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| [February 19, 2013] |
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USAMRMC, TATRC, Carnegie Mellon University, and Parallax Inc., Announce - 2013 National microMedic Contest
ROCKLIN, Calif. --(Business Wire)--
The U.S. Army Medical Research & Materiel Command's (USAMRMC)
Telemedicine and Advanced Technology Research Center (TATRC), along with
Carnegie Mellon University Entertainment Technology Center, and Parallax
Inc are offering over $25,000 in awards to inspire the next generation
of medical innovation. The 2013 National microMedic contest is an
opportunity to show the country what citizens can do with new technology
- encouraging technical innovation with significant use of
microcontrollers and sensors in the medical industry. This contest is a
perfect practical application for STEM (Science, Technology,
Engineering, Math) students around the nation.
Inventors and students are encouraged to participate by creating medical
applications and prototypes for possible use in the healthcare industry,
medical simulation training, and the battlefield. These technologies
have the potential to benefit service members, wounded warriors and
patients in general. STEM teachers are encouraged to get their classes
involved. Over 100 free contest kits will be given away on a first come
first serve basis to qualified applicants. Use your favorite
microcontroller or apply to receive a free kit that includes either the
Parallax multi-core Propeller chip or a shield for use with the Arduino
microcontroller. The kit also contains various sensors, LED displays,
infrared emitters, a blood pressure cuff, heart rate monitor and many
other components to spark your imagination. Use of the official contest
kit is not required to win.
Microcontrollers are inexpensive and tiny computers used in electronics.
They are found in automobiles, appliances, medical devices and gadgets
almost everywhere. Recently, the hobbyist community has been using
microcontrollers to create a wide variety of useful applications.
Examples include robots, monitoring systems, toys, 3D printers and a
wide variety of inventions.
Te 2013 National microMedic Contest is open to people of all ages and
is expected to create a surge in interest around new open-source medical
applications. Dr. Thomas Talbot, the Scientific Domain Coordinator for
Medical Simulation at TATRC, shared, "We're looking for
microcontroller-based projects for the health and medical simulation
community that combine the latest use of sensors, 3D printing, CNC and
science disciplines. This is a call to action for inventive people to
put their skills to use for the benefit of Army personnel and civilians."
To help get the competitors started, Parallax Inc is hosting resources
such as mini tutorials with code examples for sensors, lists of
application ideas and an online discussion forum specific to the
microMedic National contest where contestants can ask questions and
collaborate.
Applicants have until July 31st, 2013 to submit their
microMedic entries. Prizes will be awarded to 14 educational winners and
10 winners from the public category. The award ceremony will be held in
September 2013 at TATRC's Prototyping, Integration & Testing Lab
(PITLAB) at Fort Detrick, MD. For more information on the 2013
microMedic Contest visit www.Parallax.com/micromedic.
About Parallax Inc:
Parallax designs and manufactures microcontroller development tools and
small single-board computers as well as a vast array of products
including project boards, robotics kits, educational tools, and sensors.
Parallax is dedicated to providing the electronics industry with
products that are technically innovative, unique, and economical while
staying committed to thoughtful, creative design and quality
workmanship. Parallax Inc. is a privately held company located in
Rocklin, California.
About U.S. Army (TATRC):
The Telemedicine and Advanced Technology Research Center (TATRC)
provides tele-health solutions and executive medical research management
to enhance and support military healthcare and promote innovative
medical technologies. TATRC serves as the primary execution manager for
Defense Health Programs research while exploring science and engineering
technologies ahead of programmed research, leveraging other programs to
maximize benefits to military health care. TATRC is the science and
technology scout for military medicine and the center of gravity for
Army telemedicine initiatives. TATRC initiates, sponsors, promotes and
oversees programs and partnerships in medical science and engineering
that support military medical programs. For more information, please
visit: www.tatrc.org.
This initiative is supported under contract #: W81WXH- 12-20004.
About Carnegie Mellon (ETC):
The Entertainment Technology Center at Carnegie Mellon University is the
premiere professional graduate program for interactive entertainment as
it is applied across a variety of fields. The ETC offers a unique
two-year Masters in Entertainment Technology degree that is jointly
conferred by the School of Computer Science and the College of Fine
Arts. We emphasize leadership, innovation and communication by creating
challenging experiences through which students learn how to collaborate,
experiment, and iterate solutions. The ETC is simply different, we
strive to design experiences that educate, engage and inspire.

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