Thimble microscope system
Loading...
Date
Authors
Kamal, Tahseen
Watkins, Rachel
Cen, Zi
Kong, Gary
Lee, Woei Ming (Steve)
Rubinstein, Jaden
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
Abstract
Wearable computing devices, e.g. Google Glass, Smart watch, embodies the new human design frontier, where
technology interfaces seamlessly with human gestures. During examination of any subject in the field (clinic, surgery,
agriculture, field survey, water collection), our sensory peripherals (touch and vision) often go hand-in-hand. The
sensitivity and maneuverability of the human fingers are guided with tight distribution of biological nerve cells, which
perform fine motor manipulation over a range of complex surfaces that is often out of sight. Our sight (or naked
vision), on the other hand, is generally restricted to line of sight that is ill-suited to view around corner. Hence,
conventional imaging methods are often resort to complex light guide designs (periscope, endoscopes etc) to navigate
over obstructed surfaces. Using modular design strategies, we constructed a prototype miniature microscope system
that is incorporated onto a wearable fixture (thimble). This unique platform allows users to maneuver around a sample
and take high resolution microscopic images. In this paper, we provide an exposition of methods to achieve a thimble
microscopy; microscope lens fabrication, thimble design, integration of miniature camera and liquid crystal display.
Keywords: wearable, maneuverability, miniature microscope, thimble.
1. INTRODUCTION
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Proceedings of SPIE, Conference Volume 10013
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
Open Access