When the Apollo 13 spacecraft embarked on its lunar landing mission on April 11, 1970, the concept of a digital twin was yet to be conceived. Three days into the journey, the mission took an ...
Imagine having a digital carbon copy of yourself that physicians could use to predict long-term risks for disease, assess how your body may respond to treatment, and simulate surgeries in advance. A ...
A patient has cancer. It’s decision time. Clinician and patient alike face, really, the ultimate challenge when making those decisions. They have to consider the patient’s individual circumstances, ...
A good way to think about digital twins is as a flight simulator for the business. Maneuvers and corrections are made within the safe and relatively inexpensive confines of cyberspace, buttressed by ...
Digital twins are rapidly emerging as powerful tools in personalized medicine and beyond. In healthcare, they serve as virtual representations of a patient’s body, body parts, specific organs, and ...
Digital twins introduce a shift from static, retrospective modeling to continuously learning systems that adapt as new biological and clinical evidence emerges. By linking mechanistic understanding ...
Perhaps the simplest explanation for digital twin technology is as a 'flight simulator' for business. Sophisticated flight simulators have been in use in the aircraft industry for some time, and ...
A recent report by Hexagon looked at data from 660 enterprise executives worldwide to identify the ROI that could be achieved by digital twin technology. It found that only half of companies reported ...