An 'amplifier' for missed signals produced by our bodies
January 13, 2025
January 13, 2025
EVANSTON, Illinois, Jan. 13 -- Northwestern University issued the following news release:
An unplugged electric instrument may function, but it sounds much better when it is connected to an amplifier and pedals. Similarly, toxins and other small molecules at low concentrations in the environment or human body may emit quiet signals that are undetectable without specialized lab technology.
Now, thanks to a "cool trick in biochemistry" used to adapt a sensing p . . .
An unplugged electric instrument may function, but it sounds much better when it is connected to an amplifier and pedals. Similarly, toxins and other small molecules at low concentrations in the environment or human body may emit quiet signals that are undetectable without specialized lab technology.
Now, thanks to a "cool trick in biochemistry" used to adapt a sensing p . . .