Experimental Characterization of In Vivo Wireless Communication Channels
A. Fatih Demir, Qammer H. Abbasi, Z. Esat Ankarali, Marwa Qaraqe,, Erchin Serpedin, Huseyin Arslan

TL;DR
This paper presents experimental results characterizing in vivo wireless communication channels using human cadaver studies, aiming to improve the reliability and performance of medical wireless devices.
Contribution
It provides the first experimental characterization of in vivo wireless channels and compares these findings with numerical models.
Findings
Experimental data on in vivo wireless channels from cadaver studies
Comparison of experimental results with numerical simulations
Insights into channel behavior for medical device communication
Abstract
In vivo wireless medical devices have a critical role in healthcare technologies due to their continuous health monitoring and noninvasive surgery capabilities. In order to fully exploit the potential of such devices, it is necessary to characterize the in vivo wireless communication channel which will help to build reliable and high-performance communication systems. This paper presents preliminary results of experimental characterization for this fascinating communications medium on a human cadaver and compares the results with numerical studies.
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