Scientists have developed a water-repelling, porous sensor capable of detecting subtle water waves, tracking human movement, and even recognizing speech 1. The material can have applications in ...
A team of physicists at the University of Colorado Boulder named the new technology Modulated Ringdown Comb Interferometry, ...
Glucotrack has cleared the first human clinical study of its long-term ... The company’s real-time sensor is placed within the subclavian vein, located under the collarbone—to collect sugar ...
The flexible sensor, ideal for use in the human body, uses laser-induced graphene to simultaneously but separately measure temperature and strain, potentially enabling better wound healing monitoring ...