Subjects -> ELECTRONICS (Total: 207 journals)
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PubDate:
Jan.-Feb. 2023
Issue No: Vol. 14, No. 1 (2023)
- Advances in Microscopy Tech Offer Better Views
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Authors:
Leslie Mertz;
Pages: 2 - 7 Abstract: Microscopes have come a very long way since the 1600s when Henry Power, Robert Hooke, and Anton van Leeuwenhoek began publishing the first views of plant cells and bacteria. The major inventions of contrast, electron, and scanning tunneling microscopes didn’t arrive until the 20th century, and the men behind them all earned Nobel Prizes in physics for their efforts. Today, innovations in microscopy are coming at a fast and furious rate with new technologies providing first-time views and information about biological structures and activity, and opening up new avenues for disease therapies. PubDate:
Jan.-Feb. 2023
Issue No: Vol. 14, No. 1 (2023)
- Can Emotion AI Keep You Healthier'
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Authors:
Mary Bates;
Pages: 8 - 11 Abstract: Even for humans, it can be challenging to recognize, interpret, and respond to emotions. Can artificial intelligence (AI) do any better' Technologies often referred to as “emotion AI” detect and analyze facial expressions, voice patterns, muscle activity, and other behavioral and physiological signals associated with emotions. PubDate:
Jan.-Feb. 2023
Issue No: Vol. 14, No. 1 (2023)
- A New Era for Bionic Limbs
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Authors:
Zara Abrams;
Pages: 12 - 15 Abstract: Despite remarkable advances in the field of prosthetic limbs, existing products still aren’t meeting the needs of patients. A 2022 survey found that 44% of upper-limb amputees abandoned their prostheses, citing discomfort, heaviness of the device, and problems with functionality [1]. PubDate:
Jan.-Feb. 2023
Issue No: Vol. 14, No. 1 (2023)
- Double Vision: Study of U.K. Twins Provides New Insight Into Human
Wellbeing-
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Authors:
Jim Banks;
Pages: 16 - 19 Abstract: Back in 1992, when Prof. Tim Spector of King’s College London set up a study to investigate the incidence of osteoporosis and other rheumatologic diseases in monozygotic (identical) twins, little did he know how much the project would expand its horizons. From a few hundred identical twins, the cohort has grown to more than 15,000 identical and nonidentical twins across the U.K., aged between 18 and 100, and a host of diseases and conditions are under the microscope (Figure 1). Now, TwinsUK has one of the most deeply characterized adult twin cohorts anywhere in the world, providing vast quantities of data for longitudinal studies of health and aging. PubDate:
Jan.-Feb. 2023
Issue No: Vol. 14, No. 1 (2023)
- Next-Generation Bioprinted Products: Products of Nature or Patentable
Innovation'-
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Authors:
Jennie O. Zheng;S. Sean Tu;Stephen B. Maebius;
Pages: 20 - 21 Abstract: Bioprinting is an additive manufacturing process used to create architectures that mimic natural living tissues in form and function [1]. It involves the deposition of bioink, which can include a mixture of living cells, nutrients, and extracellular matrix. The bioink is then deposited onto a scaffold to generate 3-D structures that imitate natural tissues and organs. This process has already been used to generate a diverse range of products, including bioprinted human ears for transplant, and 3-D printed bioceramic and modified biopolymer bone implants that received U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) marketing approval [2] Researchers are working on bioprinted versions of a wide range of organs, including liver, kidney, lung, and heart. PubDate:
Jan.-Feb. 2023
Issue No: Vol. 14, No. 1 (2023)
- Engineering a Holistic Response to the Global Crisis of Forced
Displacement-
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Authors:
Muhammad Hamid Zaman;
Pages: 22 - 24 Abstract: The global coronavirus pandemic has demonstrated the necessity of engineering approaches, from research and development to rapid prototyping and production, in saving lives all across the world [1]. From personal protective equipment design to vaccine production and distribution, engineering has been the bedrock of an effective global response. However, despite major gains made in the last several decades, there are still millions all across the world, including the vulnerable displaced, who rarely benefit from new developments at the interface of engineering, biology, and health. PubDate:
Jan.-Feb. 2023
Issue No: Vol. 14, No. 1 (2023)
- Asking Better Questions
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Authors:
Nancey Trevanian Tsai;
Pages: 25 - 27 Abstract: Have you ever picked up a “universal remote” and have to study it for a minute before finding the power, channel, and volume buttons' Just as you settle in, a push of a wrong button puts up a panel that obscures the program, forcing another long look at the remote for the “exit” button to go back to the program. On the other hand, a tutorial was likely not needed to operate an iPhone. Why is that' PubDate:
Jan.-Feb. 2023
Issue No: Vol. 14, No. 1 (2023)
- Identifying Problems and Unmet Clinical Needs: Who to Talk to and Where to
Look-
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Authors:
Jay Goldberg;
Pages: 28 - 30 Abstract: Revenue from the sale of new products fuels the growth of many companies. It often plays a key role in a company’s strategic plan and justifies significant spending on research and development. To meet their goals for growth resulting from new product sales, medical device companies need to identify new market opportunities, evaluate and predict the associated potential returns on investment, and select the opportunities with the best potential for success. Although some opportunities result from finding applications for new technologies (technology push), many opportunities are based on products that meet unmet clinical needs (market pull). For these reasons, innovative companies are constantly trying to identify unmet clinical needs that can lead to new commercializable medical products. PubDate:
Jan.-Feb. 2023
Issue No: Vol. 14, No. 1 (2023)
- Insights Into Health Care Innovation and the Future of EMBS
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Authors:
Metin Akay;
Pages: 31 - 35 Abstract: As my term comes to end as president of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBS) (‘21, ‘22), I wish to share with you some of our exciting technical activities during my tenure, strategic planning over the next five years (2022–2027), and insights for the future beyond 2027. PubDate:
Jan.-Feb. 2023
Issue No: Vol. 14, No. 1 (2023)
- The Yin and the Yang of New Technologies
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Authors:
Arthur T. Johnson;
Pages: 36 - 41 Abstract: Imagine technology as a living being. Perched on its left shoulder is a miniature angel, representing the good uses and beneficial consequences of the technology. On its right shoulder is a small devil, the bad or unintended consequences of the technological application. Every technology that I know has these two potential results: one that we might call “good,” and the other we might deem “bad,” or, at least, “undesirable.” PubDate:
Jan.-Feb. 2023
Issue No: Vol. 14, No. 1 (2023)
- Model Systems in Biology: History, Philosophy, and Practical Concerns
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Authors:
Paul H. King;
Pages: 42 - 43 Abstract: Georg F. Striedter is a professor of neurobiology and behavior in the School of Biological Sciences at University of California at Irvine, Irvine, CA, USA. His career-long research interest “in the evolution of vertebrate brains and behavior” has led him to accept “the challenge of synthesizing experimental data that are already published” (quotes from his personal website, https://www.faculty.uci.edu/profile.cfm'faculty_id=3006). PubDate:
Jan.-Feb. 2023
Issue No: Vol. 14, No. 1 (2023)
- Calendar
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Pages: 44 - 44 PubDate:
Jan.-Feb. 2023
Issue No: Vol. 14, No. 1 (2023)
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