IndiaVision RSS Feed    Browse IndiaVision on Mobile    Subscribe to me on FriendFeed    Follow us on Twitter    Follow us on Facebook
News | Videos | Mobile | Jobs | Blog | Yellow Pages | Games | Jokes | Chat | e-Cards | Astrology | Articles | Recipes | Send Gifts
IndiaVision - An Informative Site on India
IndiaVision NEWS
Today : Saturday - May 26, 2012, 01:19am (GMT+5.5)
All News  
Top News
National News
International News
Business News
Sports News
   » Cricket
   » Football
Entertainment News
Sci - Tech
Politics News
Health & Fitness
Education
Travel
Lifestyle
Gulf News
Featured
 
::| Latest News
News in Pictures

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is in Cuba again for more radiation therapy after he was operated on in February for a new cancerous tumour.

Health & Fitness
 

Soon, a silicon 'neurochip' to hear what human brain cells are saying

Tuesday - Aug 10, 2010, 07:02pm (GMT+5.5)
[+] Text [-]

Toronto, (ANI) - Calgary scientists will create a 'neurochip', which will monitor the dialogue between brain cell and silicon chip.

Researchers at the University of Calgary's Hotchkiss Brain Institute are to announce Tuesday that they have made a key advance in connecting brain cells to a newly designed silicon chip, crafted with the National Research Council of Canada, that allows them to "hear" the conversation between living tissue and an electronic device as never before.

"It used to be like seeing two people talking at a distance. ... You didn't know what they were saying or even what language they were speaking. But now it's like putting a microphone beside them," the Globe and Mail quoted Professor Naweed Syed, head of the university's department of cell biology and anatomy, who has led the work on the so-called neurochip, as saying.

The latest Calgary work makes it immediately possible to use a neurochip to screen drugs for patients with brain disorders and determine which ones are likely to work based on what the brain cells "say."

Brain cells talk to each other in a language of electrical and chemical signals that prompt each neuron to either fire up or relax. Chemical signals pass between an array of nerve fibres, known as synaptic connections, that look much like tree branches under a microscope. Electrical signals pass through gateways on the cell surface called ion channels.

But the chip doesn't come cheap, Syed admitted, estimating that for now the cost would run at 30,000 dollars for 750 reusable chips.

It is published online this week in the journal Biomedical Microdevices.



|

Rating (Votes: )   

blog comments powered by Disqus

Other Articles:
1 in 4 stroke patients discontinue prescription drugs within 3 months (10th Aug, 2010)
Now, prostate cancer can be inhibited without disturbing body processes (10th Aug, 2010)
Jogging in park better than gym (10th Aug, 2010)
Chinese farmer gets breasts removed (10th Aug, 2010)
Snoozing 4 hours a night causes acute sleep deprivation (10th Aug, 2010)
Low-fibre diets lack in allergy preventing bacteria (10th Aug, 2010)
Sitting down for hours could invite cardiac disaster (10th Aug, 2010)
More than 50pc people globally get insufficient Vitamin D (10th Aug, 2010)
Tax officer dies of swine flu, Orissa toll five (10th Aug, 2010)
Middle-aged woman dies of swine flu in Punjab (10th Aug, 2010)
Allergy shots beneficial for some asthmatics, risky for others (9th Aug, 2010)
Gene breakthrough leads to hope of meningitis vaccine soon (9th Aug, 2010)
Western lifestyle 'behind soaring breast cancer rates' (9th Aug, 2010)
Faulty genes that raise meningitis risk identified (9th Aug, 2010)
Asthma inhalers 'up prostate cancer risk' (9th Aug, 2010)
Missing out on breakfast won't make you thin (9th Aug, 2010)
Rude words 'can trigger arthritis' (9th Aug, 2010)
Parents who smoke around kids are 'child abusers,' says Brit doc (9th Aug, 2010)
Fat employees take more time off work (9th Aug, 2010)
Why is obesity so prevalent? (9th Aug, 2010)
Six AIIMS-like institutions to be registered as societies (9th Aug, 2010)
Chinese blame milk powder as baby girls develop breasts (9th Aug, 2010)
Thousands of kids misdiagnosed with food allergies (9th Aug, 2010)
Asthmatics on steroids face higher prostate cancer risk (9th Aug, 2010)
Thanks to Popeye, kids eat more vegetables (9th Aug, 2010)





Visit IndiaVision On Your Mobile
Buy Domain Names Online
Get Free Mail
Free Mail
Login | Sign Up
Download IndiaVision Free Toolbar
FireFox Safari Internet Explorer
 
Contact Us | Advertise with Us | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | Terms of Use
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...