Page 2 - ஒட்தோ கிரெகொரி News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

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

Top News In ஒட்தோ கிரெகொரி Today - Breaking & Trending Today

Sensors developed at URI can identify threats at the molecular level


 E-Mail
IMAGE: URI doctoral student Peter Ricci (left) and Professor Otto Gregory test the Digital Dog Nose sensors platform in Gregory s Thin Film Sensors Laboratory at URI. The blue devices on the.
view more 
Credit: Photo by Mike Platek
KINGSTON, R.I. - May 14, 2021 - We are frequently reminded of how vulnerable our health and safety are to threats from nature or those who wish to harm us.
New sensors developed by Professor Otto Gregory, of the College of Engineering at the University of Rhode Island, and chemical engineering doctoral student Peter Ricci, are so powerful that they can detect threats at the molecular level, whether it s explosive materials, particles from a potentially deadly virus or illegal drugs entering the country. ....

United States , Rhode Island , West Warwick , University Of Rhode Island , Peter Ricci , Michael Silevitch , Otto Gregory , W Alton Jones , Department Of Homeland Security , United States Department Of Defense , College Of Engineering , Department Of Defense , Film Sensors Laboratory , Miami Heat , Naval Research Laboratory , Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency , University Of Rhode Island Professor Otto Gregory , Energy Systems , Professor Otto Gregory , Homeland Security , Coast Guard , United State , Digital Dog , Digital Dog Nose , Jones Campus , United States Department ,

Sensors developed at URI can identify explosive materials, particles from a potentially deadly virus and illegal drugs at the part-per-quadrillion level


More sensitive than a dog’s nose and the sensors don’t get tired
URI doctoral student Peter Ricci (left) and Professor Otto Gregory test the Digital Dog Nose sensors platform in Gregory’s Thin Film Sensors Laboratory at URI. The blue devices on the table represent the two latest versions of the Digital Dog Nose. Photo courtesy of Otto Gregory.
KINGSTON, R.I. – May 13, 2021 – We are frequently reminded of how vulnerable our health and safety are to threats from nature or those who wish to harm us.
New sensors developed by Professor Otto Gregory, of the College of Engineering at the University of Rhode Island, and chemical engineering doctoral student Peter Ricci, are so powerful that they can detect threats at the molecular level, whether it’s explosive materials, particles from a potentially deadly virus or illegal drugs entering the country. ....

United States , Peter Ricci , Michael Silevitch , Otto Gregory , W Alton Jones , Department Of Homeland Security , United States Department Of Defense , College Of Engineering , Department Of Defense , Miami Heat , University Of Rhode Island , Naval Research Laboratory , Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency , Energy Systems , Professor Otto Gregory , Rhode Island , Homeland Security , Coast Guard , United State , Digital Dog , Digital Dog Nose , Jones Campus , United States Department , Distinguished Professor , Northeastern University , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் ,

AI System Can Sniff Out Disease As Well As Dogs Do


Posted on March 12, 2021 | Views: 457
cwebb2021-03-11T19:12:09-08:00
by Prachi Patel: Researchers are training algorithms to emulate trained dogs’ ability to detect cancer and other diseases, perhaps including COVID-19…
Most people consider smell their least important sense, surveys suggest. Dogs, however, feel their way through the world with their noses. Humans already employ the animals’ olfactory acuity for contraband and explosives detection. More recently it has also proved uncannily good at sensing cancers, diabetes and even COVID-19. Exactly how dogs detect diseases is a mystery, but that has not stopped researchers from mimicking this prowess with an artificial-intelligence-based noninvasive diagnostic tool. ....

United States , Otto Gregory , Prachi Patel , Andreas Mershin , Stephen Thaler , Hiroaki Matsunami , University Of Rhode Island , Massachusetts Institute Of Technology , Duke University , Medical Detection Dogs , Nano Nose , Rhode Island , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , ஒட்தோ கிரெகொரி , பிரசி படேல் , ஸ்டீபன் தாலர் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் ரோட் தீவு , மாசசூசெட்ஸ் நிறுவனம் ஆஃப் தொழில்நுட்பம் , டியூக் பல்கலைக்கழகம் , மருத்துவ கண்டறிதல் நாய்கள் , நானோ மூக்கு , ரோட் தீவு ,

AI System Can Sniff Out Disease as Well as Dogs Do


Scientific American
AI System Can Sniff Out Disease as Well as Dogs Do
Researchers are training algorithms to emulate trained dogs’ ability to detect cancer and other diseases, perhaps including COVID-19
Print
U.K.-based charity Medical Detection Dogs trains dogs to detect human diseases by smell. Researchers are working on an AI system that could do the job just as well. Credit: Leon Neal
Advertisement
Most people consider smell their least important sense, surveys suggest. Dogs, however, feel their way through the world with their noses. Humans already employ the animals’ olfactory acuity for contraband and explosives detection. More recently it has also proved uncannily good at sensing cancers, diabetes and even COVID-19. Exactly how dogs detect diseases is a mystery, but that has not stopped researchers from mimicking this prowess with an artificial-intelligence-based noninvasive diagnostic tool. ....

Otto Gregory , Andreas Mershin , Stephen Thaler , Hiroaki Matsunami , University Of Rhode Island , Massachusetts Institute Of Technology , Duke University , Medical Detection Dogs , Nano Nose , Rhode Island , ஒட்தோ கிரெகொரி , ஸ்டீபன் தாலர் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் ரோட் தீவு , மாசசூசெட்ஸ் நிறுவனம் ஆஃப் தொழில்நுட்பம் , டியூக் பல்கலைக்கழகம் , மருத்துவ கண்டறிதல் நாய்கள் , நானோ மூக்கு , ரோட் தீவு ,