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News Release 14-173

Tomorrow's tech-most-wanted at Eureka Park

NSF-supported technological innovation returns to Eureka Park at 2015 International CES®

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Electronics on a human arm.

Included in Eureka Park is the University Innovations Marketplace, which features consumer-focused technologies developed in academic environments. Students and staff from four NSF-funded Engineering Research Centers (ERC), interdisciplinary groups based at universities with industry partners that produce complex engineered systems and systems technologies, will be present. The ERC ASSIST is developing nanotechnology-enabled, self-powered, wearable health and environment monitoring devices to enable wellness management and prevent chronic disease.

Credit: Advanced Self-Powered Systems of Integrated Sensors and Technologies (ASSIST)


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A spherical robotic hand filled with granular material that is gripping a lightbulb

Empire Robotics has created the VERSABALL®, a spherical robotic hand filled with granular material that conforms to and grips objects. At CES, Empire's interdisciplinary team of experts will demonstrate the hand's abilities.

Credit: Empire Robotics


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Illustration of a camera.

InView Technology Corp. is developing a low-cost, multi-color, short-wave infrared camera that can be directly mounted on microscopes for scientific, industrial and biomedical imaging. The camera is based on compressive sensing, a new sampling technique that reduces data collection requirements for high-resolution imaging to below Nyquist limits. At CES, InView will demonstrate its computational imaging platform enabled by the patented InView210 broadband shortwave infrared camera and CompressView software.

Credit: InView Technology Corp.


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Diagram of a human head and headset.

Reach Bionics develops technology that harnesses EMG signals from vestigial human muscles around the ears to create hands-free, wearable controllers. Headset applications include computer cursors, video game controllers and motorized wheelchairs.

Credit: Reach Bionics


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Low-cost, commercial-scale graphene

At the 2015 International CES, Graphene Frontiers demonstrates its graphene production and processing. The applications include more flexible, resilient smartphone and tablet displays, as well as chemical detection for wearable sensors.

Credit: Graphene Frontiers


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