I’d like to start with a question I’ve been pondering lately.
Being born deaf, do you feel there is additional pressure for you to achieve? If not that’s cool too.
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I’d like to start with a question I’ve been pondering lately.
Being born deaf, do you feel there is additional pressure for you to achieve? If not that’s cool too.
New Line Cinema
Bionic Ear Market: Business Planning Research and Resources, Revenue 2021-2031
Bionic Ear Market: Business Planning Research and Resources, Revenue 2021-2031
The most recent research report on Bionic Ear Market 2021 published by insightSLICE begins with the market description, official report, segmentation, and classification. The report offers a comprehensive analysis of the market so that perusers can be guided on future opportunities and high-profit ranges within the industry. With this study, you can expect a perfect mix of qualitative and…
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3D Printing in Electronics Industry | Quantum Dot Display | Bionic Ear | CUBESAT 3D Printing
3D Printing in Electronics Industry | Quantum Dot Display | Bionic Ear | CUBESAT 3D Printing
3D Printing in Electronics Industry
In order to achieve miniaturization, low energy consumption and intelligent performance, the electronic devices require suitable mechanical, geometric and optical functions. Thanks to increasingly evolving technologies, the development of designs and completed goods has to shift. Throughout the manufacture of electrical instruments, the traditional approach is…
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Scientists Print 3D Prototype of "Bionic Eye" - HEALTH/SCIENCE/TECH, U.S. NEWS
New Post has been published on https://citizentruth.org/3d-printed-bionic-eye/
Scientists Print 3D Prototype of "Bionic Eye"
A team of researchers has printed a “bionic eye” prototype using 3D printing technology, potentially giving sight to the blind.
A team of scientists from the University of Minnesota has 3D-printed a “bionic eye” prototype. The aim is to create bionic eyes that could allow blind people to see, along with improving sight for people with normal vision.
The scientists were able to print a set of light receptors on a hemispherical material using 3D printing technology. According to Michael McAlpine, co-author of the study, Benjamin Mayhugh, University of Minnesota Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering, using a multi-material 3D printer for bionic eyes is “not rocket science” as earlier thought, and could soon become everyday reality within just a few years.
Converting Light to Electricity
Though printing on any curved material is challenging, researchers began experimenting with a hemispherical glass dome. They used a customized 3D printer along with ink containing silver particles as its base component. The applied ink dried efficiently where administered without ever running down the curved surface.
The scientists then used semiconducting polymer materials to print photodiodes, which convert light into electricity. The overall experiment took about an hour to achieve the desired results. McAlpine said the team was surprised to be able to use the 3D-printed semiconductors to convert light into electricity with 25 percent efficiency.
“We have a long way to go to routinely print active electronics reliably, but our 3D-printed semiconductors are now starting to show that they could potentially rival the efficiency of semiconducting devices fabricated in microfabrication facilities,” McAlpine said. “Plus, we can easily print a semiconducting device on a curved surface, and they can’t.”
“When Are You Going to Print Me a Bionic Eye?”
The author of the study has a patent in place for the 3D-printed devices. In the past, the research team has successfully integrated 3D printing, electronics, and biology into the same material–several years ago, they were celebrated internationally after printing a “bionic ear.”
They have since gone ahead to successfully 3D-print “bionic skin,” artificial organs, as well as cells and scaffolds that spinal cord patients could use to regain some functionality. According to McAlpine, his motivation for creating a “bionic eye” prototype is his mother, who is blind in one eye and always asks him “When are you going to print me a bionic eye?”
The team looks forward to producing a fully functioning prototype with increased light receptors able to convert light into energy. They also hope to 3D-print on a soft-enough hemispherical material capable of being implanted into an actual human eye.
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fresh Research Helps Track How Deaf Children Learn Words With the serve of eye-tracking technology, researchers are better understanding how deaf children with cochlear implants learn fresh words. Subscribe to Vocativ: ... source
From Unshredders To Bionic Ears: Our Top Five Cool Tools For 2017
From Unshredders To Bionic Ears: Our Top Five Cool Tools For 2017
From tiny ear buds that allow you to isolate and perfectly hear the conversation at the table across the restaurant from you to an unshredding program that will reconstruct the ripped up evidence letter, 2017 promises to be a banner year for those in need of these type of cool tools.
Below is our selection of the top five cool tools for 2017:
1. Bionic Earbuds For People Who Can Hear: Here(Bioni…
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From science fiction to reality: the dawn of the biofabricator
Gordon Wallace, University of Wollongong
We can rebuild him. We have the technology. - The Six Million Dollar Man, 1973
Science is catching up to science fiction. Last year a paralysed man walked again after cell treatment bridged a gap in his spinal cord. Dozens of people have had bionic eyes implanted, and it may also be possible to augment them to see into the infra-red or ultra-violet. Amputees can control bionic limb implant with thoughts alone.
Meanwhile, we are well on the road to printing body parts.
We are witnessing a reshaping of the clinical landscape wrought by the tools of technology. The transition is giving rise to a new breed of engineer, one trained to bridge the gap between engineering on one side and biology on the other.
Enter the “biofabricator”. This is a role that melds technical skills in materials, mechatronics and biology with the clinical sciences.
21st century career
If you need a new body part, it’s the role of the biofabricator to build it for you. The concepts are new, the technology is groundbreaking. And the job description? It’s still being written.
It is a vocation that’s already taking off in the US though. In 2012, Forbes rated biomedical engineering (equivalent to biofabricator) number one on its list of the 15 most valuable college majors. The following year, CNN and payscale.com called it the “best job in America”.
These conclusions were based on things like salary, job satisfaction and job prospects, with the US Bureau of Labour Statistics projecting a massive growth in the number of biomedical engineering jobs over the next ten years.
The Cochlear implant has brought hearing to many people. Dick Sijtsma/Flickr, CC BY-NC
Meanwhile, Australia is blazing its own trail. As the birthplace of the multi-channel Cochlear implant, Australia already boasts a worldwide reputation in biomedical implants. Recent clinical breakthroughs with an implanted titanium heel and jawbone reinforce Australia’s status as a leader in the field.
I’ve recently helped establish the world’s first international Masters courses for biofabrication, ready to arm the next generation of biofabricators with the diverse array of skills needed to 3D print parts for bodies.
These skills go beyond the technical; the job also requires the ability to communicate with regulators and work alongside clinicians. The emerging industry is challenging existing business models.
Life as a biofabricator
Day to day, the biofabricator is a vital cog in the research machine. They work with clinicians to create a solution to clinical needs, and with biologists, materials and mechatronic engineers to deliver them.
Biofabricators are naturally versatile. They are able to discuss clinical needs pre-dawn, device physics with an electrical engineer in the morning, stem cell differentiation with a biologist in the afternoon and a potential financier in the evening. Not to mention remaining conscious of regulatory matters and social engagement.
Our research at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Electromaterials Science (ACES) is only made possible through the work of a talented team of biofabricators. They help with the conduits we are building to regrow severed nerves, to the electrical implant designed to sense an imminent epileptic seizure and stop it before it occurs, to the 3D printed cartilage and bone implants fashioned to be a perfect fit at the site of injury.
As the interdisciplinary network takes shape, we see more applications every week. Researchers have only scratched the surface of what is possible for wearable or implanted sensors to keep tabs on an outpatient’s vitals and beam them back to the doctor.
Meanwhile, stem cell technology is developing rapidly. Developing the cells into tissues and organs will require prearrangement of cells in appropriate 3D environments and custom designed bioreactors mimicking the dynamic environment inside the body.
Imagine the ability to arrange stem cells in 3D surrounded by other supporting cells and with growth factors distributed with exquisite precision throughout the structure, and to systematically probe the effect of those arrangements on biological processes. Well, it can already be done.
Those versed in 3D bioprinting will enable these fundamental explorations.
Future visions
The 1970s TV show, Six Million Dollar Man, excited imaginations, but science is rapidly catching up to science fiction. Joe Haupt/Flickr, CC BY-SA
Besides academic research, biofabricators will also be invaluable to medical device companies in designing new products and treatments. Those engineers with an entrepreneurial spark will look to start spin-out companies of their own. The more traditional manufacturing business model will not cut it.
As 3D printing evolves, it is becoming obvious that we will require dedicated printing systems for particular clinical applications. The printer in the surgery for cartilage regeneration will be specifically engineered for the task at hand, with only critical variables built into a robust and reliable machine.
Appropriately trained individuals will also find roles in the public service, ideally in regulatory bodies or community engagement.
For this job of tomorrow, we must train today and new opportunities are emerging biofab-masters-degree. We must cut across the traditional academic boundaries that slow down such advances. We must engage with the community of traditional manufacturers that have skills that can be built upon for next generation industries.
Australia is also well placed to capitalise on these emerging industries. We have a traditional manufacturing sector that is currently in flux, an extensive advanced materials knowledge base built over decades, a dynamic additive fabrication skills base and a growing alternative business model environment.
Gordon Wallace is Executive Director of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Electromaterials Science and Director of the Intelligent Polymer Research Institute at University of Wollongong
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.