|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
The Third International Conference on Synthetic Microstructures in
Biological Research (SMIBR) was held in Williamsburg, Virginia,
September 9-12, 1991. This book represents the compilation of many
of the papers and posters presented at the meeting. Publications
resulting from previous SMIBR meetings held at Airlie House,
Airlie, Virginia (March 24-26, 1986 and March 20-23, 1988) can be
obtained from the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers,
Inc. (IEEE) Service Center (908 562-5418). The purpose of these
conferences is to provide an interface between the engineering
community and those at the cutting edge of biological and related
material science. The overriding motive for assembling
representatives from these diverse disciplines is clear. Engineers,
even in 1986, could manipulate materials over dimensional scales on
the order of those critical to biological systems. The devices that
emerge from these manipulations could then be tailored to monitor
system function more directly with significantly more localization
than ever before. Thus, one important goal of the meetings is to
provide the detailed specifications required for effective
interfacing of devices with biological systems under investiga
tion."
The Third International Conference on Synthetic Microstructures in
Biological Research (SMIBR) was held in Williamsburg, Virginia,
September 9-12, 1991. This book represents the compilation of many
of the papers and posters presented at the meeting. Publications
resulting from previous SMIBR meetings held at Airlie House,
Airlie, Virginia (March 24-26, 1986 and March 20-23, 1988) can be
obtained from the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers,
Inc. (IEEE) Service Center (908 562-5418). The purpose of these
conferences is to provide an interface between the engineering
community and those at the cutting edge of biological and related
material science. The overriding motive for assembling
representatives from these diverse disciplines is clear. Engineers,
even in 1986, could manipulate materials over dimensional scales on
the order of those critical to biological systems. The devices that
emerge from these manipulations could then be tailored to monitor
system function more directly with significantly more localization
than ever before. Thus, one important goal of the meetings is to
provide the detailed specifications required for effective
interfacing of devices with biological systems under investiga
tion."
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R398
R330
Discovery Miles 3 300
|