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Bionics and engineering
Bionics entered the Webster dictionary in 1960 as " a science concerned with the application of data about the functioning of biological systems to the solution of engineering problems ".
Bionics ( also known as biomimicry, biomimetics, bio-inspiration, biognosis, and close to bionical creativity engineering ) is the application of biological methods and systems found in nature to the study and design of engineering systems and modern technology.
Bionics is a term which refers to the flow of concepts from biology to engineering and vice versa.

Bionics and .
The hand, manufactured by " Touch Bionics " of Scotland ( a Livingston company ), went on sale on 18 July 2007 in Britain.
Cochlear implants that operate successfully, including those produced by all three major manufacturers ( Cochlear Corporation, Advanced Bionics and Med-El ), incorporate the same basic design.
The external components must be turned off and removed prior to swimming or showering, except for users of the Advanced Bionics Neptune processor, which is waterproof.
Advanced Bionics uses other techniques like CIS, SAS, HiRes, and Fidelity 120, which stimulate the full spectrum.
Some strategies used in Advanced Bionics and MED-EL devices make use of fine structure presentation by implementing the Hilbert Transform in the signal processing path, while ACE strategies depends mainly on the Short Time Fourier Transform.
Currently (), the three cochlear implant devices approved for use in the U. S. are manufactured by Cochlear Limited ( Australia ), Advanced Bionics ( USA, a division of Sonova ) and MED-EL ( Austria ).
He is also a director of Trow Global, Bombardier Inc., The Great-West Life Assurance Company, The Investors Group, Ecopia Biosciences inc., and is Chairman of the Board of Victhom Human Bionics in Quebec City.
" They go on adventures such as going to the hospital which Freak claims has a secret department called the " Bionics Department " which has had his brain cat scanned to be fitted into a bionic body.
* Bionics and Engineering: The Relevance of Biology to Engineering, presented at Society of Women Engineers Convention, Seattle, WA, 1983, Jill E. Steele
* Bionics: Nature as a Model.
A similar term, ' Bionics ' was coined by Jack Steele in 1960 at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton, Ohio where Otto Schmitt also worked.
The point of the Bionic Tower is to use Bionics to solve the world's rising population problems in an eco-friendly way, a feat incredibly hard to accomplish.
Bionics are used to replace Austin's arm ( his left in Caidin's original story ; his right in the TV version ) and both legs.
* KaleidoscopeHarlan Nails was a brilliant scientist who worked alongside Prof. Sharp in the field of Bionics.
Today the Advanced Bionics Corporation, the Cochlear Corporation and the Med-El Corporation are the major commercial providers of cochlea implants.
Medtronic and Advanced Bionics are significant commercial names in the emergent market of Deep Brain Stimulation.
The Sonova Group consists of four divisions-Phonak Hearing Systems, Unitron Hearing, Phonak Communications and Advanced Bionics, Connect Hearing Australia.
Bionics was one of the DJ's for the group, but left in 2004 to DJ in support of his cousin Kano.

German and equivalent
Much like the relationship between British English and American English, the Austrian and German varieties differ in minor respects ( e. g., spelling, word usage and grammar ) but are recognizably equivalent and largely mutually intelligible.
* AW (" Antwort "), used in email subject lines as equivalent to RE ( e-mail ) ( in German speaking countries )
They were nicknamed Hundemarken ( the German equivalent of " dog tags ") and compared to a similar identification system instituted for dogs in the Prussian capital city of Berlin at about the same time.
The German university bureaucratic practice of using the post-nominal form, " Ph. D ." ( or equivalent ), to distinguish non-German doctorates can be challenged legally as evidence of arbitrary discrimination and prejudice against non-German nationals ( academics ).
Grimm took Forseti, " praeses ", to be the older form of the name, first postulating an unattested Old High German equivalent * forasizo ( cf.
However, the English one underwent a great upward mobility during the Middle Ages, becoming associated with the aristocracy, while its German equivalent retained the humble meaning of " servant ".
Similar in German with " ordinär " ( while a real equivalent for " ordinary " can be, especially in administrative or legal language, " ordentlich ", which however also means " decent " and " tidy ").
His successor, Nikita Khrushchev, rejected reunification as equivalent to returning East Germany for annexation to the West ; hence reunification went unconsidered until the German Democratic Republic collapsed in 1989.
The German and Austrian equivalent of an hereditary knight is a Ritter.
In 1889 Wilhelm II reorganised top level control of the navy by creating a Navy Cabinet ( Marine-Kabinett ) equivalent to the German Imperial Military Cabinet which had previously functioned in the same capacity for both the army and navy.
In January 1946 the Allied Control Council set the foundation of the future German economy by putting a cap on German steel production — the maximum allowed was set at about 5, 800, 000 tons of steel a year, equivalent to 25 % of the pre-war production level.
This was the equivalent of the German singspiel, where arias alternated with spoken dialogue.
This includes belote and klaverjas ( the national games of France and the Netherlands, respectively ) and skat ( the German national game, which is also played with the equivalent German-suited decks in some regions ).
However, there is no exact equivalent of a guilty plea in German criminal procedure.
Rijk is the Dutch and Afrikaans equivalent of German Reich.
The word doesn't appear unhyphenated until about 1934 by Willem de Sitter, perhaps indicating that up to that point its German equivalent, Rotverschiebung, was more commonly used.
With these ideas referring to an organized body of knowledge and " any systematically presented set of concepts, whether they are empirical, axiomatic, or philosophical, " Lehre " is associated with theory and science in the etymology of general systems, but also does not translate from the German very well ; " teaching " is the " closest equivalent ", but " sounds dogmatic and off the mark ".
When released the Trabant was technically equivalent to the West German Lloyd automobile, which had an air cooled two-cylinder four-stroke engine in the same size vehicle.
In German, the equivalent is Krieg ; the equivalent Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian words for " war " is guerra, derived from the Germanic werra (“ fight ”, “ tumult ”).< ref > Diccionario de la Lengua Española, 21 < sup > a </ sup > edición ( 1992 ) p. 1071 </ ref > Etymologic legend has it that the Romanic peoples adopted a foreign, Germanic word for " war ", to avoid using the Latin bellum, because, when sounded, it tended to merge with the sound of the word bello (" beautiful ")
The German equivalent teleprinter machines in World War II used by higher-level but not field units were the Lorenz SZ 40 and Siemens and Halske T52 using Fish cyphers.
The German equivalent of the high school are the grades 10 to 12 ( age 16 to 18 years ) of Gymnasium, which are called " Oberstufe ".
In the Official History, ( 1948 ) Brigadier-General James E. Edmonds put British losses at 244, 897 and claimed that equivalent German figures were not available, estimating German losses at 400, 000.

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