Apps allow you to link your smartphone to anything from your shoes, to 
your jewelry, to your doorbell — and soon, you may be able to add your 
contact lenses to that list.
 Engineers at the University of Washington have developed an innovative 
way of communicating that would allow medical aids such as contact 
lenses and brain implants to send signals to smartphones.
 The new tech, called "interscatter communication," works by converting Bluetooth signals into Wi-Fi signals, the engineers wrote in a paper
 that will be presented Aug. 22 at the Association for Computing 
Machinery's Special Interest Group on Data Communication conference in 
Brazil. [Bionic Humans: Top 10 Technologies]
 "Instead of generating Wi-Fi signals on your own, our technology 
creates Wi-Fi by using Bluetooth transmissions from nearby mobile 
devices such as smartwatches," study co-author Vamsi Talla, a research 
associate in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at the 
University of Washington, said in a statement.  
 Interscatter communication is based on an existing method of 
communication called backscatter, which lets devices exchange 
information by reflecting back existing signals. "Interscatter" works 
essentially the same way, but the difference is that it allows for 
inter-technology communication — in other words, it allows Bluetooth 
signals and Wi-Fi signals to talk to each other. 
 Interscatter communication would allow devices such as contact lenses
 to send data to other devices, according to the researchers. Until now,
 such communication had not been possible, because sending data using 
Wi-Fi requires too much power for a device like a contact lens.
 To demonstrate interscatter communication, the engineers designed a 
contact lens equipped with a tiny antenna. The Bluetooth signal, in this
 case, came from a smartwatch. The antenna on the contact lens was able 
to manipulate that Bluetooth signal, encode data from the contact lens 
and convert it into a Wi-Fi signal that could be read by another device.
 And though the concept of "smart" contact lenses may seem a bit 
gimmicky, they could, in fact, provide valuable medical information to 
patients.
 For example, it is possible to monitor blood sugar levels from a 
person's tears. Therefore, a connected contact lens could track blood 
sugar levels and send notifications to a person's phone when blood sugar
 levels went down, study co-author Vikram Iyer, a doctoral student in 
electrical engineering, also at the University of Washington, said in a 
statement. (Monitoring blood sugar levels is important for people with 
diabetes.)
 The researchers also said interscatter communication could be used to 
transmit data from brain implants that could one day help people with 
paralysis regain movement.
 Not all of the potential applications are related to medical devices, 
however. Interscatter communication could also exchange information 
between credit cards, the researchers wrote. This would allow people to 
transfer money between cards by simply holding them near a smartphone, 
for example, they said.
 Originally published on Live Science.


0 comments:
Post a Comment