Author: dhallett

Purdue, FSSA partner to bring new care models, process improvements, and technology systems to improve opioids addiction treatment and hospital transitions from long-term care

The Indiana Family and Social Services Administration (FSSA) and the Regenstrief Center for Healthcare Engineering at Purdue University on Tuesday (Nov. 27) announced a two-year, $12M contract to continue to provide direct, technical assistance to the state’s Medicaid providers. By promoting and enabling optimal use of modern health information technology, the funding will help address several clinical challenges currently impacting long-term care and the opioid crisis like patient bottlenecks, overprescribing, and unnecessary emergency room visits.

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Flying high: Computer graphics researchers make drone navigation easier

Bedrich Benes, a professor of
computer graphics technology, and doctoral student Hao Kang collaborated with corporate researchers to develop FlyCam, a touch-screen method to navigate and take pictures with drones.

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Major natural carbon sink may soon become a carbon source

Until humans can find a way to geoengineer ourselves out of the climate disaster we’ve created, we must rely on natural carbon sinks, such as oceans and forests, to suck carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere. These ecosystems are deteriorating at the hand of climate change, and once destroyed they may not only stop absorbing carbon from the atmosphere, but start emitting it.

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Holiday travel: New technology paves the way for fewer orange barrels and safer, quicker road repairs

A Purdue University team developed a method and equipment to better repair paved roadways and highways using electrical resistance measurements to measure the optimum curing time for asphalt emulsions

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Targeted delivery: Purdue cancer identity technology makes it easier to find a tumor’s ‘address’

An improved drug delivery method from Purdue University uses nanoparticles to help treat people with various tumors and ease the painful side effects of chemotherapy.

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New flexible, transparent, wearable bio-patch, improves cellular observation, drug delivery

Minimally invasive patch developed by Purdue researchers delivers exact doses directly into cells, lessens pain, toxicity.

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Bringing ‘space trash’ safely back to Earth

Orbital debris from the defunct satellites and fragments of spent rockets left suspended in Earth’s atmosphere are slowly making their way back to Earth. Objects usually return after a few years, but debris trapped in higher orbits can remain for more than a century. Purdue University’s David Spencer, associate professor of aeronautics and astronautics, aims to develop a system that in the future would deorbit spacecraft launched by companies like SpaceX, OneWeb, and Boeing, as the spacecraft complete their missions.

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Teaching computers to interpret ideology: Purdue professor uses AI to deduce bias in social media and news

A Purdue professor is combining machine learning with models of social relationships and behavior to read between the lines of text and capture the author’s intent in a deeper way. The technology could help identify biases in social media posts and news articles, the better to judge the information’s validity.

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Research on clots could make pancreatic cancer more treatable

Pancreatic cancer symptoms often arrive after the cancer has already spread, making the disease one of the leading causes of cancer deaths in the U.S. However, a team of researchers believes that targeting how blood clots form and are naturally cleared could make the cancer more treatable.

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Light-bending tech shrinks kilometers-long radiation system to millimeter scale

A new device bends visible light inside a crystal to produce “synchrotron” radiation (blue and green) via an accelerating light pulse (red) on a scale a thousand times smaller than massive facilities around the world.

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