Topic: Maysam Ghovanloo
The medicine cabinet of the future could help make sure patients take their medications on time via a myriad of smart technologies. Rizwan Bashirullah, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Florida, says pills that report back when ...
Medical scientists at the Shepherd Center in Atlanta, Georgia are developing a truly breakthrough piece of technology to assist those recovering from strokes or spinal injuries - a wheelchair that can be controlled by tongue movements.. The wheelchair technology breakthrough comes from a ...
A headset that makes it possible for a person to precisely control a wheelchair or computer using only their tongue has begun trials with spinal injury patients in the US. Spinal damage The system is being developed by electrical engineer Maysam Ghovanloo ...
A headset that makes it possible for a person to precisely control a wheelchair or computer using only their tongue has begun trials with spinal injury patients in the US. Spinal damage The system is being developed by electrical engineer Maysam Ghovanloo ...
A headset that makes it possible for a person to precisely control a wheelchair or computer using only their tongue has begun trials with spinal injury patients in the US. Spinal damage The system is being developed by electrical engineer Maysam Ghovanloo ...
A headset that makes it possible for a person to precisely control a wheelchair or computer using only their tongue has begun trials with spinal injury patients in the US. Spinal damage The system is being developed by electrical engineer Maysam Ghovanloo ...
The technology is being developed by Maysam Ghovanloo,an electrical and computer engineer at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Ghovanloo's software can be personalized, allowing users to train the system to best fit their abilities, oral anatomy or preferences. But it ...
Georgia Institute of Technology, School of Electrical and Computer Engineering Field of Study: What inspired you to choose this field of study? I am also fascinated with the human brain, its power, and complexity. What is your favorite thing about being a ...
Researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology are looking into ways to convert the humble tongue into an elaborate computer control system.. "You could have full control over your environment by just being able to move your tongue," said Maysam Ghovanloo, a ...
7/3/2008 Print E-mail A tongue drive system that enables severely disabled people to operate powered wheelchairs and to perform other tasks has been developed by engineers at the Georgia Institute of Technology. "This device could revolutionize the field of assistive ...