scholarly journals An Innovative High-Tech Acupuncture Product: SXDZ-100 Nerve Muscle Stimulator, Its Theoretical Basis, Design, and Application

2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xinyan Gao ◽  
Peijing Rong ◽  
Liang Li ◽  
Wei He ◽  
Hui Ben ◽  
...  

We introduce the theoretical basis, design, and application of a patented innovative high-tech product, SXDZ-100 nerve and muscle stimulator. This product is featured with a built-in chip containing transcoding information from different acupuncture manipulation collected from the wide dynamic neurons (WDR) in the spinal dorsal horn in animal experiments, which is bioinformation feedback therapy. The discharges of WDR neurons excited by different manipulations are analyzed using chaos theory in this study. It combines the advantages of manual acupuncture (MA) like no receptor adaptation and treatment individualization and that of electroacupuncture (EA) such as relatively low stimulation intensity and good quantification and thus makes it more effective than common stimulators in acupuncture clinic.

2016 ◽  
Vol 693 ◽  
pp. 64-68
Author(s):  
Cong Ling Zhu ◽  
C.H. Zhu ◽  
C.C. Li

In this paper, the static constitutive model of rubber damping materials, the equipment needed in experiment and the method of experiment design optimization are studied, providing new experiment design and theoretical basis for accurate design and application of vehicle rubber damper.


Author(s):  
J. Roland Ortt ◽  
Tineke Mirjam Egyedi

This chapter underscores the importance of timing by focusing on the effect of pre-existing standards and regulations on the innovation and diffusion of new high-tech product innovations. The effect is assessed in terms of the time interval between the invention of a technological principle and the introduction of the first marketable product (development phase), and the successive time interval up to the start of large-scale industrial production and diffusion (adaptation phase). Fifty heterogeneous cases of new high-tech product innovations from 1850 onward are analysed. Results indicate that pre-existing standards and regulations significantly shorten the adaptation phase, an effect not found for the development phase. The shortening effect on the adaptation phase is particularly evident for more radical innovations and for innovations that are more interrelated with a larger technological system. This accelerating effect on the diffusion of innovations is highly relevant for innovation managers and policy makers alike.


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