Bailey is a Ph.D. student in Biomedical Engineering at Texas A&M University. She earned her M.S. in Biomedical Engineering and her B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from Texas A&M University. Bailey has been a member of the Optical and Bio-Sensing Laboratory since her undergraduate studies and has contributed to multiple projects in wearable medical device development. Her research focuses on wearable physiological monitoring systems, including cuffless blood pressure monitoring technologies, physiologically relevant phantom platforms for benchtop device validation, and the development of novel electrode designs for EEG and multimodal biosensing applications. Her work integrates mechanical design, sensor development, and experimental validation to advance noninvasive health monitoring technologies. Through her work in the lab, Bailey has contributed to the development of intellectual property and is an inventor on patents related to wearable biomedical sensing technologies. Bailey previously served as a PATHS-UP Scholar and is currently an Avilés-Johnson Fellow. She has also contributed to peer-reviewed research on multimodal wearable sensing platforms and remains actively involved in mentoring students within the laboratory. Her long-term goal is to develop translational medical technologies that improve access to reliable and noninvasive health monitoring.
