Latest Breaking News On - நரம்பியல் அறுவை சிகிச்சை - Page 5 : comparemela.com
Imagine a Pacemaker That Does Its Job, Then Pulls a Houdini
designnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from designnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Nanorobotics Market Valuation to Reach USD 14 03 Billion in 2028 | Rapid Innovations in the Technology and Rising Application in Treatment of Neurological Diseases will Drive Industry Growth, says Emergen Research
finanznachrichten.de - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from finanznachrichten.de Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Toggle navigation
PK Das Institute of Medical Sciences has become next multi-speciality hospital in India to offer the EPLIMO Personalized Lifestyle Management solution
EPLIMO by Vieroots being deployed in more hospitals - PK Das Hospital adopts innovative solution ANI | Updated: Jul 20, 2021 09:43 IST
Ottapalam (Kerala) [India], July 20 (ANI/PNN): PK Das Institute of Medical Sciences, near Ottapalam, in Kerala has become the next multi-speciality hospital in India to offer the EPLIMO Personalized Lifestyle Management solution pioneered in India by Vieroots Wellness Solutions, an innovative health-tech startup that was launched last year amid the pandemic s first wave.
Earlier, June this year, Believers Church Medical College Hospital, Thiruvalla, Kerala, had started offering EPLIMO. Vieroots Founder & Chairman, Dr Sajeev Nair informed that the company is in talks with more hospitals across India to deploy this game-changing soluti
Researchers at UC San Francisco have successfully developed a âspeech neuroprosthesisâ that has enabled a man with severe paralysis to communicate in sentences, translating signals from his brain to the vocal tract directly into words that appear as text on a screen.
The achievement, which was developed in collaboration with the first participant of a clinical research trial, builds on more than a decade of effort by UCSF neurosurgeon Edward Chang, MD, to develop a technology that allows people with paralysis to communicate even if they are unable to speak on their own. The study appears July 15 in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Brain signals translated into speech give paralyzed man back his words
Scientists at UC San Francisco have successfully developed a speech neuroprosthesis device that has enabled a man with severe paralysis to communicate in sentences, translating signals from his brain to text on a screen.
UCSF neurosurgeon Edward Chang, MD, has spent more than a decade developing a technology that allows people with paralysis to communicate even if they can t speak! Chang s achievement was developed in collaboration with the first participant of a clinical research study.
The research, presented as a study in the
New England Journal of Medicine, is the first successful demonstration of direct decoding of complete words from brain waves of someone who cannot speak due to paralysis.
vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.