If any of you have been involved in hobby electronics, the maker movement, or student design projects, you have probably heard about "Arduino" (arr-dwee-noh) - the small, low-cost embedded microcontroller board. Since it's launch in 2005, the Arduino community has grown rapidly, with add-on boards and numerous discussion forums, blogs, and neat projects being posted on-line almost every day. For those of you who haven't come across it, Arduino is an open-source "physical computing" prototyping platform consisting of very small, low-cost and low-power microcontroller boards with a small amount of integrated I/O. It is supported with a free, simple set of tools for configuration and programming. Intended for hobbyists and non-embedded experts, it has caught on rapidly and is now supported by a growing ecosystem of add-on products and on-line communities.
The Arduino board doesn't have much to offer in the way of a user interface, so a group of guys at NI thought that it would be cool to be able to interface LabVIEW with an Arduino project, and do it in a way that is easy and inexpensive in keeping with the Arduino philosophy. Check out what they've come up with here: https://decibel.ni.com/content/groups/labview-interface-for-arduino
The free LabVIEW Interface for Arduino toolkit has been so popular that we have partnered with Sparkfun Electronics to create a complete kit of an Arduino Uno board with the LabVIEW Student Edition all for under $50.
So what kinds of biomedical applications could you do with an Arduino Uno and LabVIEW? How about an activity monitor for a pet gerbil or hamster that you could use to monitor periods of sleep, activity, feeding, and maybe even provide alerts for low water or food. Or a pulse rate monitor with data logging using a photoplethysmograph (PPG) sensor utilizing an IR LED and photodetector. If you have had the chance to work with an Arduino, let us know about your project - we'd love to hear about it!
Steve
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