Bionet Sonar Media Coverage
Not-so-alien implants in Look ahead, The Economist, August 27, 2013.
"Future implants will benefit from networking; for example linked glucose sensors and insulin pumps that allow more precise dosage control for diabetics. Work at the University at Buffalo could lead to devices that communicate more efficiently than radio via sound waves."
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"Future implants will benefit from networking; for example linked glucose sensors and insulin pumps that allow more precise dosage control for diabetics. Work at the University at Buffalo could lead to devices that communicate more efficiently than radio via sound waves."
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Unexpected: A Sonar-Based Wireless Network that Lives in Your Body in TIME Tech, June 5, 2013.
"By designing sonar-based technology small enough to work within the confines of the human body (or worn without), the researchers hope to create sonar-based “body area networks” composed of interrelating ultrasonic sensors capable of generating or detecting wireless information and acting to treat diseases like diabetes or heart failure in real time."
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"By designing sonar-based technology small enough to work within the confines of the human body (or worn without), the researchers hope to create sonar-based “body area networks” composed of interrelating ultrasonic sensors capable of generating or detecting wireless information and acting to treat diseases like diabetes or heart failure in real time."
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Sonar Could Lets Your Body Talk to Machines Better in Gizmodo, June 5, 2013.
"Sonar. Subs use it. Dolphins use it. And someday your own body might use it to detect and treat what ails you. Echolocation unlocking the quantified self."
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"Sonar. Subs use it. Dolphins use it. And someday your own body might use it to detect and treat what ails you. Echolocation unlocking the quantified self."
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Sonar Could Connect Sensors In Your Body in Discovery News, June 4, 2013.
"Sound waves travel easily through water and don’t bring up any of the concerns radio frequencies do. They also have a long track record of working well. Not only have navies used sonar for decades, but ultrasound has proven a valuable and perfectly safe tool for imaging (as many expectant parents know)."
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"Sound waves travel easily through water and don’t bring up any of the concerns radio frequencies do. They also have a long track record of working well. Not only have navies used sonar for decades, but ultrasound has proven a valuable and perfectly safe tool for imaging (as many expectant parents know)."
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