An electronic nose that detects chemicals in the breath of lung cancer patients can identify with 85% accuracy those who will or will not respond to immunotherapy, according to new... Read more
Within the “smelldect“ Project, KIT Researchers Develop a Sensor to “Smell“ Cable Fires or Spoilt Food Freshly ground coffee, popcorn, bio waste or smoke – in the course of life, w... Read more
Detecting pesticides and nerve gas in very low concentrations? An international team of researchers led by Ivo Stassen and Rob Ameloot from KU Leuven have made it possible. The bes... Read more
UT Dallas Team Breathes New Life into Possibilities By Using CMOS Integrated Circuits Technology Researchers at the Texas Analog Center of Excellence (TxACE) at UT Dallas are worki... Read more
A research team from the University of Liverpool and the University of the West of England (UWE Bristol) has reached an important milestone towards creating a urine diagnostic test... Read more
New technology could be used to detect drugs at airports, diagnose certain cancers and test food quality, researchers say Humans can detect more than one trillion different smells,... Read more
A research consortium headed by Professor Hossam Haick of the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology is developing a product that, when coupled with a smartphone, will be able to... Read more
Novel noninvasive technique successfully discriminates between prostate cancer and benign disease in proof of principle study, paving the way for easy and early diagnosis, reports... Read more
Collecting samples of exhaled breath from people at a high risk of lung cancer could be a cheap and non-invasive method of diagnosing the disease, according to new research. The fi... Read more
An electronic nose, used to detect the presence of molecules in the breath of a patient, could be used to diagnose obstructive sleep apnoea. A new study, published online today ahe... Read more
Can detect small quantities of harmful airborne substances Research by Nosang Myung, a professor at the University of California, Riverside, Bourns College of Engineering, has enab... Read more
A way to make imperfectly ripe fruit a thing of the past Have you ever been disappointed by a cantaloupe from the grocery store? Too ripe? Not ripe enough? Luckily for you, researc... Read more
A German team has developed a completely new non-invasive method to identify heart failure. It consists of an “electronic nose” which could make the “smelling... Read more
Scientists are reporting an advance toward a fast, inexpensive urine test to detect and monitor the effectiveness of treatment for tuberculosis (TB), which is on a rampage in the d... Read more