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Electrochemiluminescent tactile visual synapse enabling in situ health monitoring

Authors
 Kim, Woojoong  ;  Lee, Kyuho  ;  Choi, Sanghyeon  ;  Park, Eunje  ;  Kim, Gwanho  ;  Ha, Jebong  ;  Kim, Yeeun  ;  Jang, Jihye  ;  Oh, Ji Hye  ;  Kim, Hoyeon  ;  Jiang, Wei  ;  Yoo, Jioh  ;  Kim, Taebin  ;  Kim, Yeonji  ;  Kim, Kwan-Nyeong  ;  Hong, Juntaek  ;  Javey, Ali  ;  Rha, Dong-wook  ;  Lee, Tae-Woo  ;  Kang, Keehoon  ;  Wang, Gunuk  ;  Park, Cheolmin 
Citation
 NATURE MATERIALS, Vol.24(6) : 925-934, 2025-06 
Journal Title
NATURE MATERIALS
ISSN
 1476-1122 
Issue Date
2025-06
MeSH
Fingers / physiology ; Humans ; Monitoring, Physiologic / instrumentation ; Monitoring, Physiologic / methods ; Semiconductors ; Touch* / physiology ; Transistors, Electronic
Keywords
Carrier Concentration ; Diseases ; Mhealth ; Personalized Medicine ; Artificial Synapse ; Electrical Output ; Electrocardiogram Analysis ; Electrochemiluminescent ; Finger Flexion ; Finger Rehabilitations ; Health Monitoring ; In-situ Monitoring ; Optical Output ; Real- Time ; Visualization ; Devices ; Finger ; Human ; Physiologic Monitoring ; Physiology ; Procedures ; Semiconductor ; Touch ; Transistor ; Fingers ; Humans ; Monitoring, Physiologic ; Semiconductors ; Touch ; Transistors, Electronic
Abstract
Tactile visual synapses combine the functionality of tactile artificial synapses with the ability to visualize their activity in real time and provide a direct and intuitive visualization of the activity, offering an efficient route for in situ health monitoring. Herein we present a tactile visual synapse that enables in situ monitoring of finger rehabilitation and electrocardiogram analysis. Repetitive finger flexion and various arrhythmias are monitored and visually guided using the developed tactile visual synapse combined with an electrical and optical output feedback algorithm. The tactile visual synapse has the structure of an electrochemical transistor comprising an elastomeric top gate as a tactile receptor and an electrochemiluminescent ion gel as a light-emitting layer stacked on a polymeric semiconductor layer, forming an electrical synaptic channel between source and drain electrodes. The low-power (similar to 34 mu W) visualization of the tactile synaptic activity associated with the repetitive motions of fingers and heartbeats enables the development of a convenient and efficient personalized healthcare system.
Full Text
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41563-025-02124-x
DOI
10.1038/s41563-025-02124-x
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Rehabilitation Medicine (재활의학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Rha, Dong Wook(나동욱) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7153-4937
Hong, Juntaek(홍준택)
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/208640
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