Digitise your dog into a computer game
Published on 16 June 2020Researchers from CAMERA have developed motion capture technology that enables you to digitise your dog without a motion capture suit and using only one camera.
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Researchers from CAMERA have developed motion capture technology that enables you to digitise your dog without a motion capture suit and using only one camera.
For the first time researchers successfully reproduced the electrical properties of biological neurons onto semiconductor chips.
The 'smart' pacemaker responds to signals from the body, instead of constantly pumping the heart at a fixed pace.
The University has been recognised for its commitment to openness and transparency around the use of animals in research.
A new mouse model for Joubert Syndrome has been developed by Bath scientists, who hope it will accelerate research to understand how this rare disease develops.
An innovative sensor platform, developed by Dr Ben Metcalfe, promises to offer new horse health insights to improve welfare and performance in horse racing.
Scientists at the University of Bath have identified how a mutant gene in fish is involved in controlling stem cells.
Scientists have shown that the zebrafish is a useful model for neuron and blood vessel development in the brain disease ALS (Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis).
The University was recently shortlisted for an award at the Understanding Animal Research (UAR) Openness Awards in the “Website or use of new media” category.
Scientists from the University of Bath have helped to figure out why shoals of fish flash silver by studying how shiny silver cells are created in zebrafish.