Brain Scan may help determine your exact age within a year

Image via the University of California San Diego School of Medicine

A MRI(magnetic resonance imaging) may help determine whether there are any problems with your brain, but researchers at multiple universities have discovered a new use for the MRI that has less to do with your health and more to do with your age? Yep that’s right, Timothy Brown from UCSD(University of California, San Diego) and researchers from nine different universities have reported today in the journal Current Biology that their test results indicated that they were able to determine a patients exact age within year accurately using the MRI.

Brown explained the experiment in a press release today: “We have uncovered a ‘developmental clock’ of sorts within the brain — a biological signature of maturation that captures age differences quite well, regardless of other kinds of differences that exist across individuals.” They experimented on 885 people from age 3 to age 20 and by identifying 231 biomarkers in the brain, they were able to determine the patient’s age with 92% accuracy, the highest to date in determining age. By combining the 231 biomarkers instead of normally separating them, they were able to more accurately determine an age according to Brown.

We’ll have to see if the team continues to have such success as they progress into a wider range of ages as being off by a year or two is completely different when talking about a 3 year old or talking about an 80 year old. Nonetheless it is still a good step forward on research on how our brain reflects our age. Let us know what you think of the experiment in the comments section below.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Brain scans can tell if you’ll really quit smoking, Researchers try to determine if you’re a pro gamer with science,

Fasotec Print a 3D model of your unborn baby with the ‘Shape of an angel’ service

Fasotec and Hiroo Ladies clinic, have started a service that makes 3D models showing the inside of the abdomen during pregnancy. This service began on July 30.
Currently, many clinics provide photos taken during ultrasound scans. But this is the world’s first service to provide a 3D model that you can actually hold.
“We actually got three expectant mothers to try this out. They said it felt great to see how their babies looked before birth, and to be able to actually hold the inside …

Robopsy is a low-cost, disposable patient-mounted medical robot

Robopsy is a lowcost, disposable patientmounted medical robot

In a less gelatin-centric demo, the Harvard-based team behind the Robotically Steerable Probe showed off some Robopsy devices during our visit to the school, rings that can help medical imaging technology like CT, ultrasound and MR physically pinpoint precise locations on patients. The devices, which can hold up to ten needles, are lightweight, mounting directly on patients via adhesives or straps. The medical robots are made largely of inexpensive injection molded plastic parts, making them disposable after they’ve been used on a patient, popping the motors and other control electronics onto another device. In all, the team says Robopsy rings are “orders of magnitude” cheaper and lighter than other medical robotic devices. Check out a video of the one of the Robopsy devices running after the break.

Continue reading Robopsy is a low-cost, disposable patient-mounted medical robot

Filed under:

Robopsy is a low-cost, disposable patient-mounted medical robot originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 05 Aug 2012 11:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceRobopsy  | Email this | Comments

New system lets you type with your brain using MRIs

New system lets you type with your brain using MRIs

This isn’t mind reading, per say. Instead Bettina Sorger, Joel Reithler, Brigitte Dahmen and Rainer Goebel at Universiteit Maastricht have figured out a way to monitor the flow of blood in the brain and associate the images captured using an MRI with the letters of the alphabet. The whole system takes about an hour to learn and configure for each individual. Trials focused on healthy individuals, but clearly its the paralyzed and people suffering from diseases like ALS that have the most to gain. Sorger hopes to enable “locked-in” patients to finally be able to communicate with the outside world by thinking out letter at a time. Obviously, patients aren’t going to be able to install an MRI in their homes, much less lug one around with them. The data collected could be used to finely tailor less accurate but more portable systems for patients that monitor electrical or light signals. If you’re interested in the real nitty-gritty you can check out the complete research paper at the source link.

New system lets you type with your brain using MRIs originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 29 Jun 2012 13:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Gizmodo  |  sourceCurrent Biology, University of Maastricht  | Email this | Comments

This Is What Child Birth Looks Like, From the Inside [Science]

Back in 2010, a team of German doctors announced that they’d recorded the world’s first MRI of a woman giving birth. Back then, only still images were available—but now the researchers have released the video, and it’s spellbinding. More »