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1 ing deep brain stimulation (DBS) and sensory prosthetics.
2 that have important implications for neural prosthetics.
3 e a potential substrate for brain-controlled prosthetics.
4 ous literature on the analysis of failed hip prosthetics.
5 s, from neurorehabilitation robots to neural prosthetics.
6 ficial tactile perception to manipulators or prosthetics.
7 al on metal junction utilized in modular hip prosthetics.
8 : skin-attachable electronics, robotics, and prosthetics.
9 of surrounding environment for robotics and prosthetics.
10 te the development of robotics, haptics, and prosthetics.
11 nal or subcutaneous microphones for auditory prosthetics.
12 ides a new logic for enhanced-acuity retinal prosthetics.
13 al to the design of effective auditory brain prosthetics.
14 stic imitation of human skin in robotics and prosthetics.
15 icable for bridging injured sites and active prosthetics.
16 a key determinant of the success of cochlear prosthetics.
17 hophysical vestibular testing and vestibular prosthetics.
18 o maximize patient susceptibility to sensory prosthetics.
19 applicability and ease of operation of motor prosthetics.
20 ctrical stimulation in the context of visual prosthetics.
21 several new topics in the arena of cortical prosthetics.
22 chlear optogenetics in auditory research and prosthetics.
23 bination of soft tissue repair and synthetic prosthetics.
24 aries during color matching in maxillofacial prosthetics.
25 ntial for safe and autonomous cortical motor prosthetics.
26 ia cell-type-specific optical neural control prosthetics.
27 y might help to increase the lifetime of the prosthetics.
28 of occlusion observed with smaller-diameter prosthetics.
29 dermatoses in patients with limb loss using prosthetics.
30 or network-can thus aid the future design of prosthetics(7), robot grasping tools and human-robot int
35 urgical procedures enhance recovery, and new prosthetics and neural interfaces can replace missing li
37 hat can be applied to bio-inspired robotics, prosthetics and rehabilitation medicine, while also prov
43 preliminary results demonstrate that emotion prosthetics and somatosensory interfaces offer new possi
44 uch as in minimally invasive surgery, active prosthetics, and automation tasks involving delicate irr
45 rategies for improved integration of retinal prosthetics, and for stem cell therapies, particularly t
46 ve subtle tactile sensation for robotics and prosthetics, and further be applied to haptic-based virt
50 ve garments, skin-like sensors for robots or prosthetics, and user interfaces in contaminated environ
52 es have demonstrated that the newer biologic prosthetics are reasonable options for hernia repair in
53 ant promise for applications in HCI, such as prosthetics, assistive technology, rehabilitation, and h
54 As retinal cell replacement therapies and prosthetics become increasingly viable, we must understa
55 litate semicircular canal (angular velocity) prosthetics but inhibit approaches with the otolith (lin
56 ential to simplify the manufacture of ocular prosthetics, but existing approaches just replace to var
57 e poor quality of vision returned by retinal prosthetics by reducing the signal-to-noise ratio of pro
58 r, AI in rehabilitation devices and advanced prosthetics can provide individualized support, as well
59 mulation, with future applications in neural prosthetics, chip scale neural engineering, and extensio
60 lth and establishing control interfaces with prosthetics, computer systems and wearable robotic devic
61 echnique for augmenting biomedical research, prosthetics design, and preoperative surgical assessment
62 f implantable therapeutic devices-oculomotor prosthetics-designed to modify eye movements dynamically
64 ve the quality of vision elicited by retinal prosthetics, elicited neural activity should resemble ph
65 on with motor control, biologically embedded prosthetics enhance user capabilities and may elicit fee
66 oundations for using technology as cognitive prosthetics even during neurodegenerative illnesses.
70 s with [(18)F]fluoride require (18)F-labeled prosthetics for bioconjugation more often with cysteine
71 ical microcircuits and the promise of neural prosthetics for patients with neurological and psychiatr
72 europsychiatric illness; powerful control of prosthetics for restorative function in degenerative dis
75 trends in the device development for neural prosthetics have focused on establishing stimulus locali
81 movement provided the foundation for neural prosthetics in which brain-controlled interfaces are use
82 mb soft-tissue envelope change in lower-limb prosthetics is precise and can be used to detect the eff
83 rove the efficacy of microelectronic retinal prosthetics it will be necessary to better understand th
85 tions that require variable color, including prosthetics, medical models, and indicators, among other
90 y understand the properties of the available prosthetics or the circumstances that warrant the use of
91 ay with brain-machine interfaces, for bionic prosthetics, or biologically with hand replacement surge
93 es the quality of vision returned by retinal prosthetics, paving the way to novel clinical applicatio
98 ction, and adaptive control in exoskeletons, prosthetics, smart wheelchairs, and navigation systems.
99 this new technology into neural stimulation prosthetics, such as cochlear implants for the deaf, wit
100 This has important implications for neural prosthetics, suggesting that accurate operation of a bra
107 ecessary for the proper function of cochlear prosthetics, therefore, it is of great interest to under
108 strategy to "encode color" in future retinal prosthetics through a predictive computational tool to s
110 s a promising approach in rehabilitation and prosthetics to model the series of transformations from
111 alysis of body fluids, (ii) smart gloves and prosthetics to realise the sensation of touch and pain,
113 physicians, who implant life-changing penile prosthetics, to understand the most recent advances in t
114 een the synthetics, composites, and biologic prosthetics used for ventral hernia repair in terms of m
115 orrosion mechanisms of metal based implanted prosthetics utilized in modern surgical procedures.
116 such as SMA, as well as for next generation prosthetics, utilizing in vitro phenotypic models would
117 fields such as healthcare, robotic systems, prosthetics, visual realities, professional sports, ente
118 ithms can improve the performance of retinal prosthetics where substantial irregularities arise at th
120 g implies that, with current methods, visual prosthetics will have a limited dynamic range available
123 on, P3HT NPs provide a new avenue in retinal prosthetics with potential applications not only in reti