Customs Today
  • Home
  • Islamabad
  • Karachi
  • Lahore
  • National
  • Transfers and Postings
  • Chambers & Associations
  • Business
No Result
View All Result
Customs Today
  • Home
  • Islamabad
  • Karachi
  • Lahore
  • National
  • Transfers and Postings
  • Chambers & Associations
  • Business
No Result
View All Result
Customs Today
No Result
View All Result
Home Science & Technology Technology

Google Map imaging technology can take millions of microscopic images of a human body area

byCustoms Today Report
04/04/2015
in Technology
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

SYDNEY: The technology giant Google has introduced a new Map which lets you to view inside human body as this Google Map Technology is able to take millions of microscopic images of human body area.

The “Earth” view in Google Maps lets us zoom from the heights of our atmosphere to the tops of our homes, putting our place in the world in dramatic perspective. New technology helps the zoom factor continue — straight down into our bodies.

You might also like

Tesla driverless system to use updated radar technology

12/09/2016

Apple to develop its own self-driving technology

10/09/2016

At the just-concluded Orthopedic Research Society meeting in Las Vegas, Melissa Knothe Tate from the University of New South Wales (UNSW) in Australia presented a new kind of imaging technique that will let scientists zoom in to the body with the same fluidity as Google Maps lets us zoom into our neighborhoods.

To create the technique, the biomedical engineer and a group of researchers from other universities tapped technology originally invented by German company Zeiss to scan the surface of silcon wafers such as those used in microelectronics. The imaging technology can take millions of microscopic images of an area of the body — and offers advantages over MRIs.

“MRI is the equivalent of looking at the map of the United States or a map of Europe, where you see the individual country borders,” Knothe Tate told Quartz. With her technique, “you see the individual inhabitants within the cities and the countries.”

But once those images — which can range from “centimeters-long human joints to nanometer-sized molecules inside a single cell inhabiting the tissue,” according to The Sydney Morning Herald — are assembled, they comprise an enormous set of data that can be hard to wield. So the researchers turned to the same algorithms used by Google Maps to stitch the images together into one zoomable picture.

“For the first time we have the ability to go from the whole body down to how the cells are getting their nutrition and how this is all connected,” Knothe Tate said in a statement. “This could open the door to as yet unknown new therapies and preventions.”

Knothe Tate, who focuses on regenerative medicine, told Quartz that the new technology can let her go from seeing cracks in the bone to zooming in deeper to observe weak blood vessel connections. Such an analysis of data used to take up to 25 years, but can now be done in weeks, says the UNSW report. With this new understanding, Knothe Tate hopes to develop preventive and recuperative treatments for individuals suffering from bone and joint ailments.

Related Stories

Tesla driverless system to use updated radar technology

byCT Report
12/09/2016

WASHINGTON: Electric carmaker Tesla announced Sunday it was upgrading its Autopilot software to use more advanced radar technology. In a...

Apple to develop its own self-driving technology

byCT Report
10/09/2016

SAN FRANCISCO: Apple may not become an automaker, but it still wants to develop its own self-driving technology. The iPhone-maker's...

‘YouTubers’ outshining old-school television

byCT Report
09/08/2016

SAN FRANCISCO: A media revolution is taking place, and most people over 35 years of age aren’t tuned in. Millennial...

Google pays tribute to Edhi

byCT Report
11/07/2016

ISLAMABAD: The technology giant, Google, has paid tribute to renowned social activist, philanthropist and humanitarian Abdul Sattar Edhi by placing...

Next Post

$450,000 Ferrari 599 GTO torn into pieces by valet parker after accidentally accelerator instead of brake

  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer

© 2011 Customs Today -World's first newspaper on customs. Customs Today.

No Result
View All Result
  • Transfers and Postings
  • Latest News
  • Karachi
  • Islamabad
  • Lahore
  • National
  • Chambers & Associations
  • Business
  • About Us

© 2011 Customs Today -World's first newspaper on customs. Customs Today.