10 research outputs found

    Toward Temperature Tracking With Unipolar Metal-Oxide Thin-Film SAR C-2C ADC on Plastic

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    © 1966-2012 IEEE. The maturity of metal-oxide thin-film transistors (TFT) highlights opportunities to develop robust and low-cost electronics on flexible and stretchable substrates over large area in an industry-compatible technology. Internet-of-Everything applications with sensor nodes are driving the development of analog-to-digital converters (ADCs). In this paper, a self-biased and self-digital-controlled successive approximation ADC with integrated references and sensor read-in circuitry together with a printed negative temperature coefficient (NTC) sensor using unipolar dual-gate metal-oxide (InGaZnO) TFTs is demonstrated. The system is operated at a clock of up to 400 Hz and a total power dissipation of 245 mW (73 μW from analog) at a maximum power supply of 30 V is measured. The radio-frequency identification-ready ADC comprises of a total of 1394 indium-gallium-zinc oxide TFTs and 31 metal-insulator-metal capacitors. A figure of merit of 26 nJ/c.s. is achieved from the ADC driven from external microcontroller. The robustness of the various blocks of the chip is characterized and the yield is discussed.status: publishe

    Adult attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in ASD

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    Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by core symptoms of inattention, impulsivity, and hyperactivity. ADHD has been considered for a long time as a childhood condition, fading as children grew up. Instead, ADHD changes its clinical presentation over the lifespan, but persists in most cases in adulthood with its associated impairment. It is only since 2013, with the release of DSM-5, that it is possible to diagnose ADHD in the presence of ASD. This change was based on studies performed in children, adolescents, and adults that found high comorbidity rates between ASD and ADHD. Studies investigating the co-occurrence of such disorders at a genetic, at structural and functional neuroimaging levels indicate that they share common genetic risk factors, involve similar biological mechanisms, and affect the same brain regions. The co-existence of both disorders causes a significant burden. Individuals with ASD presenting ADHD symptomatology exhibit a more severe phenotype, with more autistic traits, greater impairment in adaptive behavior, and increased risk for developing additional psychiatric conditions. Pharmacotherapeutic treatments for ADHD, such as methylphenidate and atomoxetine, have been studied in individuals with ADHD+ASD, demonstrating efficacy in decreasing the severity of ADHD symptoms, although with lower effect sizes than in people with only ADHD. The diagnosis of ADHD is established clinically and requires the use of rating scales as well as clinical interviews for avoiding the risk of misdiagnosis. The stigma surrounding individuals with ADHD is huge, therefore it is necessary to increase awareness about this disorder among both the public and healthcare professionals, in order to reduce the barriers that patients face to get access to proper diagnosis and treatment
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