Dr Tim Good
CEng, PhD, BEng
School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Research Associate
Communications Research Group
- Profile
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I received a BEng degree in Electronic Engineering from the University of Sheffield in 1991. Following many years in industry I returned to this university to study for a PhD which was awarded in 2007.
I joined the medical physics department of Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS FT and have developed a number of electronic medical devices.
Some years later, I returned to the University of Sheffield to continue this research theme together with a number of teaching duties.
My research has included very low power cryptographic hardware implementations of the Advanced Encryption Standard, comparison of stream cipher candidate ciphers hardware performance, 64-channel functional electrical nerve stimulator with autonomous setup for correcting drop-foot, electrical impedance spectroscopy probes for tissue analysis and development of a tele-health system to support type-1 diabetes.
- Qualifications
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- CEng, MIET
- PhD, University of Sheffield 2007
- BEng Electronic Engineering (Computing), University of Sheffield 1991
- Research interests
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- Medical device electronics
- Cryptologic hardware
- Embedded software, FPGA & ASIC
- Publications
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Journal articles
- A deep neural network application for improved prediction of HbA1c in type 1 diabetes. IEEE Journal of Biomedical and Health Informatics. View this article in WRRO
- A review of the design and clinical evaluation of the ShefStim array-based functional electrical stimulation system. Medical Engineering and Physics, 38(11), 1159-1165. View this article in WRRO
- Enhancing public involvement in assistive technology design research. Disability and Rehabilitation: Assistive Technology, 10(3), 258-265.
- Feasibility Study of a Take-Home Array-Based Functional Electrical Stimulation System With Automated Setup for Current Functional Electrical Stimulation Users With Foot-Drop. Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 95(10), 1870-1877.
- Automated setup of functional electrical stimulation for drop foot using a novel 64 channel prototype stimulator and electrode array: Results from a gait-lab based study. Medical Engineering & Physics, 35(1), 74-81.
- A holistic approach examining RFID design for security and privacy. The Journal of Supercomputing, 64(3), 664-684. View this article in WRRO
- The development, preliminary validation and clinical utility of a shoe model to quantify foot and footwear kinematics in 3-D. Gait & Posture, 36(3), 434-438.
- The use of hydrogel as an electrode–skin interface for electrode array FES applications. Medical Engineering & Physics, 33(8), 967-972.
- 692-nW Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) on a 0.13-$mu$m CMOS. IEEE Transactions on Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) Systems, 18(12), 1753-1757.
- A low-frequency RFID to challenge security and privacy concerns. 2009 IEEE 6th International Conference on Mobile Adhoc and Sensor Systems.
- Pipelined AES on FPGA with support for feedback modes (in a multi-channel environment). IET Information Security, 1(1), 1-1.
- A protocol for a cluster randomised controlled trial of the DAFNEplus (Dose Adjustment for Normal Eating) intervention compared with 5x1 DAFNE: A lifelong approach to promote effective self-management in adults with type 1 diabetes. BMJ Open.
Chapters
- ASIC Hardware Performance, Lecture Notes in Computer Science (pp. 267-293). Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Conference proceedings papers
- The Design, Development and Evaluation of an Array-Based FES System with Automated Setup for the Correction of Drop Foot. IFAC-PapersOnLine, Vol. 48(20) (pp 309-314)
- Automated setup of functional electrical stimulation for drop foot using a novel 64 channel prototype stimulator and electrode array: results from a gait-lab based study. Annals of Neurology, Vol. 72
- A low-frequency RFID to challenge security and privacy concerns. 2009 IEEE 6TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MOBILE ADHOC AND SENSOR SYSTEMS (MASS 2009) (pp 40-47)
- Price to provide rfid security and privacy?. SECRYPT 2008 - International Conference on Security and Cryptography, Proceedings (pp 209-213)
- Very small FPGA application-specific instruction processor for AES. IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems I: Regular Papers, Vol. 53(7) (pp 1477-1486)
- AES on FPGA from the Fastest to the Smallest (pp 427-440)
- AES as stream cipher on a small FPGA. 2006 IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems
- Hardware results for selected stream cipher candidates. ECRYPT. Bochum, Germany, 31 January 2007 - 1 February 2007.
- Hardware performance of eStream phase-III stream cipher candidates. Ecrypt
- Review of stream cipher candidates from a low resource hardware perspective. Ecrypt. Leuven, Belgium, 2 February 2006 - 3 February 2006.
- Teaching activities
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- EEE232 HDL-based design & programmable logic
- EEE6225 System Design