Georgios Zacharioudakis
Research Interests
- Parallel and distributed systems
- Ambient intelligence and smart environments
- Biomedical informatics and engineering
- Telemedicine and telemonitoring
- Wireless sensor technologies
- eHealth/mHealth management platforms
- Service oriented architectures and technologies
Participation in Research Projects
- p-MEDICINE - From data sharing and integration via VPH models to personalized medicine (FP7-ICT-2009.5.3-270089, 2011-2015)
- REACTION - Remote accessibility to diabetes management and therapy in operational healthcare networks, (FP7-IP-2009-248590, 2010-2014)
- ACGT - Advancing Clinico-Genomic Clinical Trials on Cancer: Open Grid Services for Improving Medical Knowledge Discovery, (FP6-IP-026996, 2006-2010)
- HEARTFAID - A Knowledge based platform of services for supporting medical - clinical management of heart failure within elderly population (FP6-STREP-027107, 2006-2009)
- eu-DOMAIN - enabling users for-Distance-working & Organizational Mobility using Ambient Intelligence service Networks (FP6-2003-IST-2-2003-004420, 2004-2007)
- TWISTER - Terrestrial Wireless Infrastructure integrated with Satellite Telecommunications for E-Rural applications, (2004 – 2007)
- 2WEAR - A Runtime for Adaptive and Extensible Wireless Wearables (IST-2000-25286, 2001-2003)
- THETIS - A Data Management and Data Visualization System for Supporting Coastal Zone Management for the Mediterranean Sea (1998-2000)
Short CV
Georgios Zacharioudakis holds a BSc in Computer Science and a MSc in Parallel and Distributed Systems
from the University of Crete, Greece. He collaborates with ICS-FORTH as a software engineer at the Computational Medicine
Laboratory since 2005 and has worked in various european research projects.
He has contributed in the integration of various distributed and heterogeneous systems and the implementation of
the necessary services and middleware, the design of health care telematics applications, ambient intelligence
components and applications for sensors and medical devices.