However, these instruments are not readily available in the developing world, so the researchers adapted the particles so they could be analyzed on paper, using an approach known as a lateral flow assay — the same
technology used in pregnancy tests.
agree to and do hereby grant
Pregnancy After Loss Support and Lindsey Henke a nonexclusive, perpetual, irrevocable, worldwide, sub-licensable, transferrable, royalty - free right and license to
use, store, display, publish, transmit, transfer, distribute, reproduce, rearrange, edit, modify, aggregate, create derivative works of and publicly perform the content that you submit to the Site for any purpose,
in any form, medium, or
technology now known or later developed.
This controller
using digital acoustic
technology reproduces the sounds and patterns
in your musical choices
in safe and stable decibel levels, suitable for any music for a fetus
in womb, for they say that music during
pregnancy has an array of benefits to your unborn child.
Although the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is currently barred from granting approval to anyone hoping to
use this
technology in pregnancies, the Nature study suggests such work could be possible, says Jennifer Doudna of the University of California, Berkeley, a biochemist and CRISPR expert.