X Chegg Study Gui Chegg Study Gui 396981dtcontentrid408951
X Chegg Study | Gui Chegg Study | Gui 396981-dt-content-rid-4089518_1/courses/12730-13455/given-imaging.pdf D Q Precalc Mail-Fleishman, Har Mathway 1 Math Prot UI Online sources or innovation Getting an Inside Look: Given Imaging\'s Camera Pifl? avrief lddan was an electro-optical engineer at Israel\'s Rafael Armament Devel- opment Authority, the Israeli authority for development of weapons and military technology, One of Iddan\'s projects was to develop the eye of a guided miss which leads the missile to its target. In 1981, Iddan traveled to Boston on sabbati cal to work for a company that produced X-ray tubes and ultrasonic probes. While there, he befriended a gastroenterologist (a physician who focuses on digestive diseases) named Eitan Scapa. During long conversations in which each would discuss his respective field, Scapa taught Iddan about the technologies used to view the interior lining of the digestive system. Scapa pointed out that the existing technologies had a number of significant limitations, particularly with respect to viewing the small intestine. The small intestine is the locale of a number of serious disorders. In the United States alone, approximately 19 million people suffer from disorders in the small intestine (including bleeding, Crohn\'s disease, celiac disease chronic diarrhea, irritable bowel syndrome, and small bowel cancer) Furthermore, the nature of the small intestine makes it a difficult place to diag nose and treat such disorders. The small intestine (or \"small bowel\") is about 5 to 6 meters long in a typical person and is full of twists and turns. X-rays do not enable the physician to view the lining of the intestine, and endoscopes (small cameras attached to long, thin, flexible poles) can reach only the first third of the small intes tine and can be quite uncomfortable for the patient. The remaining option, surgery is very invasive and can be impractical if the physician does not know which part of the small intestine is affected. Scapa thus urged Iddan to try to come up with a bet- ter way to view the small intestine, but at that time Iddan had no idea how to do it. Ten years later, Iddan visited the United States again, and his old friend Scapa again inquired whether there was a technological solution that would provide a bet- ter solution for viewing the small intestine. By this time, very small image sensors- devices (CCDs)-had been developed in the quest to build small video cameras. Iddan wondered if perhaps it would be possible to create a very small missile-ike device that could travel through the intestine without a lifeline leading to the outside of the body. Like the missiles Iddan developed at Rafael, this device would have a camera eye.\" If the device were designed well, the body\'s natural harge-coupled peristaltic action would propel the camera through the length of the intestine
Solution
3. Iddan and meron collabcollaboration Swain\'s team was advantageous to all of them as : the project was finished before the deadline and a lot of time was saved. Iddan and meron brought different knowledge to the table thantwhat Swains team brought. Iddan and meron brought tech related knowledge and medical related knowledge was Swain\'s team\'s work. Saved time was used in cutting down costs, product optimization and creating softwares.
Disadvantages would be : profit sharing among the team, product will be patented in the name of all the people involved and escape of knowledge.
In conclusion, I\'d say that advantages outweigh the disadvantages and also project might not have been completed if they had not collaborated.
