M
Mark S. Humayun
Researcher at University of Southern California
Publications - 653
Citations - 29453
Mark S. Humayun is an academic researcher from University of Southern California. The author has contributed to research in topics: Retina & Retinal. The author has an hindex of 84, co-authored 636 publications receiving 26997 citations. Previous affiliations of Mark S. Humayun include Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory & Duke University.
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Patent
Surgical pack and tray
TL;DR: A surgical pack is a platform having a plurality of recesses configured to function as a surgical tray as mentioned in this paper, which is used to hold the surgical instruments and a packaging or covering holds the platform and the plurality of surgical instruments in a substantially sterile condition.
Journal ArticleDOI
Modeling and percept of transcorneal electrical stimulation in humans
J. Xie,G-J Wang,L. Yow,Carlos J. Cela,Mark S. Humayun,James D. Weiland,Gianluca Lazzi,Hossein Jadvar +7 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that admittance modeling and PET imaging consistently predict the perceived location of electrically elicited phosphenes produced during TcES.
Journal ArticleDOI
Development of a new tissue injector for subretinal transplantation of human embryonic stem cell derived retinal pigmented epithelium
Rodrigo A. Brant Fernandes,Rodrigo A. Brant Fernandes,Francisco Rosa Stefanini,Francisco Rosa Stefanini,Paulo Falabella,Paulo Falabella,Michael Koss,Trent Wells,Bruno Diniz,Bruno Diniz,Ramiro Ribeiro,Ramiro Ribeiro,Paulo Schor,Mauricio Maia,Fernando M. Penha,David R. Hinton,Yu-Chong Tai,Mark S. Humayun +17 more
TL;DR: This innovative tissue injector was able to efficiently deliver the implant in the subretinal space of Yucatan minipigs, preventing significant hESC-RPE cell loss, minimizing tissue trauma, surgical complications and postoperative inflammation.
Journal ArticleDOI
Impedance as a Method to Sense Proximity at the Electrode-Retina Interface
TL;DR: The presence of robust electrically evoked response in the superior colliculus indicates that the electrode may not have to be in absolute contact in order to elicit a neural response to be able to sense the proximity of the electrode to the retina.
Patent
Treatment of consumption disorders with biostimulation
TL;DR: In this article, the brain signals that carry taste sensations to the brain are stimulated in order to diminish or augment (depending on the application) the pleasure associated with consumption behavior to be modified.