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A team of researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have become the first to develop 3D printed brain tissue that functions just like normal living brain tissue. Their work offers important ...
Scientists have 3D bioprinted functioning human brain tissue A new method for assembling neuron cultures horizontally instead of vertically helps solve for a longstanding issue. Andrew Paul ...
Scientists have developed the first 3D-printed brain tissue that can grow and function like typical brain tissue.
Scientists have developed 3D mini-organs from human fetal brain tissue that self-organize in vitro. These lab-grown organoids open up a brand-new way of studying how the brain develops.
University of Wisconsin–Madison (UW-Madison) researchers have successfully 3D-printed brain tissue that grows and functions like a typical brain.
Existing three-dimensional (3D) neuronal culture technology has limitations in brain research due to the difficulty of precisely replicating the brain's complex multilayered structure and the ...
Understanding the neural interface within the brain is critical to understanding aging, learning, disease progression and more. A newly developed, pop-up electrode device could gather more in ...
A team of University of Wisconsin-Madison scientists has developed the first 3D-printed brain tissue that can grow and function like typical brain tissue.
A team of scientists at the University of Wisconsin-Madison claim to have 3D-printed functional human brain tissue for the first time.
The printed tissue grows and functions like that in a normal human brain, according to the authors of the new study.