Getting The Public Invested In Science

FundScience Blog

Welcome to the FundScience Blog. This page was created to bring you the news of our venture by the FundScience team (Category: FundScience News) as well as interesting subjects that are related to education and science. We welcome and encourage comments and discussions on the posted topics. If you are a writer and are interested in posting please contact us. If you are a reader we hope that you sign-up for a feed of our blog and/or a quarterly collection of the published articles in an easy to read and pass to friends PDF format.

We hope you stay with us as we develop this exciting project!
The FundScience Team

Let a thousand neurons fire

07.30.10 by Tim

On July 20th and 21st, Backyard Brains ran part of the Health and Biomedical Engineering for Girls Camp, where, over the course of two days, 45 area high school girls learned about electronics and neuroscience. They built and soldered their own SpikerBoxes, and then used their new devices for their own neuroscience experiments. See below for a wonderful sight of brand new neuroscientists brought into existence! Watch out oh professors of the world, in 5-7 seven years you might be seeing some unusually talented graduate students.

If you are interested in Backyard Brains coming to your student group and teaching about neurons and electrical engineering, don’t hesitate to contact us!

| Posted in Education, Marketing, Outreach | Comments Off

How to Roll Your Own iPhone Data Recording Cable

07.12.10 by Tim

Many users, while enjoying the SpikerBox demo’s we have done, have also expressed excited curiosity that the iPhone can be used as a portable data recorder / oscilloscope. To truly take advantage of your iPhone though, you want your signal to go directly to the line input. Though you can buy one of these cables, in the open-source spirit of Backyard Brains, here is the schematic to build your own. You need: one 4.7 kOhm resistor, one 10 uF capacitor, one 3.5 mm audio three conductor cable you cut in half, and one 3.5 mm audio four conductor cable you cut in half. Bring out your soldering iron, your wire-stripper, and your favorite beverage!

Wrap all exposed wire in electrical tape, cover with heat shrink tubing, and you’re ready to rock! This design splices the left and right audio channels in the microphone input, so if you use this cable to record music, you are only recording in mono.

This of course is our favorite use…

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