The skin can tell the surgeon to give an alarm when our body is about to get sick, and even diagnose the disease of another person by touch alone. Tokyo University scientist Takao Someya is turning this scene into reality. Someya invented a bionic or esthetic e-skin that would give humanity a new sense of spiritual sensitivity. This electronic skin is as light as a feather, but it is extremely difficult to destroy. One day, it will bring great changes to the medical field. The future of health care? Someya is working hard for a future: doctors wear custom-made gloves made with his technique to detect tumors in women's breasts by touch. This can reduce the need to refer to and scan the body, as well as detect tumors as early as possible – such as during routine physical examinations. Huge possibility These wearable bionic skin can be applied to us or just sewn to the clothes. They can be used to monitor vital signs in the body and even to monitor the state of our heart to help doctors predict the risk of heart attack. Someya plans to complete the development of this technology in the next few years. However, his vision begins with robots – not humans. “The picture I imagine is that a robot can detect the emotions of the other person by shaking hands with people—such as enthusiasm or sadness.†He believes that designing e-skin for robots can create outside the already saturated commercial electronics field. A new research trend, the commercial electronics industry at that time either focused on developing micro-robots or making machines move faster. But this is 15 years ago. In today's view, with the technology lead he achieved, the picture he imagined at the time was not so far away. Exploring his thoughts The professor of electrical engineering said: "In the early 21st century, I just started research. At that time, flexible electronic materials were just emerging, but most people wanted to develop electronic paper. I wanted to do something other than mainstream. †Artificial skin has long been there, but they are not perfect enough. Artificial skins that detect temperature and pressure are not soft enough, just a bunch of rigid electronic materials with certain functions. And their cost is too expensive, and it costs too much to cover the number of a robotic limb. Someya wants to break all these limitations, but it's not that simple. Tetanus Toxoid Vaccine,Toxoid Vaccine,Hep B Immune Globulin,Immunoglobulin Injections FOSHAN PHARMA CO., LTD. , https://www.full-pharma.com