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Bruce Sayers

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Bruce Mc Arthur Sayers
Born(1928-02-06)6 February 1928[3]
Hampstead London
Died12 May 2008(2008-05-12) (aged 80)
Salisbury
Alma materImperial College
SpouseRuth Wools Humphery
Scientific career
Fieldsbiomedical engineering
InstitutionsMelbourne University,[1] Imperial College[2]
Doctoral advisorColin Cherry

Bruce Mc Arthur Sayers (6 February 1928 – 12 May 2008[4]) was a British electrical engineer. He was a professor and served as head of the Department of Electrical Engineering and later head of the Department of Computing at Imperial College, London.[5]

He was also Dean of the City and Guilds College for two terms.

He married Ruth Wools Humphery on the 30th August 1951 in the Presbyterian Church Frankston Victoria. By the winter of 1954 Bruce and Ruth had boarded the Italian Ship Flotta Laura bound for the UK.

Works[1]

Sayers was born in Hampstead London on 6 February 1928 and moved to Melbourne with his parents. He was initially educated at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT). He graduated from Melbourne University with a first-class degree in Physics and Electrical Engineering. He then worked as an electronics design engineer before working in Imperial College as a research student. In 1968 he became Professor of Engineering Applied to Medicine.

During the 1960s Sayers established the Engineering in Medicine Laboratory, which became a research centre for physics and engineering applications to biomedical problems. In 1989, the laboratory eventually became the College's Centre for Biological and Medical Systems. Finally, in the 1990s, this became the Department of Bioengineering for Imperial College.

Throughout his career, Sayers published various research papers about signal processing and statistical techniques to biomedical problems. He worked with the World Health Organization to study the spread of many diseases. In the 1990s he worked in WHO's Advisory Committee on Heath Research (ACHR), chaired several subcommittees, and served as the vice-chairman of ACHR.

Sayers co-edited a book on Global Health and the Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems, which is sponsored by UNESCO, until his death.

References

  1. ^ a b Bruce Sayers: Professor of Engineering Applied to Medicine, The Times, 6 July 2008
  2. ^ Imperial honours long-serving member of College, IC Reporter, 19 November - 2 December 1996
  3. ^ Death notice for Bruce Sayers Archived 13 October 2008 at archive.today, Physics Today, 11 July 2008
  4. ^ "Memorial service for Professor Bruce Sayers". Imperial Department of Computing. Archived from the original on 18 May 2011. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  5. ^ "Book Reviews". Family & Community History. 19 (1): 65–79. 2 January 2016. doi:10.1080/14631180.2016.1144962. ISSN 1463-1180. S2CID 218669139.