A read-write wearable both reads your body and writes back to it by delivering an intervention.
Now a new generation of devices is trying to do something the read-only wearable never could, talk back to the body.
Just one of many reasons why routine appointments for this body part are so important.
Rather than having distinct departments for blindness, paralysis and sensory disorders, scientists are developing a unified ...
Science Focus on MSN
Human eyeballs are literally changing shape. And experts are baffled
Myopia is booming. Can we stop the epidemic of short-sightedness?
From memorable patient encounters to emerging therapies, OT talks with practitioners about opportunities and challenges in ...
The Michigan-themed courtyards at Ford World Headquarters are designed to connect employees with nature, reduce stress, and ...
There is memory at play, and pleasure. Exactly how such realisations occur could have implications for learning, medicine and ...
As the body ages, changes in the bacteria living inside the digestive system can lead to a weakened sensory connection ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Learning to speak may depend less on your mouth than on how your brain hears sound
Researchers have found that the brain’s ability to hear and evaluate its own speech may matter more for learning new vocal ...
IBS brain imaging study links predictable multisensory rewards from the Waxppu Ball to reduced pain and greater emotional ...
Single neurons in mouse sensorimotor cortex are organized by their activity features into distinct subpopulations with area-spanning footprints whose boundaries align closely with anatomical and ...
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