). He completed his PhD (1996) with Prof. Athina Petropulu as the advisor, working on Higher-Order-Spectra and medical ultrasound imaging. The thesis developed slice-based low-complexity algorithms for blind signal identification, tumor detection in ultarsound images, and image deconvolution.

Teaching Activities:

Assoc/Prof. Abeyratne has designed and taught university level courses on digital signal processing, electronic circuits, medical and general instrumentation, medical signal processing, medical imaging, control systems, project management and electromagnetic waves. He has supervised both undergraduate and postgraduate dissertation thesis projects in these areas. Within the last decade five students supervised by him won competitive awards at the UQ Innovation Expo.

Current Research Profile:

Assoc./Prof. Abeyratne's research interests encompass digital signal processing, machine learning, medical instrumentation, medical imaging, electrophysiology, bio-signal analysis and electronics. Over the last two decades A/Prof. Abeyratne has conceptualized, initiated and led the development of a number of innovative technologies funded by prestigious granting agencies such as the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Australian Research Council and the A*-Star Singapore. His research programmes are characteristic of unorthodox approaches resulting in pioneering outcomes that produced spin-off companies, patents and scholarly publications. His research has recieved multiple peer accolades at the international level.

1. Electronic Instrument Design: hand-held ultrasound devices for medical, agricultural and industrial use; stethoscopes for the 21st century (The "Magithescope(c)", winner of two UQ Expo awards in 2013, 2014); biomimetic sensing devices (e.g. electronic nose, e-tongue), low-cost, portable electronic devices ("Tricoders") for diagnosing diseases such as apnea, asthma, pneumonia; wearable electrophysiological devices; real-time fatigue measurement and warning systems; hand-held instruments for the condition monitoring of machinery such as power transformers. Development of diagnostic and treatment devices for sleep apnea. Dr. Abeyratne is especially interested in developing accurate, multi-purpose and low-cost in-situ decision devices for applications in resource-poor regions of the world.

2. Diagnostic and Treatment Technology for Sleep Disorders: speech-like analysis of snore and breathing sounds; sleep diagnostic instrument design; sleep polysomnography, brain wave (EEG) analysis in sleep, quantification of fatigue and sleepiness; sleep apnea; design of apnea treatment devices (CPAP, dental devices); interaction of apnea and chronic diseases. mHealth approaches in sleep diagnostics. A/Prof. Abeyratne pioneered speech-like processing of respiratory sounds, leading to patents, papers and a spin-off company. He conceptualized and led the development of EEG based technology to quantifiy sleepiness in real-time in actual work environments. Outcomes of this program have recieved wide coverage in international media outlets due to its groundbreaking nature and the potential impact.

3. Respiratory Diagnostic Technology: diagnostic instrumentation and algorithm design for respiratory illnesses such as pneumonia, bronchiolitis, asthma, bronchiectasis and COPD; cough sound analysis in respiratory medicine; imaging technology for respiratory diagnosis; Portable diagnostic technologies and mHealth approaches for remote resource-poor areas of the world. About 1 million children below the age of 5 yrs die every year of pneumonia alone, mainly in remote resource-poor areas of the world. Poor access to diagnostics and medical treatment are the major reasons for pneumonia fatalities. A/Prof. Abeyratne proposed a ground-breaking new technology to diagnose pneumonia centred about cough sound analysis. For this research Dr. Abeyratne received funding from UQ, UniQuest and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which lauded the project (Page 4) as an exmaple for an innovative idea with high impact. Outcomes led to scholarly publications and contributed to patents as well as a spinoff company by UQ.

4. Signal Processing and Machine Intelligence: the analysis of bio-signals such as electroencephalography (EEG), electromyography (EMG); speech and industrial sound analysis, bowel sound analysis and the characterisation of inflammatory bowel disease; cardiovascular signal processing, source localization and blind source separation, higher order spectra, wavelets, pattern recognition, classifier design. Developing technology for monitoring the condition of Left Ventricular Assist Devices (LVAD).

5. mHealth: research on smart phone and other consumer devices as a platform for healthcare delivery. A/Prof Abeyratne is actively engaged in developing mHealth diagnostic solutions, including translating and customising sleep and respiratory technologies. He is also in the process of expanding the work to include meaningful deployment of the technology in both the developed and developing worlds, in collaboration with international NGOs, experts in community medicine, and the UQ spin-off companies resulting from the research program. New national and international collaborations are currently being negotiated to fund and facilitate this work.

The Research Team, Past & Present:

Associate professor Udantha Abeyratne, Dr. Keegan Kosasih (Past PhD graduate); Dr Duleep Herath (past PhD gradute, )Dr. Shahin Akhter (Past PhD graduate), Dr. Vinayak Swarnkar (Past PhD graduate ); Dr. Yusuf Amrulloh (Past PhD graduate); Dr. Shaminda de Silva (Past PhD graduate); Dr. Samantha Karunajeewa (Past PhD graduate); Dr. Suren Rathnayake (Past PhD graduate), Dr. Xiao Di (Past PhD graduate), Dr. T. Emoto (Past PhD work in UQ while at UT), ; Mrunal Markendeya (Current PhD Student); Karen McCloy (current PhD student), Ajith Wakwella (Past MPhil graduate); Lee Teck Hock (Past MPhil Graduate), Tang Xiaoyan (Past MPhil Graduate), Dr. Zhang Guanglan (Past MPhil Graduate), Dr. Syed Adnan (Past MPhil Graduate) and many past and present dissertation thesis students.

Research Collaborators:

Dr. Craig Hukins & Brett Duce (Princess Alexandra Hospital), Prof. Y. Kinouchi & Dr. T. Emoto (U of Tokushima, Japan), Dr. Sarah Biggs (Monash), Dr.Simon Smith (QUT), Dr. Chandima Ekanayake (Griffith U), Dr. Paul Porter (PMH Hospital), Prof. Anne Chang (Menzies School of Health Reserach, CDU), Dr. Scott Mckenzie (Princess Charles Hospital), Dr. Nirmal Weeresekera (JKMRC, UQ), Dr. Rina Triasih (Gadjah Mada U, Indonesia), Dr. K. Puvanendran (1998-2002: Singapore General Hospital, Singapore), Prof.Stanislaw Gubanski (Chalmers U, Sweden).

Availability

Dr Udantha Abeyratne is:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Qualifications

  • Bachelor (Honours) of Science (Advanced), University of Peradeniya
  • Masters (Coursework) of Engineering, University of Tokushima
  • Doctor of Philosophy, Drexel University
  • Postgraduate Diploma in Education, The University of Queensland
  • Postgraduate Diploma, University of Western Australia

Research interests

  • Cough Counting: Respiratory Diagnostics for the Developing and Developed Worlds

    Cough is a common and one of the earliest symptoms in a range of respiratory diseases such as bronchitis, Congestive Heart Disease, pneumonia, asthma and pertussis. Cough frequency and coughing patterns can be useful in the differential diagnosis of diseases and in assessing the treatment outcomes. The nature of nocturnal cough patterns can also be highly useful in managing respiratory diseases. The manual counting of coughs in overnight (or long term) recordings is a tedious process. We are developing cough identification technology targeting ubiquitous consumer devices such as iPads/smart phones. Our methods will be available for both adults and children, including subjects with respiratory diseases. These methods need further development, validation and implementation on smart phones. Students with a background on Digital Signal Processing/Machine Learning/Pattern Recognition/iOS-Android programming and a keen interest in biomedical signal processing will be suitable for this project.

  • Differential Diagnosis of Pneumonia: Respiratory Diagnostics for the Developing and Developed Worlds

    Pneumonia annually kills about a million children throughout the world. The vast majority of these deaths occur in resource poor regions such as the sub-Saharan Africa and remote Asia. Throughout the world pneumonia can be a serious problem in the aftermath of natural disasters and among the elderly. The management of pneumonia is difficult due to field-ready diagnostic facilities as well as the scarcity of trained healthcare workers. The World Health Organization (WHO) has developed a simple clinical algorithm to classify pneumonia. It has a reasonably high sensitivity but a poor specificity leading to over-prescription of antibiotics and the wastage of drug stocks. It has also met with operational challenges in remote communities. We are developing automated pneumonia diagnostic decision technology targeting ubiquitous consumer devices such as iPads/smart phones. Our mathematical algorithms will be available on self-contained smart phones. The phone will be used as the data acquisition, analysis and decision display unit. Our pilot studies indicate that it is indeed possible to diagnose pneumonia using cough sound analysis alone at high performance (sensitivity >90%, specificity>80%). We have also demonstrated that other clinical observations can be used alone, or, together with cough. Recent results we obtained suggest that other measurements alone (e.g. existence of runny nose, #days with runny nose, breathing rate and temperature) can achieve a sensitivity of 91% at the specificity around 72%. Specificity of our method is substantially higher than that, i.e., 38%, of the WHO algorithm while the sensitivities are similar. These methods need further development, validation and implementation on smart phones. Students with a background on Digital Signal Processing/Machine Learning/Pattern Recognition/iOS-Android programming and a keen interest in biomedical signal processing will be suitable for this project.

Research impacts

Patents rsulting from A/Prof Abeyratne's Research Programs:

Multi-parametric analysis of snore sounds for the community screening of sleep apnea with non-gaussianity index, #18880207, USA, Granted (2014); An expanded version under examination (#20150039110, USA, (2015)); Method and apparatus for determining sleep stages, Application #20110301487, USA (2011); A method and apparatus for processing patient sounds, application #2013239327 (Australia); #14/389291 (USA); #13768257.1 (Europe); 2015-502020 (Japan); #201380028268 (China); 10-2014-7030062 (Korea); About 5 other Australian & International PCT stage filings since 2005.

Research spinoff companies resulting from A/Prof Abeyratne's Research Programs (all through The University of Queensland):

News Media Coverage of Research Outputs:

More than 200 major news outlets have reported my work on sleep apnea and respiratory disgnostics. Examples include: ABC Science (Australia), Discovery News (USA), The Australian (Australia), Medical News Today (USA), Z-News (India), (Journal) Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery, Springer USA Press Release, HealthLine News, Science Daily, Australian Life Sceintist, The Times (UK), Nine News (Australia) - video, CBC News (Canada), Sleep Review (journal), Lung Disease News, 2015.

Featured in Magazines

The Future of Healthcare, Ingenuity ("UQ Biomedical Engineering Research Addresses Global Issues", Pages 26-27), Discovery at UQ 2012 ("Sound Asleep?" Page 12), Bill & Melind Gates Foundation Discovery Stretegy Overview (page 4). International Innovation ("Field of Dreams"), UK, 2015.

Works

Search Professor Udantha Abeyratne’s works on UQ eSpace

189 works between 1989 and 2024

161 - 180 of 189 works

2002

Conference Publication

Spatio-temporal evolution of fatigue in flexor carpi radialis muscle: instrumentation and analysis based on 2D EMG array

Gunawan, T. S. and Abeyratne, U. R. (2002). Spatio-temporal evolution of fatigue in flexor carpi radialis muscle: instrumentation and analysis based on 2D EMG array. 7th International Conference on Control, Automation, Robotics and Vision (ICARCV 2002), Singapore, 2-5 December 2002. Piscataway, NJ, U.S.A.: IEEE. doi: 10.1109/ICARCV.2002.1234942

Spatio-temporal evolution of fatigue in flexor carpi radialis muscle: instrumentation and analysis based on 2D EMG array

2001

Journal Article

EEG source localization: A comparative study of classical and neutral network methods

Abeyratne, Udantha R., Zhang, G. and Saratchandran, P. (2001). EEG source localization: A comparative study of classical and neutral network methods. International Journal of Neural Systems, 11 (4), 349-359. doi: 10.1142/S0129065701000813

EEG source localization: A comparative study of classical and neutral network methods

2001

Conference Publication

Pitch-jitter analysis of snoring sounds for the diagnosis of sleep apnea

Abeyratne, U. R., Patabandi, C. K. K. and Puvanendran, K. (2001). Pitch-jitter analysis of snoring sounds for the diagnosis of sleep apnea. 23rd Annual International Conference of the IEEE-Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, Istanbul Turkey, 25-28 October 2001. Piscataway, NJ United States: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. doi: 10.1109/IEMBS.2001.1020642

Pitch-jitter analysis of snoring sounds for the diagnosis of sleep apnea

2001

Conference Publication

Formant-structure and phase-coupling analysis of human snoring sounds for the detection of Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Lee, T. H., Abeyratne, U. R., Puvanendran, K. and Goh, K. L. (2001). Formant-structure and phase-coupling analysis of human snoring sounds for the detection of Obstructive Sleep Apnea. 4th International Symposium on Computer Methods in Biomechanics and Biomedical Engineering, Lisbon Portugal, 1 October 2001. Amsterdam, The Netherlands: Gordon and Breach Science Publishers.

Formant-structure and phase-coupling analysis of human snoring sounds for the detection of Obstructive Sleep Apnea

2001

Conference Publication

Multigradient field active contour for multilayer detection of ultrasound rectal wall image

Xiao, Di, Ng, Wan Sing, Abeyratne, U. R. and Tsang, Charles Bih-Shiou (2001). Multigradient field active contour for multilayer detection of ultrasound rectal wall image. 23rd Annual International Conference of the IEEE-Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, Istanbul Turkey, 25-28 October 2001. Piscataway, NJ United States: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers.

Multigradient field active contour for multilayer detection of ultrasound rectal wall image

2001

Conference Publication

A systematic comparison of classical and neural network techniques in EEG source localization

Zhang, G. L., Abeyratne, U. R. and Lee, T. H. (2001). A systematic comparison of classical and neural network techniques in EEG source localization. 4th International Symposium on Computer Methods in Biomechanics and Biomedical Engineering, Lisbon Portugal, 1 October 2001. Amsterdam, The Netherlands: Gordon and Breach Science Publishers.

A systematic comparison of classical and neural network techniques in EEG source localization

2001

Conference Publication

Rectal wall structure delineation and broken layer recognition by multigradient field active contour

Xiao, Di, Ng, Wan Sing, Abeyratne, U. R., Keong, Kwoh Chee, Tsang, Charles B. and Cheon, Seow (2001). Rectal wall structure delineation and broken layer recognition by multigradient field active contour. 7th Australian and New Zealand Intelligent Information Systems Conference (ANZIIS 2001), Perth Australia, Nov 18-21, 2001. Crawley, Australia: ARCME, the University of Western Australia.

Rectal wall structure delineation and broken layer recognition by multigradient field active contour

2000

Journal Article

Wavelet transforms in estimating scatterer spacing from ultrasound echoes

Tang, X. and Abeyratne, Udantha R. (2000). Wavelet transforms in estimating scatterer spacing from ultrasound echoes. Ultrasonics, 38 (1-8), 688-692. doi: 10.1016/S0041-624X(99)00150-X

Wavelet transforms in estimating scatterer spacing from ultrasound echoes

2000

Journal Article

A novel scheme for the selective stimulation of nerve fibers using nonlinear properties of action potentials

Abeyratne, Udantha R. and Adnan, Syed M. (2000). A novel scheme for the selective stimulation of nerve fibers using nonlinear properties of action potentials. Critical Reviews in Biomedical Engineering, 28 (1-2), 95-101. doi: 10.1615/CritRevBiomedEng.v28.i12.160

A novel scheme for the selective stimulation of nerve fibers using nonlinear properties of action potentials

2000

Journal Article

RBF networks for source localization in quantitative electrophysiology

Abeyratne, Udantha R., Tun, Ang Kian, Lye, Nah Teck, Guanglan, Zhang and Saratchandran, P. (2000). RBF networks for source localization in quantitative electrophysiology. Critical Reviews in Biomedical Engineering, 28 (3-4), 463-472. doi: 10.1615/CritRevBiomedEng.v28.i34.190

RBF networks for source localization in quantitative electrophysiology

2000

Journal Article

Spectral information changes in obtaining heart rate variability from tachometer R-R interval signals

Abeysekera, S. S., Abeyratne, Udantha R. and Goh, S. B. (2000). Spectral information changes in obtaining heart rate variability from tachometer R-R interval signals. Critical Reviews in Biomedical Engineering, 28 (1-2), 149-155. doi: 10.1615/CritRevBiomedEng.v28.i12.250

Spectral information changes in obtaining heart rate variability from tachometer R-R interval signals

1999

Conference Publication

Position selective stimulation of a multifascicular nerve

Adnan, Syed M., Abeyratne, Udantha R. and Zhang, Guanglan (1999). Position selective stimulation of a multifascicular nerve. IEEE.

Position selective stimulation of a multifascicular nerve

1999

Journal Article

Blind reconstruction of non-minimum-phase systems from 1-D oblique slices of bispectrum

Abeyratne, UR (1999). Blind reconstruction of non-minimum-phase systems from 1-D oblique slices of bispectrum. Iee Proceedings-Vision Image and Signal Processing, 146 (5), 253-264. doi: 10.1049/ip-vis:19990643

Blind reconstruction of non-minimum-phase systems from 1-D oblique slices of bispectrum

1999

Conference Publication

Comparing RBF and BP neural networks in dipole localization

Guanglan, Zhang, Abeyratne, Udantha R. and Saratchandran, P. (1999). Comparing RBF and BP neural networks in dipole localization. Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, Atlanta, GA, United States, 13 - 16 October 1999. Piscataway, NJ, United States: IEEE. doi: 10.1109/IEMBS.1999.804093

Comparing RBF and BP neural networks in dipole localization

1998

Journal Article

Spectral information changes in obtaining heart rate variability from tachometer R-R interval signals

Abeysekera, Saman S. and Abeyratne, Udantha R. (1998). Spectral information changes in obtaining heart rate variability from tachometer R-R interval signals. Critical Reviews in Biomedical Engineering, 26 (5), 325-326.

Spectral information changes in obtaining heart rate variability from tachometer R-R interval signals

1998

Journal Article

RBF networks for source localization in quantitative electrophysiology

Tun, Ang Kian, Lye, Nah Teck, Guanglan, Zhang, Abeyratne, Udantha R. and Saratchandran, P. (1998). RBF networks for source localization in quantitative electrophysiology. Critical Reviews in Biomedical Engineering, 26 (5), 368-369.

RBF networks for source localization in quantitative electrophysiology

1998

Journal Article

Novel scheme for the selective stimulation of nerve fibers using nonlinear properties of action potentials

Abeyratne, Udantha R. and Adnan, Syed M. (1998). Novel scheme for the selective stimulation of nerve fibers using nonlinear properties of action potentials. Critical Reviews in Biomedical Engineering, 26 (5), 309-310.

Novel scheme for the selective stimulation of nerve fibers using nonlinear properties of action potentials

1998

Conference Publication

On the identification of non-minimum phase systems from arbitrary slices of output higher-order spectra

Abeyratne, Udantha R. (1998). On the identification of non-minimum phase systems from arbitrary slices of output higher-order spectra. 24th Annual Conference of the IEEE Industrial-Electronics-Society, Aachen Germany, Aug 31-Sep 04, 1998. Piscataway, NJ United States: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. doi: 10.1109/IECON.1998.722852

On the identification of non-minimum phase systems from arbitrary slices of output higher-order spectra

1998

Conference Publication

Signal reconstruction from bispectrum slices in biomedical applications

Abeyratne, U. R. (1998). Signal reconstruction from bispectrum slices in biomedical applications. NORSIG'98. 3rd IEEE Nordic Signal Processing Symposium, Vigsø, Denmark, 8-11 June 1998. Aalborg, Denmark: Aalborg University.

Signal reconstruction from bispectrum slices in biomedical applications

1997

Journal Article

Higher order versus second order statistics in ultrasound image deconvolution

Abeyratne, Udantha R., Petropulu, Athina P., Ried, John M., Golas, Thomas, Conant, Emily and Forsberg, Flemming (1997). Higher order versus second order statistics in ultrasound image deconvolution. IEEE Transactions On Ultrasonics Ferroelectrics and Frequency Control, 44 (6), 1409-1416. doi: 10.1109/58.656646

Higher order versus second order statistics in ultrasound image deconvolution

Funding

Past funding

  • 2018 - 2019
    Equipment for naturalistic sleep-wake, circadian rhythm, and stress measurement
    UQ Major Equipment and Infrastructure
    Open grant
  • 2017 - 2021
    Brain Asynchrony in Sleep Apnea
    NHMRC Project Grant
    Open grant
  • 2016 - 2018
    ResApp Research Project: Phase 2
    UniQuest Pty Ltd
    Open grant
  • 2015 - 2020
    Analysis of cough and breathing sounds obtained from clinical sites using iPhones and other recording devices
    UniQuest Pty Ltd
    Open grant
  • 2015 - 2017
    Research Sub-Contract between UQ and UniQuest for JHC Perth Clinical Study
    UniQuest Pty Ltd
    Open grant
  • 2014 - 2016
    Snore Sounds Technology
    UniQuest Pty Ltd
    Open grant
  • 2014 - 2015
    Project Asthma mHealth: smartphones for monitoring respiratory distress in asthma
    UQ Collaboration and Industry Engagement Fund - Seed Research Grant
    Open grant
  • 2012 - 2014
    Breathing and snoring Sound Analysis in Sleep Apnea
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2009 - 2012
    Diagnosis of Pneumonia Using Non-Contact Sound Recordings
    Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
    Open grant
  • 2007 - 2009
    Non-contact Instrumentation for the Home Monitoring of Upper Airway Obstructions in Sleep
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2006
    Snore Analysis for the Diagnosis of Apnoea
    UQ External Support Enabling Grant
    Open grant
  • 2005 - 2006
    Collection, sharing, visualisation and analysis of locally gathered information from geographical remote areas vulnerable to tidal waves (ARC SR0567373 administered by University of Melbourne).
    University of Melbourne
    Open grant
  • 2004 - 2006
    Micro Structure Analysis Of Snore Signals For the Characterization of Upper Airways During Sleep
    UQ Early Career Researcher
    Open grant
  • 2003
    Novel Instrumentation and Signal Processing Paradigms in the Diagnosis of Sleep Apnoea
    UQ New Staff Research Start-Up Fund
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Dr Udantha Abeyratne is:
Available for supervision

Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.

Supervision history

Current supervision

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Physiologic Signal Correlates of Vigilance Related Cognitive Decline in Patients with Obstructive Sleep Apnoea

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Nadeeka Dissanayaka

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Physiologic Signal Correlates of Vigilance Related Cognitive Decline in Patients with Obstructive Sleep Apnoea

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Nadeeka Dissanayaka

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Dr Udantha Abeyratne directly for media enquiries about:

  • Brain waves
  • cough sound analysis
  • Diagnosis of sleep disorders
  • Diagnostic ultrasound
  • fatigue & sleepiness
  • Medical instrumentation
  • mHealth
  • respiratory diagnostics
  • Sleep apnea
  • Sleep disorders
  • smart phone as a medical instrument
  • Snoring

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