Stanford researchers have developed a “brain stethoscope” that can help detect non-convulsive epileptic seizures. By converting brain waves into sound, even non-specialists can detect “silent seizures” – epileptic seizures without the convulsions most of us expect.
- Category
- Academic
Sign in or sign up to post comments.
Be the first to comment
Up Next
Autoplay
-
Stanford researchers reimagine the sink
by admin 214 Views -
Brain Circuits: Harvard Medical School Researchers Crawl a Neural Network
by ava 1,066 Views -
Stanford researchers find that swarms of tiny organisms churn ocean waters
by admin 239 Views -
Stanford researchers decode how birds land with ease
by ava 181 Views -
Stanford researchers develop vine-like, growing robot
by admin 230 Views -
Technology That Could Help You Detect a Child Left in the Car
by ava 172 Views -
Stanford researchers modify small flying robots to haul heavy loads
by admin 223 Views -
Anatomy of the Stethoscope : Tips From a Nurse
by admin 776 Views -
Stanford Fellowship in Anesthesia Research and Medicine (Stanford FARM Scholars)
by admin 397 Views -
Stanford researchers develop algorithm to diagnose heart arrhythmias
by admin 249 Views -
Stanford researchers identify brain region activated by Pokémon
by admin 196 Views -
Stanford researchers discover new type of cell communication
by admin 179 Views -
Stanford engineers develop new tool for designing prosthetic limbs
by admin 215 Views -
How to Detect Balding | Thinning Hair
by ava 321 Views -
Silent Letter Words - Words With Silent ‘N’ #pronunciation #learnenglish #speakenglish #ananya #esl
by ava 73 Views -
Stanford researchers create "Shazam" for mosquitoes
by admin 253 Views -
Stanford researchers decode an ancient, extraordinary animal
by admin 253 Views -
Stanford researchers develop drone technology to study secrets of San Francisco Bay
by ava 192 Views -
Stanford researchers design solutions for hot hazmat suits
by admin 228 Views -
Stanford researchers find rice yields plummet in future climate
by admin 200 Views -
Stanford HAI 2019: Session 1- Welcome and Introduction to Stanford HAI
by admin 287 Views -
Stanford researchers design a touchable, 3D printing display for the visually impaired
by admin 173 Views
Add to playlist
Sorry, only registred users can create playlists.