The Calgary Pediatric Stroke Program team standing in a field

The BCI Team

Program Leadership

Headshot Dr. Kirton

Dr. Adam Kirton

Program Director

Professor of Pediatrics, Radiology, and Clinical Neurosciences

In addition to being the director for the BCI4Kids program, Dr. Adam Kirton is also the director for the Calgary Pediatric Stroke Program and is a practicing pediatric neurologist at the Alberta Children's Hospital. He was inspired to launch the BCI program after learning about the potential of BCI technology to help the kids he saw both in his clinical practice and through his research in perinatal stroke. He has brought together a multidisciplinary team to tackle the challenge of adapting BCI technology for children. His vision is to ensure children with physical disabilities have access to this cutting-edge technology that can increase their independence and participation in the world around them. When he is not seeing patients or leading his research teams, Adam loves skiing, golfing and biking.

UofC profile     ACHRI profile     CIHR profile     HBI profile     PubMed

Nicole R.

Nicole Romanow

Program Manager

As the Program Manager for the Calgary Pediatric Stroke Program and BCI4Kids, Nicole directs the operations of the research program and manages the group’s many local, national, and international collaborations. She came to the program because she wanted to be part of the direct connection between research and the impact on children and families, bringing her experience in designing, implementing, and executing projects and leading multi-disciplinary teams. Nicole has an MSc in Community Health Sciences and is a certified Project Management Professional. When she isn’t overseeing program activities, she is usually mountain biking in the summer or skiing in the winter.

ACHRI Profile   UCalgary Profile     Google Scholar

Eli, lead scientist

Dr. Eli Kinney-Lang

Assistant Professor 

Eli leads the technical arm of BCI4Kids within his research program in the Department of Biomedical Engineering. He is originally from Laramie, Wyoming and completed his PhD in biomedical signal processing in Edinburgh, Scotland. He is extremely passionate about progressing the field of pediatric BCI research and collaborating with other research groups, clinicians, industry partners and families. As an avid game enthusiast, he is very interested in developing and adapting games for children with disabilities and gamifying BCI. In addition to playing games of all sorts, he loves watching movies and hanging out with his family.

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Trainees

Dr. Ludymila Borges

Dr. Ludymila Borges

Postdoctoral Researcher

Ludymila has a B.Sc. in Biomedical Engineering and M.Sc. and Ph.D. in Science, Electrical Engineering Program. Throughout Ludy's academic experience, they have worked with signal processing (EEG, EMG, IMU sensors), neuromodulation (Binaural Beats, TMS, DBS, TDCs), hardware and software development, human-machine interfaces, wheelchair technology, and robotics, among other areas. Moreover, Ludy has had the privilege of sharing their knowledge as a lecturer, teaching electronics, and contributing to cutting-edge research and development projects during their time with a startup.

PubMed

Portrait shot of master's of science candidate Joanna

Joanna Keough

MSc Candidate

Joanna received her BSc in Health Science from Mount Royal University. Joanna’s MSc research with the Calgary Perinatal Stroke Program is focused on optimizing brain-computer interfaces for children with quadriplegic cerebral palsy. In particular, Joanna is investigating the role of fatigue in brain-computer interface performance and enjoyment. Her research utilizes EEG data as well as other quantitative and qualitative assessments of fatigue. Joanna is passionate about increasing the independence of children with cerebral palsy.

PubMed

Portrait shot of postdoctoral fellow Daniel

Dr. Daniel Comaduran Marquez

Postdoctoral Fellow

Daniel joined the BCI4kids team in October 2021 as a postdoctoral fellow. He has completed a PhD and MSc in biomedical engineering at the University of Calgary. Daniel’s graduate work focused in developing bioinstrumentation to acquire electrophysiological signals (i.e., EMG and EEG). Now, as part of the BCI4Kids team, Daniel is working on two main projects. The first project aims to develop a BCI-enabled Boccia ramp to improve inclusion of children with severe motor disabilities in paralympic sports; the second project aims to improve BCI by removing artifact signals (e.g., eye blinks and muscle activity) from the EEG signal. Daniel’s main interest is to develop appropriate solutions to improve the quality of life of people with disabilities. In his free time, he enjoys playing guitar, soccer, and biking.

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Anna B.

Anna Bourgeois

MSc Candidate

Anna earned her BSc. in Exercise and Health Physiology (Kinesiology) from the University of Calgary and is currently pursuing a MSc. in Neuroscience. She has a background in high performance sport and is passionate about developing and improving the enjoyment and access to rehabilitation technology and para-sport programming for individuals with disabilities. Her research is centered around patient input, aiming to design a more engaging therapy for children and teens with perinatal stroke. She is focused on adapting brain-computer interface (BCI) technology to integrate with functional electrical stimulation and social media, aiming to leverage brain plasticity for enhancing functional gains translating into more independence for children with physical disabilities.

Adam L.

Adam Luoma

MSc Candidate

Adam received his BSc in Psychology, Neuroscience and Behaviour with a specialization in Music Cognition from McMaster University, and joined the lab in 2023. For his MSc research, Adam is developing BCI systems for musical composition and performance. His project uses real time EEG data to control musical elements. Adam hopes to provide all children the same creative freedom he experiences from playing music. Outside of the lab you can find Adam out exploring the mountains.

Araz M.

Araz Minhas

PhD Candidate

Araz graduated with a BSc in Neuroscience from the University of Calgary and is furthering his studies in the field under the MD/PhD program. With a background in software development and diverse computational methods, he is passionate about leveraging the latest advances in artificial intelligence (AI) to further real-world usability of pediatric brain-computer interface (BCI) technologies and enhance quality of life for children with complex needs and their families. His PhD research specifically focuses on investigating neurophysiological markers of parental comfort in comatose children being cared for in the intensive care unit — to develop AI-based clinical decision support tools for predicting outcomes, supporting early intervention, and hoping to enable an avenue for reestablishing parent-child communication in these critical circumstances through BCI systems. He is committed to reconnecting children with their families and caregivers and ensuring better outcomes for their lives by supporting advancements in neurotechnology.


Program Staff

Alison

Alison Barnfather

Occupational Therapist

Alison is an Occupational Therapist in a Research Clinician role at the Alberta Children’s Hospital. Her responsibilities include identifying and implementing research outcomes into clinical best practice. She currently works alongside the BCI Clinical Program Lead to develop all elements of the BCI Clinical Program at the ACH. She is a key liaison between the BCI4Kids research program and the frontline clinical services. She is interested in maximizing occupational participation and social connection for children with disabilities and facilitating their ability to meet their identified goals. Alison has a BSc in Occupational Therapy and an MSc in Public Health (Health Promotion).
PubMed

Danette, occupational therapist

Danette Rowley

Occupational Therapist

Danette is an occupational therapist, originally from Midnight Lake (Glaslyn), Saskatchewan. Her substantial experience in access technologies and seating has been monumental in helping us transition BCI technology out of the laboratory and into the homes of the kids in our program. She is determined to break down barriers the kids in our program face to participation using BCI and any other technology that could provide them new ways to interact with the world. When she is not working, Danette loves spending time with her family and being active with hiking, biking and yoga.

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Ion, biomedical engineer

Ion Robu

Biomedical Technologist

Ion is a biomedical engineer who works part time with the BCI team. He comes up with ingenious solutions for many of our hardware and design challenges and loves pushing the boundaries of what is possible with BCI. We wish he could be with us full time, but he also supports various programs at the Alberta Children's Hospital including the ACETS team and running gait analyses. Ion is originally from Romania and loves skiing, hiking, anything with computers and building DIY projects.

PubMed

Headshot of our assistant BCI technologist Brian

Brian Irvine

BCI Research Engineer (EIT)

Brian recently joined the BCI team after completing his Master's degree in biomedical engineering from the University of Oulu, Finland. He is originally from Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. Brian loves working and tinkering on the behind-the-scenes development of BCI technology. He also loves that BCI feels like a superpower - he is constantly impressed and inspired by what the kids in the BCI4Kids program are able to do with BCI. In his free time, Brian enjoys reading, running and rock climbing.

PubMed

Headshot of a man with short hair and glasses smiling at the camera

Greg Wilding

Software Engineer

Greg is a software engineer helping the BCI team commercialize some of their technology, including the Think2Switch device.  He's a geek at heart, comfortable leading the team but still likes to roll up his sleeves to code.  Outside the office, Greg is an avid cyclist and enjoys snowboarding.

Headshot of a woman with shoulder length wavy hair smiling at the camera

Karin Eldred

Physiotherapy Research Clinician

Karin is a physiotherapist with over 15 years of clinical experience working with patients and their families, primarily in small healthcare centres in rural Alberta.  Her professional interests include enabling clinicians to work to their full scope of practice, implementing innovation into physiotherapy assessment and intervention, and supporting ongoing research at Alberta Children’s Hospital. In her free time, Karin enjoys exploring the outdoors while running, biking, hiking or skiing.

PubMed