77 research outputs found

    Apple Vision Pro for Healthcare: "The Ultimate Display"? -- Entering the Wonderland of Precision Medicine

    Full text link
    At the Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) in June 2023, Apple introduced the Vision Pro. The Vision Pro is a Mixed Reality (MR) headset, more specifically it is a Virtual Reality (VR) device with an additional Video See-Through (VST) capability. The VST capability turns the Vision Pro also into an Augmented Reality (AR) device. The AR feature is enabled by streaming the real world via cameras to the (VR) screens in front of the user's eyes. This is of course not unique and similar to other devices, like the Varjo XR-3. Nevertheless, the Vision Pro has some interesting features, like an inside-out screen that can show the headset wearers' eyes to "outsiders" or a button on the top, called "Digital Crown", that allows you to seamlessly blend digital content with your physical space by turning it. In addition, it is untethered, except for the cable to the battery, which makes the headset more agile, compared to the Varjo XR-3. This could actually come closer to the "Ultimate Display", which Ivan Sutherland had already sketched in 1965. Not available to the public yet, like the Ultimate Display, we want to take a look into the crystal ball in this perspective to see if it can overcome some clinical challenges that - especially - AR still faces in the medical domain, but also go beyond and discuss if the Vision Pro could support clinicians in essential tasks to spend more time with their patients.Comment: This is a Preprint under CC BY. This work was supported by NIH/NIAID R01AI172875, NIH/NCATS UL1 TR001427, the REACT-EU project KITE and enFaced 2.0 (FWF KLI 1044). B. Puladi was funded by the Medical Faculty of the RWTH Aachen University as part of the Clinician Scientist Program. C. Gsaxner was funded by the Advanced Research Opportunities Program from the RWTH Aachen Universit

    Tile-based Pattern Design with Topology Control

    Get PDF
    International audiencePatterns with desired aesthetic appearances and physical structures are ubiquitous.However, such patterns are challenging to produce - manual authoring requires significant expertise and efforts while automatic computation lacks sufficient flexibility and user control.We propose a method that automatically synthesizes vector patterns with visual appearance and topological structures designated by users via input exemplars and output conditions.The input can be an existing vector graphics design or a new one manually drawn by the user through our interactive interface.Our system decomposes the input pattern into constituent components (tiles) and overall arrangement (tiling).The tile sets are general and flexible enough to represent a variety of patterns, and can produce different outputs with user specified conditions such as size, shape, and topological properties for physical manufacturing

    Nanoporous molybdenum carbide wires as an active electrocatalyst towards the oxygen reduction reaction

    Get PDF
    A non-precious metal electrocatalyst has been developed for the oxygen reduction reaction based on nanoporous molybdenum carbide (nano-Mo2C) wires through a facile calcination of sub-nanometer periodic organic–inorganic hybrid nanowires. The highly dispersed Mo2C wires were composed of 10–15 nm nanocrystals with a mesopore size of 3.3 nm. The properties of nano-Mo2C wires were characterized using scanning electron microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction and N2 adsorption/desorption porosimetry. The highly active surface area and enriched nanoporosity for nano-Mo2C wires are unique features that make them a high-performance electrocatalyst for oxygen reduction in an alkaline medium. The electrocatalysis and reaction kinetics results show that nano-Mo2C-based materials can be developed as new catalysts with high activity at low cost for electrochemical energy conversion applications

    MoS2 formed on Mesoporous Graphene as a Highly Active Catalyst for Hydrogen Evolution

    Get PDF
    A highly active and stable electrocatalyst for hydrogen evolution is developed based on the in situ formation of MoS2 nanoparticles on mesoporous graphene foams (MoS2/MGF). Taking advantage of its high specific surface area and its interconnected conductive graphene skeleton, MGF provides a favorable microenvironment for the growth of highly dispersed MoS2 nanoparticles while allowing rapid charge transfer kinetics. The MoS2/MGF nanocomposites exhibit an excellent electrocatalytic activity for the hydrogen evolution reaction with a low overpotential and substantial apparent current densities. Such enhanced catalytic activity stems from the abundance of catalytic edge sites, the increase of electrochemically accessible surface area and the unique synergic effects between the MGF support and active catalyst. The electrode reactions are characterized by electrochemical impedance spectroscopy. A Tafel slope of ≈42 mV per decade is measured for a MoS2/MGF modified electrode, suggesting the Volmer-Heyrovsky mechanism of hydrogen evolution

    Floating conductive catalytic nano-rafts at soft interfaces for hydrogen evolution

    Get PDF
    Mo2C nanowires and composites of Mo2C nanoparticles formed on multiwalled carbon nanotubes (Mo2C/CNT) were developed as advanced catalysts for hydrogen evolution at a polarised water–1,2-dichloroethane interface. Each catalyst acts as a catalytic nano-raft suspended at the interface to markedly enhance the rates of biphasic proton reduction in the presence of an organic solubilised electron donor, decamethylferrocene. Mo2C nanoparticles were grown in situ on the conductive CNT support, achieving a high dispersion and intimate contact, thereby facilitating electron transfer between the components. The high catalytic activity of each catalyst was successfully demonstrated by their respective impacts on the reaction kinetics. The reaction rate increased more than 1000 times when the Mo2C/CNT composite was present at a very low concentration of 25 μM. CNTs have the ability to act as highly efficient conduits or “transport superhighways” for injected electrons to reach the catalytic sites of the nanoparticle. Electrochemical instabilities, similar to those observed for the transfer of surface-active ions, were observed under experimental conditions that produced an abundance of hydrogen at the interface. Finally, the movement of CNTs floating at the interface under the influence of a cycling applied interfacial Galvani potential difference was vividly captured in a short movi

    Different molecular characteristics and antimicrobial resistance profiles of Clostridium difficile in the Asia-Pacific region

    Get PDF
    Molecular epidemiology of Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) has been extensively studied in North America and Europe; however, limited data on CDI are available in the Asia-Pacific region. A multicentre retrospective study was conducted in this region. C. difficile isolates were subjected to multilocus sequence typing (ST) and antimicrobial susceptibility testing. Totally, 394 isolates were collected from Hangzhou, Hong Kong, China; Busan, South Korea; Fukuoka, Japan; Singapore; Perth, Sydney, Australia; New York, the United States. C. difficile isolates included 337 toxin A-positive/B-positive/binary toxin-negative (A+B+CDT-), 48 A-B+CDT-, and nine A+B+CDT+. Distribution of dominant STs varied geographically with ST17 in Fukuoka (18.6%), Busan (56.0%), ST2 in Sydney (20.4%), Perth (25.8%). The antimicrobial resistance patterns were significantly different among the eight sites (χ2 = 325.64, p \u3c 0.001). Five major clonal complexes correlated with unique antimicrobial resistances. Healthcare-associated (HA) CDI was mainly from older patients with more frequent antimicrobial use and higher A-B+ positive rates. Higher resistance to gatifloxacin, tetracycline, and erythromycin were observed in HA-CDI patients (χ2 = 4.76-7.89, p = 0.005-0.029). In conclusion, multiple C. difficile genotypes with varied antimicrobial resistance patterns have been circulating in the Asia-Pacific region. A-B+ isolates from older patients with prior antimicrobial use were correlated with HA-CDI

    A nanoporous molybdenum carbide nanowire as an electrocatalyst for hydrogen evolution reaction

    Get PDF
    A highly active and stable electrochemical catalyst of nanoporous molybdenum carbide nanowires (np-Mo2C NWs) has been developed for hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). The np-Mo2C NWs were synthesized simply by pyrolysis of a MoOx,/amine hybrid precursor with sub-nanosized periodic structure under an inert atmosphere. The enriched nanoporosity and large reactive surface of these highly dispersed nanowires with uniform Mo2C nanocrystallites provide an efficient electrocatalysis, leading to their superior HER activity with lower onset overpotential and higher current densities than Mo2C microparticles. This study opens a new perspective for the development of highly active non-noble electrocatalysts for hydrogen production from water splitting

    Hydrogen evolution across nano-Schottky junctions at carbon supported MoS2 catalysts in biphasic liquid systems

    Get PDF
    The activities of a series of MoS2-based hydrogen evolution catalysts were studied by biphasic reactions monitored by UV/Vis spectroscopy. Carbon supported MoS2 catalysts performed best due to an abundance of catalytic edge sites and strong electronic coupling of catalyst to support
    corecore