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Creators/Authors contains: "Chiao, Jung-Chih"

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  1. Wearable smart devices have become ubiquitous in modern society, extensively researched for their health monitoring capabilities and convenience features. However, the “wearability” of these devices remains a relatively understudied area, particularly in terms of design informed by clinical trials. Wearable devices possess significant potential to enhance daily life, yet their success depends on understanding and validating the design factors that influence comfort, usability, and seamless integration into everyday routines. This review aimed to evaluate the “wearability” of smart devices through a mixed-methods scoping literature review. By analyzing studies on comfort, usability, and daily integration, it sought to identify design improvements and research gaps to enhance user experience and system design. From an initial pool of 130 publications (1998–2024), 19 studies met the inclusion criteria. The review identified three significant outcomes: (1) a lack of standardized assessment methods, (2) the predominance of qualitative over quantitative assessments, and (3) limited utility of findings for informing design. Although qualitative studies provide valuable insights, the absence of quantitative research hampers the development of validated, generalizable design criteria. This underscores the urgent need for future studies to adopt robust quantitative methodologies to better assess wearability and inform evidence-based design strategies. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 1, 2025
  2. A compact and planar imaging system was developed using a flexible polymer substrate that can distinguish subcutaneous tissue abnormalities, such as breast tumors, based on electromagnetic-wave interactions in materials where permittivity variations affect wave reflection. The sensing element is a tuned loop resonator operating in the industrial, scientific, and medical (ISM) band at 2.423 GHz, providing a localized high-intensity electric field that penetrates into tissues with sufficient spatial and spectral resolutions. The resonant frequency shifts and magnitudes of the reflection coefficients indicate the boundaries of abnormal tissues under the skin due to their high contrasts to normal tissues. The sensor was tuned to the desired resonant frequency with a reflection coefficient of −68.8 dB for a radius of 5.7 mm, with a tuning pad. Quality factors of 173.1 and 34.4 were achieved in simulations and measurements in phantoms. An image-processing method was introduced to fuse raster-scanned 9 × 9 images of resonant frequencies and reflection coefficients for image-contrast enhancement. The results showed a clear indication of the tumor’s location at a depth of 15 mm and the capability to identify two tumors both at the depth of 10 mm. The sensing element can be expanded to a four-element phased array for deeper field penetration. Field analysis showed the depths of −20 dB attenuation were improved from 19 to 42 mm, giving wider coverage in tissues at resonance. Results showed that a quality factor of 152.5 was achieved and a tumor could be identified at a depth of up to 50 mm. In this work, simulations and measurements were conducted to validate the concept, showing great potential for subcutaneous imaging in medical applications in a noninvasive, efficient, and lower-cost way. 
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  3. Light-sheet fluorescence microscopy (LSFM) provides access to multi-dimensional and multi-scale in vivo imaging of animal models with highly coherent volumetric reconstruction of the tissue morphology, via a focused laser light sheet. The orthogonal illumination and detection LSFM pathways account for minimal photobleaching and deep tissue optical sectioning through different perspective views. Although rotation of the sample and deep tissue scanning constitutes major advantages of LSFM, images may suffer from intrinsic problems within the modality, such as light mismatch of refractive indices between the sample and mounting media and varying quantum efficiency across different depths. To overcome these challenges, we hereby introduce an illumination correction technique integrated with depth detail amelioration to achieve symmetric contrast in large field-of-view images acquired using a low power objective lens. Due to an increase in angular dispersion of emitted light flux with the depth, we combined the dehazing algorithm with morphological operations to enhance poorly separated overlapping structures with subdued intensity. The proposed method was tested on different LSFM modalities to illustrate its applicability on correcting anisotropic illumination affecting the volumetric reconstruction of the fluorescently tagged region of interest. 
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