DocumentCode :
2639682
Title :
Biological insight into future technology - what living cells tell us
Author :
Shimozawa, Tateo
Author_Institution :
Res. Inst. for Electron. Sci., Hokkaido Univ., Sapporo, Japan
fYear :
2005
fDate :
12-15 May 2005
Firstpage :
174
Abstract :
Sensory cells of cricket wind receptor are sensitive to stimulus energy of the order of KBT (ca. 4×10-21 Joule at 300 °K). Due to this high sensitivity at the ultimate limit of thermodynamics, the mechanoreceptors are facing to thermal noise. Based on this kind of biophysical measurements on the signal to noise ratio or the rate of information transmission of neurons, design principle of the nervous system is discussed. Biological systems evolved under the inevitable thermal noise will teach us a design principle for future information communication technology that will certainly face with thermal noise and other stochastic uncertainty such as quantum noise. Future technology needs wide and sound bases of natural sciences, not only of physics, chemistry and mathematics, but also of biology, the field of science that tells us what kind of design is possible in this world.
Keywords :
biotechnology; biothermics; cellular biophysics; evolution (biological); mechanoception; neurophysiology; 300 K; biological system; biophysical measurement; cricket wind receptor; information communication technology; information transmission rate; living cells; mechanoreceptors; nervous system design principle; neurons; origin of life; parallel structure; quantum noise; sensory cell; signal extraction; signal to noise ratio; stimulus energy; stochastic uncertainty; thermal noise sensitivity; thermodynamics; Acoustic noise; Biological systems; Cells (biology); Communications technology; Nervous system; Neurons; Noise measurement; Signal design; Signal to noise ratio; Thermodynamics; Living cell; origin of life; parallel structure; signal extraction; thermal noise sensitivity;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Microtechnology in Medicine and Biology, 2005. 3rd IEEE/EMBS Special Topic Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8711-2
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/MMB.2005.1548417
Filename :
1548417
Link To Document :
بازگشت