Results 81 to 90 of about 98,828 (301)

Multidimensional and Multifunctional Laser‐Induced Graphene (LIG) for Point‐of‐Care and Wearable Biosensing, Theranostics, and Bioactive Interfaces Toward Personalized Healthcare and Regenerative Medicine

open access: yesAdvanced Science, EarlyView.
Multidimensional laser‐induced graphene (LIG) spanning from 0D to 3D architectures is comprehensively reviewed for multifunctional biomedical platforms, including biosensing, theranostics, and bioactive interface applications, which highlights its potentials for point‐of‐care diagnostics, wearable health monitoring, smart drug delivery, and tissue ...
Li Zhang   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

Talking responsibly about medicine in the Fourth Industrial Revolution

open access: yesThe Thinker, 2019
A lot of what is currently being said about the future of medicine in the fourth industrial revolution (4IR) is irresponsible: it appears to be uttered without regard for whether it is true or false.
Alex Broadbent
doaj  

Data‐Driven Modeling of Composition–Processing–Microstructure Relations for Recycled Aluminum Cast Alloys

open access: yesAdvanced Science, EarlyView.
Interpretable machine learning reveals how composition and processing govern the formation and microstructural burden of Fe‐rich intermetallic compounds in recycled Al–Si–Fe–Mn alloys. By separating morphology selection from morphology‐conditioned burden partitioning, this framework shows that identical Fe contents can yield different intermetallic ...
Jaemin Wang   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

Hermeneutics of Food and Drug Regulatory Policy

open access: yesHumana.Mente: Journal of Philosophical Studies, 2020
In this paper, I examine the philosophical foundations of the regulation of edible things with particular emphasis on interpretations of the ontological relationship between the categories of 'food' and 'drugs.' To illustrate the diversity of possible ...
Joseph A. Tuminello, III
doaj  

Human, Health and Environment- and its modern interpretation- [PDF]

open access: yes, 2008
Hippocrates, the father of medicine, has been represented in many ways throughout the history of Western medicine. His influence on later medicine took various forms from one epoch to another, and the doctrine of Hippocratic medicine was interpreted in ...
여인석
core  

A Worm‐Inspired Origami Robot with Multimodal Locomotion for Adaptive Mobility in Complex Pipeline Environments

open access: yesAdvanced Science, EarlyView.
An origami worm‐inspired robot achieves multimodal locomotion in confined pipelines through mechatronic integration that embeds actuation, control, and communication within each origami module. Large, reversible configuration and dimensional changes enable 25 gaits synthesized by a unified framework across peristaltic, inchworm, and wheel‐rolling modes
Qiwei Zhang   +6 more
wiley   +1 more source

“Philosophy of Medicine and Model Design” [PDF]

open access: yes, 2013
This contribution shows how philosophy of science and medicine have been increasingly interacting and are further called to interact in elaborating different models, in clarifying notions like explanation, mechanism and generalization in the medical ...
CAMPANER, RAFFAELLA
core  

Philosophy in Medical Education [PDF]

open access: yes
In recent years, philosophy of science has increasingly engaged with scientific practice and with the distinctive features of various specific scientific disciplines.
Raffaella Campaner
core   +1 more source

Integrated Single‐Cell and Spatial Analysis Reveals a Metabolic‐Immune Axis Driving Aortic Dissection

open access: yesAdvanced Science, EarlyView.
Single‐cell and spatial profiling of 110 human thoracic aortic samples reveals a stromal–immune circuit driving aortic dissection. An elastin‐rich fibroblast subset is depleted with age and markedly reduced in disease, weakening aortic wall integrity.
Jing Tao   +25 more
wiley   +1 more source

The Need for Empirically-Led Synthetic Philosophy [PDF]

open access: yes, 2013
The problem of unifying knowledge represents the frontier between science and philosophy. Science approaches the problem analytically bottom-up whereas, prior to the end of the nineteenth century, philosophy approached the problem synthetically top-down.
Scoular, Spencer
core  

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