Page 78 - Technology Engineering Computer Science News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Stay updated with breaking news from Technology engineering computer science. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.

Top News In Technology Engineering Computer Science Today - Breaking & Trending Today

Canadian innovators use video games to help children with neurodevelopment disabilities


HealthTech Connex s Centre for Neurological Studies and the
NeuroCatch Platform (Surrey), the
Woodview Autism and Mental Health Services (Ontario). This partnership initiative emerged from Surrey s
Health and Technology District and is a product of decades of leading-edge research started by Dr. Catherine Mateer and Dr. Kimberly Kerns from the University of Victoria. It represents a major milestone in translating leading research into health technology benefits for Canadians and children around the globe.
Through a combination of research, clinical studies, innovation, and clinical expertise, the multi-year partnership enables collaborators to offer a video-game based treatment program for children with neurodevelopmental disabilities. Their goal is to help children with special needs reach their potential through the development and use of novel, evidence-based innovations, to improve neuro-behavioural outcomes in children with neurodevelopmental challenges. ....

British Columbia , Sarah Macoun , Yvonne Chiang , Jessica Currie , Brian Katz , Kimberly Kerns , Judy Mann , Catherine Mateer , Healthtech Connex , Healthtech Connex Inc , Technology District In Surrey , University Of Victoria , Child Development , Child Development Foundation , Youth Services , Kids Brain Health Network , Healthtech Connex Centre For Neurological , Centre For Neurology , Uncomplicated Family Corporate Group , Researchers At University Of Victoria , Surrey Health , Dino Island Intervention Program , Kids Uncomplicated Inc , Health Canada , Technology District , Centre For Child Development ,

In a leap for battery research, machine learning gets scientific smarts


Loading video.
VIDEO: SLAC and Stanford researcher Will Chueh talks about a new way to incorporate scientific insight into machine learning for battery research - an approach that will speed up development of.
view more 
Credit: Olivier Bonin/SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
Menlo Park, Calif. Scientists have taken a major step forward in harnessing machine learning to accelerate the design for better batteries: Instead of using it just to speed up scientific analysis by looking for patterns in data, as researchers generally do, they combined it with knowledge gained from experiments and equations guided by physics to discover and explain a process that shortens the lifetimes of fast-charging lithium-ion batteries. ....

United States , Stephen Dongmin Kang , Martin Bazant , Chongbo Zhao , Department Of Energy , Massachusetts Institute Of Technology , Battery Materials Research Program , Biden Administration , Toyota Research Institute , Office Of Science , Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Advanced Light Source , Stanford University , National Accelerator Laboratory , Menlo Park , Will Chueh , Accelerator Laboratory , Nature Materials , Massachusetts Institute , Patrick Herring , Toyota Research , Jungjin Park , Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource , Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory , Advanced Light Source , Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource , Battery Materials Research ,

Reduced heat leakage improves wearable health device


 E-Mail
IMAGE: NC State s flexible heat harvesting device shows better efficiency at retaining heat to power the device.
view more 
Credit: Photo courtesy of Mehmet Ozturk.
North Carolina State University engineers continue to improve the efficiency of a flexible device worn on the wrist that harvests heat energy from the human body to monitor health.
In a paper published in
npj Flexible Electronics, the NC State researchers report significant enhancements in preventing heat leakage in the flexible body heat harvester they first reported in 2017 and updated in 2020. The harvesters use heat energy from the human body to power wearable technologies - think of smart watches that measure your heart rate, blood oxygen, glucose and other health parameters - that never need to have their batteries recharged. The technology relies on the same principles governing rigid thermoelectric harvesters that convert heat to electrical energy. ....

Viswanathp Ramesh , Veena Misra , Mehmet Ozturk , Mehmetc Ozturk , Michael Dickey , Taylorv Neumann , Mick Kulikowski , Yasaman Sargolzaeiaval , Michaeld Dickey , Daryoosh Vashaee , News Services , Nc State National Science Advanced Self , Carolina State University , Flexible Electronics , North Carolina State University , Integrated Sensors , Thermoelectric Generator , Liquid Metal Interconnects , Low Thermal Conductivity Silicone , Superconductors Semiconductors , Technology Engineering Computer Science , Electrical Engineering Electronics , Research Development , வீணா மிஸ்ரா , மைக்கேல் டிக்கி , செய்தி சேவைகள் ,

Biological artificial organs like skin, vessels...now produced more easily


 E-Mail
IMAGE: Overall schematic illustration of the fabrication of EPUM using PLCL using a VIPS process during spin-coating. The fabricated membrane was transferred to a 12-well insert for cell co-culture to mimic.
view more 
Credit: Korea Institute of Science and Technology(KIST)
A Korean research group has developed a technology that allows for the differentiation of stem cells into desired cell types, such as vascular mural cells or osteoblasts, without special pretreatment. This technology is expected to facilitate the production of artificial organs for preclinical studies or artificial tissues for transplants such as artificial skin and cardiac patches.
The Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST) announced that the research group led by Dr. Youngmee Jung of the Center for Biomaterials has developed a new cell co-culture platform based on porous, ultrathin membranes that can culture multiple types of cells simultaneously to form tissue ....

South Korea , Youngmee Jung , Korea Institute Of Science , Ministry Of Science , Korea Institute , Nano Material Technology Development Program , National Research Foundation , Advanced Functional Materials , Medicine Health , Technology Engineering Computer Science , தெற்கு கொரியா , யங்மீ ஜங் , கொரியா நிறுவனம் ஆஃப் அறிவியல் , அமைச்சகம் ஆஃப் அறிவியல் , கொரியா நிறுவனம் , நானோ பொருள் தொழில்நுட்பம் வளர்ச்சி ப்ரோக்ர்யாம் , தேசிய ஆராய்ச்சி அடித்தளம் , மருந்து ஆரோக்கியம் , தொழில்நுட்பம் பொறியியல் கணினி அறிவியல் ,