The future of electroencephalography (EEG) monitoring may soon look like a strand of hair. In place of the traditional metal electrodes, a web of wires and sticky adhesives, a team of researchers from ...
Although clinicians using needle electrodes for sick term infants reported minimal evidence of discomfort [12] and negligible infection rate for long-term application, [46] in vulnerable preterm ...
For the first time, scientists have invented a liquid ink that doctors can print onto a patient's scalp to measure brain activity. The technology, presented December 2 in the Cell Press journal Cell ...