On decoding and rewriting genomes: a psychoanalytical reading of a scientific revolution. (17/26)

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An objective method for selecting command sources for myoelectrically triggered lower-limb neuroprostheses. (18/26)

Functional electrical stimulation (FES) facilitates ambulatory function after paralysis of persons with spinal cord injury (SCI) by exciting the peripheral motor nerves to activate the muscles of the lower limbs. This study identified a process for selecting command sources for triggering FES with the surface electromyogram (EMG) from muscles partially paralyzed by incomplete SCI, given its high degree of intersubject variability. We found Discriminability Index (DI) to be a good metric to evaluate the potential of controlling FES-assisted ambulation in four nondisabled volunteers and two participants with incomplete paralysis. The left erector spinae (ES) (mean DI = 0.87) for triggering the left step and the right ES (mean DI = 0.83) for triggering the right step were the best command sources for participant 1. The left ES (mean DI = 0.93) for triggering the left step and the right medial gastrocnemius (mean DI = 0.88) for triggering the right step were the best command sources for participant 2. Our results showed that command sources can be selected objectively from surface EMG before a fully implantable EMG-triggered FES system for walking is implemented.  (+info)

Moral enhancement via direct emotion modulation: a reply to John Harris. (19/26)

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Smart drugs "as common as coffee": media hype about neuroenhancement. (20/26)

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BOSS: context-enhanced search for biomedical objects. (21/26)

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"Life in a germ-free world": isolating life from the laboratory animal to the bubble boy. (22/26)

This article examines a specific technology, the germ-free "isolator," tracing its development across three sites: (1) the laboratory for the production of standard laboratory animals, (2) agriculture for the efficient production of farm animals, and (3) the hospital for the control and prevention of cross-infection and the protection of individuals from infection. Germ-free technology traveled across the laboratory sciences, clinical and veterinary medicine, and industry, yet failed to become institutionalized outside the laboratory. That germ-free technology worked was not at issue. Working, however, was not enough. Examining the history of a technology that failed to find widespread application reveals the labor involved in aligning cultural, societal, and material factors necessary for successful medical innovation.  (+info)

Neuroenhancement - perspectives of Swiss psychiatrists and general practitioners. (23/26)

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Enhancing cognition with video games: a multiple game training study. (24/26)

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