Professor Christofer Toumazou FMedSci FREng FRS

Christofer Toumazou is a remarkable electronic engineer who works to apply silicon-chip technology to medical devices for the 21st century. Whilst working on his PhD, he made a major advance that led to a radical transformation of analogue signal processing. By creating chips that use low-energy technology, he was able to develop devices that can perform data crunching at their site of operation.

Such devices are now being used to improve health monitoring and genetic testing, which have become multibillion-pound industries. As well as developing new technologies, Christofer founded a medical research institute at Imperial College London as well as three companies to commercialise his research.

Christofer has received a huge number of awards and honours in recognition of his work, including the prestigious European Inventor Award of the European Patent Office in 2014. He was appointed Regius Professor of Engineering at Imperial in 2013 — a rare privilege bestowed by Her Majesty The Queen to acknowledge exceptionally high standards of teaching and research.

Subject groups

  • Engineering and Materials Science

    Engineering, electronics, Engineering, semiconductors

  • Health and Human Sciences

    Medical instrumentation

Awards

  • Clifford Paterson Medal and Lecture

    On 'The bionic man'.

  • Gabor Medal

    For his success in applying semiconductor technology to biomedical and life-science applications, most recently to DNA analysis.

Professor Christofer Toumazou FMedSci FREng FRS
Elected 2008
Committees Participated Role
Sectional Committee 4: Engineering November 2023 - October 2023 Member
Neural Interface Steering Group February 2018 - December 2024 Chair
Hooke Committee January 2010 - December 2012 Member
Sectional Committee 4: Engineering December 2008 - November 2011 Member