PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Self-improving AI method increases 3D-printing efficiency

Self-improving AI method increases 3D-printing efficiency
2024-08-22
(Press-News.org) PULLMAN, Wash. – An artificial intelligence algorithm can allow researchers to more efficiently use 3D printing to manufacture intricate structures.

The Washington State University study, published in the journal Advanced Materials Technologies, could allow for more seamless use of 3D printing for complex designs in everything from artificial organs to flexible electronics and wearable biosensors. As part of the study, the algorithm learned to identify, and then print, the best versions of kidney and prostate organ models, printing out 60 continually improving versions.

“You can optimize the results, saving time, cost and labor,” said Kaiyan Qiu, co-corresponding author on the paper and Berry Assistant Professor in the WSU School of Mechanical and Materials Engineering.

The use of 3D printing has been growing in recent years, allowing industrial engineers to quickly convert customized designs on a computer to a wide range of products—including wearable devices, batteries and aerospace parts.

But for engineers, trying to develop the correct settings for their printing projects is cumbersome and inefficient. Engineers have to decide on materials, the printer configuration and the dispensing pressure of the nozzle, for instance—all of which affect the final product.

“The sheer number of potential combinations is overwhelming, and each trial costs time and money,” said Jana Doppa, co-corresponding author and Huie-Rogers Endowed Chair Associate Professor of Computer Science at WSU.

Qiu has done research for several years in developing complex, lifelike 3D-printed models of human organs. They can be used, for instance, in training surgeons or evaluating implant devices, but the models have to include the mechanical and physical properties of the real-life organ, including veins, arteries, channels and other detailed structures.

Qiu, Doppa, and their students used an AI technique called Bayesian Optimization to train and find the optimized 3D-printing settings.  Once it was trained, the researchers were able to optimize three different objectives for their organ models—the geometry precision of the model, its weight or how porous it is and the printing time. Porosity of the organ model is important for surgery practice, for instance, because the model’s mechanical properties can change depending on its density.

“It’s hard to balance all the objectives, but we were able to strike a favorable balance and achieve the best possible printing of a quality object, regardless of the printing type or material shape,” said co-first author Eric Chen, a WSU visiting student working in Qiu’s group in the School of Mechanical and Materials Engineering. 

Alaleh Ahmadian, co-first author and WSU graduate student in the School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, added that the researchers were able to look at all the objectives in a balanced manner for favorable results and that the project benefited from its interdisciplinary perspective.

“It is very rewarding to work on interdisciplinary research by performing physical lab experiments to create real world impact,” she said.

The researchers first trained the computer program to print out a surgical rehearsal model of a prostate. Because the algorithm is broadly generalizable, they could easily change it with small tunings to print out a kidney model.

 “That means that this method can be used to manufacture other more complicated biomedical devices, and even to other fields,” said Qiu.

The work was funded by the National Science Foundation, WSU Startup and Cougar Cage Funds.

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Self-improving AI method increases 3D-printing efficiency Self-improving AI method increases 3D-printing efficiency 2 Self-improving AI method increases 3D-printing efficiency 3

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Fighting coastal erosion with electricity

Fighting coastal erosion with electricity
2024-08-22
New research from Northwestern University has systematically proven that a mild zap of electricity can strengthen a marine coastline for generations — greatly reducing the threat of erosion in the face of climate change and rising sea levels. In the new study, researchers took inspiration from clams, mussels and other shell-dwelling sea life, which use dissolved minerals in seawater to build their shells. Similarly, the researchers leveraged the same naturally occurring, dissolved minerals to form a natural cement between sea-soaked grains of sand. But, instead of using metabolic energy like mollusks ...

Detective algorithm predicts best drugs for genetic disorders and cancer

Detective algorithm predicts best drugs for genetic disorders and cancer
2024-08-22
A computational model built by researchers at the Institute of Research in Biomedicine (IRB Barcelona) and the Centre for Genomic Regulation (CRG) can predict which drugs will be most effective in treating diseases caused by mutations that can bring protein synthesis to a halt, resulting in unfinished proteins.  The findings, published today in Nature Genetics, mark an important step in helping personalise treatment by matching patients with specific mutations with the most promising drug candidate. The predictive model, a publicly ...

For first time, DNA tech offers both data storage and computing functions

2024-08-22
Researchers from North Carolina State University and Johns Hopkins University have demonstrated a technology capable of a suite of data storage and computing functions – repeatedly storing, retrieving, computing, erasing or rewriting data – that uses DNA rather than conventional electronics. Previous DNA data storage and computing technologies could complete some but not all of these tasks. “In conventional computing technologies, we take for granted that the ways data are stored and the way data are processed are compatible with each other,” ...

Will EEG be able to read your dreams? The future of the brain activity measure as it marks 100 years

Will EEG be able to read your dreams? The future of the brain activity measure as it marks 100 years
2024-08-22
One hundred years after the human brain’s electrical activity was first recorded, experts are celebrating the legacy of its discovery and sharing their predictions and priorities for its future.  Since the first recording in July 1924, human electroencephalography (EEG) has been integral to our understanding of brain function and dysfunction: most significantly in the clinical diagnosis of epilepsy, where the analysis of the EEG signal meant that a condition previously seen as a personality disorder was quickly redefined as a disorder of brain activity.  Now, a century on, more than 500 experts from around the globe, ...

Investigating the role of interhemispheric pathways in motor recovery

Investigating the role of interhemispheric pathways in motor recovery
2024-08-22
Stroke and spinal cord injuries can severely impair motor functions, and understanding how to promote recovery is a critical challenge. While damaged neurons in the brain and spinal cord have limited ability to regenerate, the brain can form or strengthen alternative neural pathways involving uninjured parts of the brain, enabling functional recovery. Such reorganization of pathways in the brain is called neural plasticity, and identifying the involved pathways and understanding their functions can ...

Clinical trial in Ireland challenges beliefs about Ozempic and similar new obesity treatments

2024-08-22
A study carried out in St Vincent’s University Hospital (SVUH) Dublin challenges the belief that weight loss medications such as Ozempic, Wegovy or Monjaro work just by promoting satiety and making you eat less. The randomized controlled trial with 30 patients was led by Professor Donal O’Shea, SVUH and UCD School of Medicine, and examined the family of medications based on the hormone Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1). The findings published today in the Journal of the Obesity Society shows that there is a strong relationship between the increase in metabolic ...

Mouse study: Proteins do the damage in fetal abdominal inflammation

2024-08-22
Inflammation of the abdominal cavity in human fetuses resulting from a perforation of their intestine is likely to be caused by proteins contained in the fetal stool. This is the result of a Kobe University study that establishes a new mouse model allowing research and drug development for a condition that is otherwise difficult to approach. The fetus’s stool, called the “meconium,” is sterile but nevertheless causes inflammation of the abdominal cavity when it leaks out of the intestine after a perforation. Called “meconium peritonitis,” this is a life-threatening condition for the baby with a mortality rate of 10%-15% in humans, and neither a cause ...

Let me take a look: AI could boost diagnostic imaging results

Let me take a look: AI could boost diagnostic imaging results
2024-08-22
In radiology, diagnostic imaging requires specialized knowledge to interpret the findings associated with a wide variety of diseases. Fortunately, in recent years, generative AI models, such as Chat Generative Pre-trained Transformer (ChatGPT), have shown potential as diagnostic tools in the medical field, but their accuracy must be evaluated for optimal use in the future. Therefore, Dr. Daisuke Horiuchi and Associate Professor Daiju Ueda of Osaka Metropolitan University’s Graduate School of Medicine led a research team that compared the diagnostic accuracy of ChatGPT and radiologists. They used 106 musculoskeletal radiology cases with patient medical history, images, ...

Prof Carl Kocher explores how you can stretch your mind to grasp quantum entanglement

2024-08-22
My new article, ‘Quantum Entanglement of Optical Photons: The First Experiment, 1964-67’, is intended to convey the spirit of a small research project that reaches into uncharted territory. The article breaks with tradition, as it offers a first-person account of the strategy and challenges for the experiment, as well as an interpretation of the final result and its significance. In this guest editorial, I will introduce the subject and also attempt to illuminate the question ‘What is a paradox?’ Let’s begin with the gyroscope that I bought when I was eight, from a store ...

Unveiling the secret of blood regeneration: New insights into stress responses in hematopoietic stem cells (HSC)

Unveiling the secret of blood regeneration: New insights into stress responses in hematopoietic stem cells (HSC)
2024-08-22
Kumamoto University researchers have made a groundbreaking discovery that sheds light on how the HMGA2 gene—an essential transcriptional activator involved in chromatin modification—regulates stress responses in hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), thereby enhancing blood cell production recovery.   Exposure to infections or treatments such as chemotherapy often leads to a rapid decline in blood cells, including red blood cells and platelets. HSCs, which reside in the bone marrow that can develop into various types of blood cells, are crucial for recovering from these stress-induced blood disorders. Under stressd ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Practical education: Clinical scenario-based program development

The impact of family dynamics on eating behaviour – how going home for Christmas can change how you eat

Tracing the quick synthesis of an industrially important catalyst

New software sheds light on cancer’s hidden genetic networks

UT Health San Antonio awarded $3 million in CPRIT grants to bolster cancer research and prevention efforts in South Texas

Third symposium spotlights global challenge of new contaminants in China’s fight against pollution

From straw to soil harmony: International team reveals how biochar supercharges carbon-smart farming

Myeloma: How AI is redrawing the map of cancer care

Manhattan E. Charurat, Ph.D., MHS invested as the Homer and Martha Gudelsky Distinguished Professor in Medicine at the University of Maryland School of Medicine

Insilico Medicine’s Pharma.AI Q4 Winter Launch Recap: Revolutionizing drug discovery with cutting-edge AI innovations, accelerating the path to pharmaceutical superintelligence

Nanoplastics have diet-dependent impacts on digestive system health

Brain neuron death occurs throughout life and increases with age, a natural human protein drug may halt neuron death in Alzheimer’s disease

SPIE and CLP announce the recipients of the 2025 Advanced Photonics Young Innovator Award

Lessons from the Caldor Fire’s Christmas Valley ‘Miracle’

Ant societies rose by trading individual protection for collective power

Research reveals how ancient viral DNA shapes early embryonic development

A molecular gatekeeper that controls protein synthesis

New ‘cloaking device’ concept to shield sensitive tech from magnetic fields

Researchers show impact of mountain building and climate change on alpine biodiversity

Study models the transition from Neanderthals to modern humans in Europe

University of Phoenix College of Doctoral Studies releases white paper on AI-driven skilling to reduce burnout and restore worker autonomy

AIs fail at the game of visual “telephone”

The levers for a sustainable food system

Potential changes in US homelessness by ending federal support for housing first programs

Vulnerability of large language models to prompt injection when providing medical advice

Researchers develop new system for high-energy-density, long-life, multi-electron transfer bromine-based flow batteries

Ending federal support for housing first programs could increase U.S. homelessness by 5% in one year, new JAMA study finds

New research uncovers molecular ‘safety switch’ shielding cancers from immune attack

Bacteria resisting viral infection can still sink carbon to ocean floor

Younger biological age may increase depression risk in older women during COVID-19

[Press-News.org] Self-improving AI method increases 3D-printing efficiency