Didactics and Technology in Education
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Didactics and Technology in Education
Almost "everything" about new approaches in Education
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Big Data for Medicine

Big Data for Medicine | Didactics and Technology in Education | Scoop.it
Researchers spotted new ways to treat cancer when the National Institutes of Health enabled semantic searches of its huge Medline database of published medical articles.
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Rescooped by Rui Guimarães Lima from Tech Latest
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How is the Medical 3D Bioprinting Market Growing?

How is the Medical 3D Bioprinting Market Growing? | Didactics and Technology in Education | Scoop.it
Research firm TechNavio has released a report outlining certain enlightening facts about medical 3D printing and the bioprinting market.

Via Peter Azzopardi
Peter Azzopardi's curator insight, September 8, 2014 6:17 PM

3D bioprinting – the fabrication of organs from biomaterials using a 3D printer –  could eliminate the need to wait for an organ.

 

Guest post: Thanks to @Inside3DP.com for the scoop.

Rescooped by Rui Guimarães Lima from Tech Latest
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Open source library for 3D printed medical devices

Open source library for 3D printed medical devices | Didactics and Technology in Education | Scoop.it
Researchers at MTU have created a library of open source digital 3D printable medical device files that can be 3D printed for just the cost of filament.

Via Peter Azzopardi
Peter Azzopardi's curator insight, September 19, 2014 12:46 PM

Professional medical syringe pumps, which are frequently used by doctors for drug delivery to administer precise amounts of medicine, can cost between hundreds to thousands of dollars.

 

Guest post: Thanks to @Inside3DP.com for the scoop.

Tiago Carita's curator insight, September 20, 2014 5:03 AM

Really cool!

Ms. Stephens's curator insight, September 22, 2014 12:06 PM

3D printers have the potential to revolutionize everything from furniture to medical devices.  Will 3D printing drive down consumer costs?

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Researchers use magnets to cause programmed cancer cell deaths

Researchers use magnets to cause programmed cancer cell deaths | Didactics and Technology in Education | Scoop.it
A team of researchers in South Korea has developed a method to cause cell death in both living fish and lab bowel cancer cells (in vivo and in vitro) using a magnetic field. The application of the magnetic field, as described in their paper published in the journal Nature Materials, triggers a "death signal" that leads to programmed cell death.

 


Via Sakis Koukouvis
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