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Neurobionics

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Neurobionics is aimed at the objective to substitute failed and damaged parts of the human brain and spinal cord by artificial, implantable systems of information processing. Thereby, the nonlinear aspects of biological information processing provide the theoretical basis for the invention of artificial implantable microsystems.[1]

In 1992 Neurobionics was founded by Hans-Werner Bothe organizing the 1st International workshop on Neurobionics in Goslar as a novel faculty between neurobiology, neurotechnology, computational neuroscience, and clinical neuromedicine.[2]

References

  1. ^ Bothe HW and Samii M (1993): Neurobionics - a novel faculty between ethics, neurobiology, computational technologies, and clinical neurosciences. In: Neurobionics (Bothe HW, Samii M, Eckmiller R eds.), Elsevier, North-Holland, Amsterdam
  2. ^ Bothe HW, Samii M, Eckmiller R (1993): Neurobionics, Elsevier, North-Holland, Amsterdam

Publications

  • Neurobionics - an interdisciplinary approach to substitute impaired functions of the human nervous system, Elsevier, Amsterdam, 1993, ISBN 0-444-89958-8
  • Die Evolution entläßt den Geist des Menschen: Neurobionik - eine medizinische Disziplin im Werden, Umschau, Frankfurt, 1994, ISBN 3-524-69105-6
  • Neurobionik - Zukunftsmedizin mit mikroelektronischen Implantaten, Umschau, Frankfurt, 1998, ISBN 3-524-69118-8