Month: May 2018
-
Students Write App to Operate, Enhance Exoskeleton
A group of computer science students at Michigan State University designed a smartphone app to operate a robotic-arm exoskeleton for individuals with disabilities.
-
Does Your Business Need A Text Service?
If you have a small business, one form of communication you may not have thought about yet is texting, but this can be a brilliant way to contact your customers.
-
New Cell Therapy Company Raises $58.5M in Early Funds
A start-up enterprise is discovering therapies to address a variety of disorders that result from faulty cell degradation processes known as autophagy, which when functioning normally contribute to cell health.
-
Trial Testing Nerve Stimulation for Stroke Rehab
A clinical trial is recruiting participants to test an implanted device that electronically stimulates a key nerve pathway for restoring use of a person’s arm after suffering a stroke.
-
How Technology Is Helping The Chronically Unwell
Having to go back and forth to constant doctors and medical appointments can be stressful and time consuming, so being able to manage some things yourself online can be incredibly helpful when you have an ongoing condition.
-
Fitness Trackers Seen Feasible for Cancer Patients
Activity tracking devices, used by athletes and ordinary persons to track their fitness, are shown in a pilot test to successfully monitor physical activity of older cancer patients for periods of 10 weeks or more.
-
Global Health R&D Cuts Threaten U.S. Economy, Jobs
An analysis of the impact of proposed cuts in funds for research and development on technologies to address global health needs shows the U.S. economy benefits directly from this spending, including support of many jobs in nearly all states.
-
Updating Your Business Tech at the Wrong Time Can Be Fatal to Your Success
When’s the perfect time to upgrade your business? When should you take the first step forward?
-
Digital Drug Discovery Company Wins A.I. Competition
A company using artificial intelligence algorithms and big data analytics to discover drug targets from RNA splicing errors is the winner of a competition among start-up enterprises for innovative uses of A.I. technology.
-
Cellectis, Wyss Inst. Partner on Recoding Human Genome
A bioengineering center at Harvard University and a biotechnology company are creating a process for genetically editing human cell lines to produce virus-resistant synthetic proteins for research and therapies.