JEFFERSON LUIZ BRUM MARQUES obtained his degree in Electrical Engineering (UFSM-Brazil, 1986), Master in Sciences in Biomedical Engineering (UNICAMP-Brazil, 1989) and a PhD in Medical Physics Clinical Engineering (University of Sheffield-United Kingdom, 1994). He worked as a Clinical Scientist at the Department of Medical Physics Clinical Engineering, Faculty of Medicine, Sheffield University (1995-1997). He is currently a Professor in Biomedical Engineering at the Federal University of Santa Catarina in the Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering. He holds a Researcher Productivity Scholarship grade 1C of the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) in Biomedical Engineering. He has published several articles in specialised journals and proceedings of events related to his area of activity and research. He has developed software, hardware, and other technical production items. He supervised 68 master's dissertations, 12 doctoral theses, fifteen undergraduate research works, and 37 final-year Electrical and Electronic engineering projects. He is supervising ten master dissertations and six doctoral theses in the post-graduation courses in Electrical/Biomedical Engineering, Medical Sciences and Health Informatics. Between 1998 and 2023, he participated in several research projects, having coordinated some of them. He works in Electronics/Biomedical Engineering, emphasising biomedical signal processing, mathematical modelling of biological phenomena, electronic and biomedical instrumentation, and electrophysiology. In his professional activities, he interacted with several collaborators in co-authorship of scientific works. In his curriculum, the most frequent terms in the contextualisation of scientific, technological production are diabetes mellitus, digital signal processing, electronic and biomedical instrumentation, hypoglycaemia, electrocardiogram, medical informatics, digital image processing, artificial intelligence, bio-electromagnetism, early diagnosis and biomarkers, ubiquitous health and healthcare 4.0, electrophysiological measurements, diabetic neuropathies, chronic disease management, heart rate variability, epilepsy and physiological measurements.