Minnesota engineers developed fluid-filled 3D-printed tissues that mimic the feel of surgery, earning praise from surgeons.
University of Minnesota researchers develop a 3D printing technique for realistic human tissue models for surgical training.
The findings have the potential to resolve the longstanding "Muddle in the Middle" of human evolution, researchers said.
The team at Lux Aeterna explain how partnering with photogrammetry specialists Sample & Hold enabled the recreation of ...
Scientists say the Yunxian 2 skull shows humans split into distinct groups over a million years ago, far earlier than believed.
University of Minnesota researchers are using 3D printers to produce "realistic human tissue" for use in medical training. Why it matters: Practicing surgical techniques and other procedures on (close ...
At Snapdragon Summit, a Saudi company teased a laptop running an agentic AI interface that replaces traditional apps and ...
Carnegie Mellon scientists create AggreBots, tiny lung-cell robots powered by cilia with controlled motility.Word excerpt: ...
Diligent Robotics co-founder Vivian Chu said her "minimum viable humanoid" robots are already helping hospital staff save ...
A brand-new engineering approach to generate "designer" biological robots using human lung cells is underway in Carnegie ...