Winter Quarter 2009 Course Announcement

ENGR110/210
Perspectives in Assistive Technology

David L. Jaffe, MS and Professor Drew Nelson
Tuesdays & Thursdays   4:15pm - 5:30pm
Main Quad, History Corner, Lane Hall (Building 200), Room 034 (lower level)


Lectures

Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4 Week 5 Week 6 Week 7 Week 8 Week 9 Week 10
Tue Thu
Tue Thu
Tue Thu
Tue Thu
Tue Thu
Tue Thu
Tue Thu
Tue Thu
Tue Thu
Tue Thu


Tuesday, January 27th

photo of Graham Creasey

What Kind of Assistive Technology Do You Need if You Break your Neck?
Graham Creasey, MD
VA Palo Alto Health Care System

Abstract: Breaking your neck can affect nearly every part of your life. Physically, you may be paralyzed from the neck down, with no feeling in the body, unable to control your bladder or bowel or sexual function. Obviously, this affects you emotionally and socially - your education, work, house, travel, and relationships. What can assistive technology do to change this?

The industrial revolution gave us new tools, special beds, mattresses, wheelchairs and cushions, catheters, implants and many other gadgets. The microelectronic industry has revolutionized communication and control of equipment in the environment; if you can control a computer you can control many other things.

What about controlling paralyzed muscles?

What about curing paralysis?

Biosketch: Graham Creasey is the Paralyzed Veterans of America Professor of Spinal Cord Injury Medicine at Stanford University and the Chief of Spinal Cord Injury Service at the VA Palo Alto Health Care System. His research interests include the restoration of function after spinal cord injury, using information technology and biotechnology.

Contact information:
VA Palo Alto Health Care System
Spinal Cord Injury Service
3801 Miranda Ave.
Room C115, Building 7
Palo Alto, CA  94304
gcreasey -at- stanford.edu
Lecture Material:
Slides - pdf file
Audio - Introduction - 11:06 - 2.6 Mb mp3 file -- Lecture - 46:41 - 10.9 Mb mp3 file
Handout


Updated 01/29/2009

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