Hello all,
I am relatively new to this forum and to the world of analog electronics
Background:
I am a electrical engineering undergrad who has taken a few courses on electromagnetism and electronics. I am familiar with some basic components (resistors, capacitors, inductors, and a tiny bit of semiconductors) and some principles (Ohm's Law, induction, Maxwell's Equations). However, I have never designed my own circuits. I have some experience with microcontrollers, but not much with analog components.
Interests:
My end goal is to design circuits for electronic medical devices (diagnosis, monitoring, wearables, EMG, EEG, etc...). I also have general interests in controls, signal processing, and embedded systems.
The Question:
The thing is, there is a lot of information out there, and I am easily overwhelmed and stuck in analysis paralysis. What path would you all recommend I take to get to designing medical stuff? Books? Particular circuits? Should I focus on first learning basic circuits and fundamental building blocks or should I dive in and learn as I go? I'd like to develop a sort of outline/roadmap of things I should learn and do.
I am relatively new to this forum and to the world of analog electronics
Background:
I am a electrical engineering undergrad who has taken a few courses on electromagnetism and electronics. I am familiar with some basic components (resistors, capacitors, inductors, and a tiny bit of semiconductors) and some principles (Ohm's Law, induction, Maxwell's Equations). However, I have never designed my own circuits. I have some experience with microcontrollers, but not much with analog components.
Interests:
My end goal is to design circuits for electronic medical devices (diagnosis, monitoring, wearables, EMG, EEG, etc...). I also have general interests in controls, signal processing, and embedded systems.
The Question:
The thing is, there is a lot of information out there, and I am easily overwhelmed and stuck in analysis paralysis. What path would you all recommend I take to get to designing medical stuff? Books? Particular circuits? Should I focus on first learning basic circuits and fundamental building blocks or should I dive in and learn as I go? I'd like to develop a sort of outline/roadmap of things I should learn and do.