“…[9][10][11][12][13] The results have encouraged investigations to enable the detection of weak low frequency biomagnetic fields with room temperature sensors. 14 This has involved research to increase the effect size of the ME response, e.g., materials, effects of device geometry and operation modes, [15][16][17][18] resonance-enhancement and loss mechanisms, 13 and investigation of noise effects and their behavior including the Johnson-Nyquist noise [19][20][21][22][23] from dielectric losses in piezoelectric materials 24 in ME cantilevers and electronics, noise in magnetostrictive (MS) materials, and thermal vibration noise. 23,[25][26][27][28] Different operation modes investigated for low frequency biomagnetic field sensing 14 include (1) direct detection, where magnetic fields oscillating at the cantilever resonance directly excite magnetostrictivepiezoelectric strain coupling and resonance-enhanced signals; (2) modulation techniques, [29][30][31] where signal fields are detected as sidebands to a carrier as a result of frequency mixing in non-linear functional materials; and (3) the ΔE effect, 32,33 where the field dependence of the elastic modulus in magnetostrictive materials is used.…”