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Wednesday, March 30, 2011

For Some Patients, the End of the Full-Body MRI

For Some Patients, the End of the Full-Body MRI: "


Claustrophobics (and everyone else who hates lying in coffin-like spaces), take note: GE just introduced an MRI machine for arm and leg injuries that requires patients to stick only the affected limb into a doughnut-shaped scanner--no full-body scanning required.

The device, dubbed the Optima MR430s, offers imaging of the elbow, wrist, hand, knee, ankle, and foot, all while allowing patients to recline in padded, adjustable chairs.

There are a number of advantages to the machine. The scanner produces clearer images since patients are sitting comfortably and not squirming around. The device's small size also means that hospitals can fit many of them in a small space and cut down on installation costs compared with full-blown MRI machines.

GE has already started rolling out the Optima to select hospitals. Find one nearby here, and check out the MRI machine in action below.



[youtube -iQLpqoEgCA]

Follow Fast Company on Twitter. Ariel Schwartz can be reached by email.


Read More: Most Innovative Companies: GE



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Keyglove does more than just keep your hands warm

Keyglove does more than just keep your hands warm: "

The Keyglove that you see here is definitely not just a futuristic looking piece of fashion to keep your fingers nice and warm during the bitter cold of winter, but it is also an open-source portable Arduino/AVR-powered glove which relies on the touch combinations for keys as well as an accelerometer for the mouse in order to generate keyboard and mouse control codes with but a single hand. Upon learning it, the glove can be used in a jiffy without having to look at it, making it ideal for embedded/wearable environments. The glove itself is thin and light, where it was specially constructed to enable activities such as writing to happen without being cumbersome. It right now requires $10,000 to kick start as a project, and with 27 days to go as at press time and a mere 13 backers with $365 pledged, it still has some ways to proceed before entering reality.


Keyglove does more than just keep your hands warm, By Ubergizmo. Top Stories : iPad 2 Review, Atrix Review,



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Friday, March 25, 2011

Ask Engadget: best ergonomic keyboard for a Mac?

Ask Engadget: best ergonomic keyboard for a Mac?: "

We know you've got questions, and if you're brave enough to ask the world for answers, here's the outlet to do so. This week's Ask Engadget question is coming to us from Andrew, who isn't interested in ever getting CTS. If you're looking to send in an inquiry of your own, drop us a line at ask [at] engadget [dawt] com.


'I bought my first computer from Apple a few months ago (15-inch MacBook Pro) and I've been using it extensively around campus. I didn't give it too much notice at first, but the keyboard is making me develop wrist problems (possibly carpel tunnel?). My wrist has been hurting so much that I couldn't sleep because my wrist would keep twitching. I bought a Logitech Wave Pro, which helped my wrist problem a lot. Problem is, Logitech dropped OS X support for the Logitech Wave almost two years ago, and many of my buttons are mapped incorrectly.



Which ergonomic keyboard would you suggest? I'm open to anything. Bluetooth is a bonus so I don't have to worry about a receiver, but if that degrades the performance / speed of the keyboard then I don't want it. Thanks!'

We know Andrew's not alone here. There simply aren't enough legitimate ergonomic keyboard options that work perfectly with OS X, but hopefully there are one or two that have really made you folks happy. Let us know in comments below, cool?

Ask Engadget: best ergonomic keyboard for a Mac? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 24 Mar 2011 22:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Thursday, March 24, 2011

x-Ar exoskeleton arm keeps repetitive tasks from doing you harm (video)

x-Ar exoskeleton arm keeps repetitive tasks from doing you harm (video): "




The spring-loaded technology behind the Steadicam has just found another use -- the x-Ar exoskeleton arm, which attaches to your wrists to reduce or eliminate the feeling of weight. Just unveiled at the Applied Ergonomics Conference in Florida this week, the mechanism mounts to a chair or other stable object and loosely cuffs your arms, allowing for a fairly extraordinary range of motion while bearing 'the weight of your arm and small objects.' (Sledgehammer-wielding workers will probably be better served by one of these.) While manufacturer Equipois suggests that the arm will likely see use in factories, assembly lines and the like where workers are subject to repetitive stress, we can also think of a few bloggers who wouldn't mind taking a little strain off their wrists. PR after the break.

Continue reading x-Ar exoskeleton arm keeps repetitive tasks from doing you harm (video)

x-Ar exoskeleton arm keeps repetitive tasks from doing you harm (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 23 Mar 2011 12:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceEquipois  | Email this | Comments"

Kinect Lets Surgeons Navigate Medical Data In The OR

Kinect Lets Surgeons Navigate Medical Data In The OR: "



Once again I am pleasantly surprised with the truly useful and helpful applications being thought up for the Kinect. Just last week we saw a hack providing a rudimentary artificial vision system for the blind — clumsy and rough, but the idea that it’s possible from off-the-shelf components and open-source software is mind-blowing.


Now we see an incredibly practical medical application: allowing surgeons to navigate data and imagery while gloved up and in the OR. Although a nurse or intern could do it, this frees more hands and eyes for essential surgery support and allows the operating surgeon to check things out directly and instantly. Odds the guy in the video is a gamer?



It’s only been used to assist a few surgeries so far (at Sunnybrook Hostpital in Toronto), and there are no concrete plans to expand it to other hospitals or commercialize the tech, but considering how useful it is, and how easy to implement, I wouldn’t be surprised to see this in many more locations come 2012.


[via MedGadget]




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Monday, March 21, 2011

Telehealth Is Trending

Telehealth Is Trending: "

Remote monitoring and other forms of 'telehealth' are increasingly shown to be effective.

nurse

Several recent studies reveal progress and greater interest in telehealth, according to reports. With patients suffering from HIV and depression, virtual assistance or remote monitoring shows promise as an element of a treatment strategy.

Recently, the Hospital Clinic of Barcelona revealed the data from a telemedicine program it called 'Hospital VIHrtual' ('VIH' is the Spanish acronym for HIV). Over five years, the Barcelona team has remotely looked after 200 patients with HIV, according to a release. Crucially, the results obtained via the telehealth program were just as good as those from traditional hospital visits. And obviously, it's less costly, both in terms of time and money, for doctors and patients alike.

Of course, you can't administer a drug over an Ethernet cable. The 'Hospital VIHrtual' consisted of consultations and medical management, and also led to a social network of sorts--a 'virtual community' with discussion forums and blogs.

What proved true for HIV patients also appears to be true for mental health patients, according to the Group Health Research Institute, a 'Seattle-based, consumer-governed, nonprofit health care system.' A randomized trial found that online messaging worked well for follow-up care to those suffering from depression. The results will appear in the Journal of General Internal Medicine. In fact, after five months, the patients receiving online care management were, 'significantly more likely to feel less depressed, take their antidepressant medication as prescribed, and be 'very satisfied' with their treatment for depression,' according to a release. 'We worried that patients might need live voice contact in real time to be understood and feel supported,' Dr. Gregory Simon said in the release. 'But this online care management helped these patients, even though they never met the trained psychiatric nurse in person or talked with her on the phone. And because she spent only one hour per patient to deliver this intervention, it promises to make high-quality depression care more affordable.'

In other recent telehealth news, Obstetricians & Gynecologists RRG of America, Inc., an insurance company, today announced that it was offering free postpartum depression tests via telephone. And the Scottish government has just announced it plans to spend 10 million pounds to transfer telehealth technology--that is, to bring existing technology into more patients' homes. The program is expected to reach 10,000 people.

As most of the reports note, the telehealth trend doesn't mean computers will be replacing old-fashioned visits to the doctor, though--merely complementing them.

Follow Fast Company on Twitter.

[Image: Flickr user wonderlane]



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Tuesday, March 15, 2011

An epidemic of repetitive stress injuries

More than 100 different injuries can result from repetitive motions. The combination of repetitive motions, which cause friction that wear down tissues, and sustained postures that keep the blood supply away from the working tissues, produces damage that builds up until it causes diseases such as carpal tunnel syndrome and tendonitis. The Bureau of Labor Statistics says that cumulative trauma disorder, another name for repetitive strain disorder, is the fastest growing occupational disease, rising from 18 percent in 1981 to 61 percent in 1991.

These kinds of disorders often affect dental professionals, because much of their work involves sustained postures and repetitive motions. In 1990, it was estimated that the annual loss of income to dental practitioners due to cumulative trauma disorder-related pain was more than $41 million.

Repetitive stress disorders have become such a widespread problem that the Healthy People 2010 Objectives for the Nation has as one of its objectives to "reduce the rate of injury and illness cases involving days away from work due to overexertion or repetitive motion." This is a statement of national health objectives designed to identify the most significant preventable threats to health and to establish national goals to reduce these threats during this decade. The Healthy People 2010 Objectives for the Nation, which was developed through a broad consultation process within the Department of Health and Human Services, is built on the best scientific knowledge and designed to measure programs over time. Its target is a 50 percent improvement, which will be achieved when the rate of injuries due to overexertion or repetitive motion is reduced from 675 to 338 per 100,000 full-time workers. The full Healthy People 2010 report can be found on the Internet at www.healthypeople.gov.

Source:
Woman Dentist Journal

Friday, March 11, 2011

Should You Invest in Better Tech, Or In Better Call Center Conditions?

Should You Invest in Better Tech, Or In Better Call Center Conditions?: "

'Call centers treat agents like slave labor,' writes Forrester analyst Kerry Bodine. She suggests that instead of spending money on the latest technology - cloud, mobile, social analytics and all that stuff we like so much - companies should invest more into their call center employees. Why invest in those employees, instead of advertising campaigns, better websites or social CRM? Because those call center workers reach more customers each month than any marketing campaign.


Sponsor



Even with conservative estimates, it's easy to make the case that large call centers have customer influence on par with, if not greater than, that of mass advertising campaigns. (Assuming a call center with 3,000 agents and an average of only 50 calls per agent per day, a company has the opportunity to make 1.05 million personal connections each week -- and 54.6 million each year.)


What should be done?



'Instead of sinking millions of dollars into call center technology projects, companies like American Express, Esurance, Lands' End, and Zappos.com, which are known for delivering great call center experiences, have focused on creating a customer-centric call center culture,' Bodine writes.



We've touched on this before, when covering Gartner's analysis of CRM's failure to improve customer satisfaction.



More customers may turn to social media for support, but according to other Forrester research, few are doing so. Last year Zendesk Vice President of Product Management Maksim Ovsyannikov told us that the company is adding multichannel support options, citing Gartner research that over 60% of customer interactions still take place on the phone.



There are technological investments that could enhance a call center. Some are smart, like Salesforce.com's integration of Apple FaceTime. Some are kooky, like using predictive analytics to match a customer's personality with a representative.  And having slow computers or a bad phone system won't help anything either. But it's all secondary to having a good work environment for the customers on the front lines.



Photo by Vitor Lima


Discuss



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Saturday, March 5, 2011

The Human Factors Prize

The Human Factors Prize: "


The Human Factors and Ergonomics Society is announcing the Human Factors Prize, a $10,000 prize recognizing excellent human factors research.  The winner will be presented at the annual meeting in Las Vegas this fall.


The Human Factors and Ergonomics Society is proud to announce the Human Factors Prize, established in 2010 by Editor-in-Chief William S. Marras. The prize, which will be presented for the first time in 2011, recognizes excellence in HF/E research through an annual competition in which authors are invited to submit papers on a specific topic for that year. The topic is selected by the editor in chief in consultation with a Board of Referees chaired by Immediate Past Human Factors Editor Nancy J. Cooke. See below for the current year’s topic.


The prize carries a $10,000 cash award and publication of the winning paper in the Society’s flagship journal, Human Factors. The award will be formally conferred at a special session at the HFES Annual Meeting, where the recipient will present his or her work.


This year’s topic is health care ergonomics:


2011 Topic

The topic for the inaugural-year Prize is health care ergonomics. Health care ergonomics is broadly defined to include research at the intersection of health care and human factors. Suitable sample topics include human factors aspects of home health care, the ergonomics of laparoscopic equipment and procedures, patient care coordination, usability of electronic health records and informatics, macroergonomics of health care facilities, and use of simulation for health care training.


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Friday, March 4, 2011

Japanese researchers weave capacitive touch into large-area textiles, want to make them wearable (video)

Japanese researchers weave capacitive touch into large-area textiles, want to make them wearable (video): "

Conductive fibers, yo, they're the future. Japan's AIST is back with yet another quirky idea, this time integrating capacitive touch sensors into 1-micron thick nylon fibers. The results is a big old cloth that can sense your loving touch and inform nearby computers of what you're up to. Initial uses envisioned by the research outfit include implementation in hospitals to monitor bedridden patients, but the ultimate goal is to make this extra-sensitive array a wearable accoutrement. Wouldn't that be lovely?

Continue reading Japanese researchers weave capacitive touch into large-area textiles, want to make them wearable (video)

Japanese researchers weave capacitive touch into large-area textiles, want to make them wearable (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 04 Mar 2011 06:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceDigInfo.tv  | Email this | Comments"

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Microsoft Wants You to Control Your Phone by Touching Yourself

Microsoft Wants You to Control Your Phone by Touching Yourself: "

Keyboards and mice are so '99. The interface of the future will be your own body.

Kinect's 'using your body as a controller' feature was one of technology’s big hits last year--not only have users had fun dancing up a storm and racing cars with official Kinect games, but a whole community has emerged to dream up new and inventive ways of hacking the system that tracks 20 joints in your body.

But if you think that's Microsoft's last foray into unconventional means of controlling digital devices, think again. The Seattle giant has a whole team of smarty-pants researchers tasked with imagining new and freaky ways we might one day turn on our mp3 players, dial phones, and, who knows, maybe even power up a microwave for a little burrito action.

One of the projects they’re working on is 'Skinput,' a system that would allow you to control devices simply by hitting specific points on your arm. Not a device on your arm. Just your arm itself.

Here’s one way you might use it: You’re on your usual early-morning jog. Your mp3 player is set to “shuffle.” A song comes up that you’ve heard one too many times. Instead of having to stop your run, take out your player, and fumble with the buttons or spin wheel to skip to the next song, you just hit your arm about midway up and keep on cruising.

The idea behind Skinput is that mechanical vibrations travel differently through your bodydepending on where they originate. Or, as the robotic voice in the video below explains: “Variations in bone density, size and mass, as well as filtering effects from soft tissues and joints, mean different locations are acoustically distinct.” The Skinput team is developing software that would listen for the vibrations--through, for example, an armband on your bicep--and then turn them into instructions for a particular device.

[youtube MUnvdblJhP8]

Another Microsoft team is looking not at mechanical vibrations but instead at the electric signals your muscles create when they contract. One of the researchers on that project, Scott Saponas, tells Fast Company about a use case drawn from his own experience. In his spare time, Saponas takes pottery classes. It’s not unusual for someone to call him while his hands are covered in clay. What if instead of racing to clean your hands before your caller hangs up--or, worse, missing a call altogether--you could simply answer your phone by touching your thumb and forefinger together, for example?

The researchers are looking into how an armband with sensors on it, similarly affixed to your arm, could pick up the electric signals given off by different gestures and use that as a control mechanism. In the video below, Saponas shows how he hacked Guitar Hero to take input from the muscles he uses to strum an imaginary guitar.

[youtube pktVSTwC8qo]

Both of these projects are still in the research phase, and it would be at least five years before either could conceivably make it to the marketplace. And there's no guarantee that either actually will make it to market, says Saponas. But something will. Keyboards and mice work just fine when the only place you're doing computing is at your desk. But as we increasingly use digital devices in our everyday lives, especially in situations when our hands are otherwise occupied, like at the gym, in the grocery store, or while driving, it’s certain that we will be using interfaces like these, or similar ones, not too far down the line.

[Image: Microsoft]

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E.B. Boyd is FastCompany.com's Silicon Valley reporter. Twitter. Email.



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