Electronics, Medical
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Subject Areas on Research
- A bio-friendly and economical technique for chronic implantation of multiple microelectrode arrays.
- A low power multichannel analog front end for portable neural signal recordings.
- A multichannel telemetry system for single unit neural recordings.
- A new design for an implantable hearing aid.
- A peripheral nerve stimulator for nerve location controlled by the scrubbed anaesthetist.
- Ability to generate patient registries among practices with and without electronic health records.
- Development of the single microelectrode current and voltage clamp for central nervous system neurons.
- Digital Health: Tracking Physiomes and Activity Using Wearable Biosensors Reveals Useful Health-Related Information
- Electroneuroprostheses: past and present uses in man.
- Endotracheal artificial larynx.
- Focal electrically administered seizure therapy: a novel form of ECT illustrates the roles of current directionality, polarity, and electrode configuration in seizure induction.
- Increased resolving power from scintillation cameras using electronic signal processing and a movable filter plate.
- Local influenza-like illness surveillance at a university health system during the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic.
- Measurement of erythrocyte velocity by use of a periodic differential detector.
- Nerve conduction and ultrasound: will the wedding give birth to new morpho-functional measures?
- Overall concordance correlation coefficient for evaluating agreement among multiple observers.
- Personal-computer-based single-fibre EMG jitter analysis system.
- Principles of digital radiography with large-area, electronically readable detectors: a review of the basics.
- Pump activated by a foot switch pedal for controlled administration of local anaesthetic drugs.
- Transcranial magnetic stimulation coil with electronically switchable active and sham modes.
- Ultrathin, transferred layers of thermally grown silicon dioxide as biofluid barriers for biointegrated flexible electronic systems.
- Visual evoked potentials with CRT and LCD monitors: when newer is not better.