60th Invention Day Award / Kim Ki-doo (Department of Electronic Engineering), Professor Emeritus

  • 25.06.27 / 이정민

 

 

 

 

Professor Kim Ki-doo, Honorary Professor of the Department of Electronic Engineering at Kookmin University, received the Chairman's Award from the National Intellectual Property Committee at the 60th National Invention Day Commemoration Ceremony for his outstanding contributions, including the development of a prototype for non-invasive glycated hemoglobin measurement using PPG signals for the first time in the world.

 

Professor Kim has made significant contributions over the past five years to securing a leading position in the global digital health wearable device and diabetes monitoring device markets, as well as strengthening national competitiveness, through the development of the world's first “non-invasive glycated hemoglobin estimation algorithm and device using PPG signals.”

 

Notably, since 2020, he has published 15 papers in world-renowned SCI(E) journals, registered nine domestic patents, filed three PCT applications, and filed four U.S. patent applications (technology transfer to Korea ITES Co., Ltd.: technology transfer fee: KRW 1.2 billion). Through collaboration with the company that acquired the patent technology, the team won three Innovation Awards at CES 2025 (in three categories: Digital Health, Mobile Devices Accessories & Apps, and Product in Support of Human Security), demonstrating the excellence of the developed technology to the world.

 

Additionally, through the “Intellectual Property Education Leading University Project” and the “Intellectual Property Fusion Talent Cultivation Project in New Industries,” the company has actively contributed to the expansion of intellectual property education and the cultivation of IP fusion talent.

 

 

 

This content is translated from Korean to English using the AI translation service DeepL and may contain translation errors such as jargon/pronouns.

If you find any, please send your feedback to kookminpr@kookmin.ac.kr so we can correct them.

 

View original article [click]

 

60th Invention Day Award / Kim Ki-doo (Department of Electronic Engineering), Professor Emeritus

 

 

 

 

Professor Kim Ki-doo, Honorary Professor of the Department of Electronic Engineering at Kookmin University, received the Chairman's Award from the National Intellectual Property Committee at the 60th National Invention Day Commemoration Ceremony for his outstanding contributions, including the development of a prototype for non-invasive glycated hemoglobin measurement using PPG signals for the first time in the world.

 

Professor Kim has made significant contributions over the past five years to securing a leading position in the global digital health wearable device and diabetes monitoring device markets, as well as strengthening national competitiveness, through the development of the world's first “non-invasive glycated hemoglobin estimation algorithm and device using PPG signals.”

 

Notably, since 2020, he has published 15 papers in world-renowned SCI(E) journals, registered nine domestic patents, filed three PCT applications, and filed four U.S. patent applications (technology transfer to Korea ITES Co., Ltd.: technology transfer fee: KRW 1.2 billion). Through collaboration with the company that acquired the patent technology, the team won three Innovation Awards at CES 2025 (in three categories: Digital Health, Mobile Devices Accessories & Apps, and Product in Support of Human Security), demonstrating the excellence of the developed technology to the world.

 

Additionally, through the “Intellectual Property Education Leading University Project” and the “Intellectual Property Fusion Talent Cultivation Project in New Industries,” the company has actively contributed to the expansion of intellectual property education and the cultivation of IP fusion talent.

 

 

 

This content is translated from Korean to English using the AI translation service DeepL and may contain translation errors such as jargon/pronouns.

If you find any, please send your feedback to kookminpr@kookmin.ac.kr so we can correct them.

 

View original article [click]

 

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