VOA慢速英语听力2013年01月(WORD文本):MAJOR-PROGRESS-IN-HEALTH-THROUGH-TECHNOLOGY.doc
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- VOA 慢速 英语听力 2013 01 WORD 文本 MAJOR PROGRESS IN HEALTH THROUGH TECHNOLOGY
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1、From VOA Learning English, this is SCIENCE IN THE NEWS in Special English. Im Bob Doughty.And Im Faith Lapidus. Today, we tell about a woman who can use signals from her brain to move a robotic arm. We tell about efforts to develop an experimental gene treatment for patients with heart disease. And
2、we explain how American computers are helping medical workers in Zimbabwe study the condition of their patients.A woman paralyzed from the neck down has learned to use her thoughts to control a specially-designed motorized arm. The arm is the product of years of research on mind-controlled artificia
3、l limbs.Researchers in the American state of Pennsylvania say the motorized arm is the most advanced mind-controlled prosthetic, or replacement limb ever made. They created the device to help return some muscle control to Jan Scheuermann. She is suffering from a degenerative neuromuscular disease th
4、at paralyzed her from the neck down. She has no control of her arms and legs.The motorized right arm has a five-fingered, fully-jointed hand. It enables Ms. Scheuermann to pick up and hold objects, and feed herself.Neurobiologist Andrew Schwartz led the University of Pittsburgh research team that de
5、veloped the prosthetic arm. He says researchers placed about 200 electrodes in the womans left cerebral cortex. The left cerebral cortex is the part of the brain that people use to move their right arm.Dr. Schwartz says the electrodes recorded what the womans brain cells were doing when she thought
6、about moving the arm.And that was enough information that we could then decode from those recordings, what the intention of the subject was, the way she wanted to move her arm and her wrist and close her hand. We could decode the information from those neurons to allow us to do that.Jan Scheuermann
7、took part in a 13-week-long program to teach her brain to move the arm. But she did not need that much time. She was able to use her mind to move the robotic arm after just two weeks of training.She reportedly told researchers that she planned to use the arm to feed herself some chocolate. When she
8、was able to do that, it made the research team very happy.Andrew Schwartz says his team plans to build another artificial arm, so people like Ms. Scheuermann can hold and move objects using two hands.And really the satisfying part is that were not just making a machine move, were actually recreating
9、 natural humanoid movements. So were capturing all the beauty and grace and skill of a real movement, and allowing these subjects to basically return to a certain amount of function that they used to have.The researchers would like to create a wireless system that helps the brain communicate with th
10、e robotic limbs. The brains signals would be changed into messages that computers can understand. People could then use the arms or legs in their homes without wires or help from scientists.A report describing the prosthetic arm was published in the journal The Lancet.A patient with an arrhythmia, o
11、r irregular heartbeat, might one day be able to have a normal heartbeat with the injection of a single gene. The experimental gene would help to create a natural heart pacemaker. This would end the need for placing an electronic device in a persons chest to control the heartbeat.Researchers in Calif
12、ornia created what they are calling biological pacemaker cells by adding a single gene to a virus. They then injected the engineered virus into the hearts of guinea pigs. The animals had been bred to suffer from arrhythmia.The gene caused the creation of an exact copy of the sino-atrial node in the
13、hearts upper right chamber. Other studies have shown that this node helps to keep the heart beating normally. The gene changed heart muscle cells - called cardiomyocytes - into natural pacemaker cells.Eduardo Marban is director of the Cedars-Sinai Health Institute in Los Angeles. He says the node, c
14、alled S-A-N, makes up just 10,000 cells among the ten billion heart muscle cells. He says the tissue made by the inserted gene looks almost like the structure it replaces.If we were to give scientists who are specialized in this area the data to look at it then compare it to a genuine pacemaker cell
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