A team of researchers from the Stanford Artificial Intelligence Laboratory have patented a portfolio of innovations that harness depth sensing technology to analyze human motion for touch-free control of devices and motion capture.
A team of researchers from the Stanford Artificial Intelligence Laboratory have developed a portfolio of patented innovations that harness depth sensing technology to analyze human motion for touch-free control of devices and motion capture.
To better understand how the brain processes information and generates behavior, researchers in Dr. Liqun Luo's lab have generated the FosTRAP and ArcTRAP mouse strains.
A team of Stanford researchers have identified a skeletal stem cell (SSC) along with the protein factors needed to direct differentiation toward bone, cartilage or bone marrow stroma.
Researchers from Stanford University and the Max Planck Institute have patented a new marker-less approach to capturing human performances from multi-view video.
Researchers in Prof. Hanlee Ji's laboratory have developed an automated method to capture and directly sequence target DNA with next-generation sequencing.
Dr. Richard Zare and colleagues have developed an inexpensive, fast and simple method for treating polyethylene terephthalate (PET) blood collection tubes (BCTs) to remove bias and interference in various blood analysis procedures.
Researchers in Dr. Juan Rivas-Davila's lab have developed 3D printing methods to make aircore inductors and capacitors with more complex geometries and functionality than components using printed circuit boards.
Voice to Text and Sketch (V2TS) is a patented software program which allows text or drawings to be synchronized to recorded audio. Each portion of text or section of a drawing is associated with an audio segment recorded at the time it was written/sketched.
Researchers in Dr. Karl Deisseroth's lab have created inhibitory channelrhodopsins (ChRs) that allow fast, reversible inhibition of electrical signals in neurons. Optogenetics is a technique used to understand normal and pathological neural circuitry.
Stanford engineers have developed a patented device and sample preparation technique for high throughput purification, concentration, and sample preparation of a wide variety of biomolecules.
Stanford researchers have invented a system for identifying head impacts and rejecting spurious motion events. The system has been implemented in an instrumented mouthguard which measures head kinematics on the sports field.
This invention is a system that allows labeling of radiological images based on anatomy, such that radiologists or other users can locate the images using anatomical names.