Introduction
Matthew Johnston is leading a quiet revolution in healthcare 鈥 one that fits in the palm of your hand.
Johnston, professor of electrical and computer engineering at 精东影视 State University, heads a lab focused on miniaturizing traditional lab equipment into portable, wearable devices.
鈥淎 lot of our focus is on taking big instruments 鈥 big boxes that would sit in a biology or chemistry lab 鈥 and trying to shrink those down,鈥 Johnston said. 鈥淲e use a variety of modern manufacturing technologies to make those much smaller so they can fit in the palm of your hand or even on your fingertip.鈥
This work is part of a broader movement toward at-home or wearable medical electronics 鈥 devices that can monitor health, diagnose disease, and even guide treatment, all without a trip to the clinic. The goal, Johnston says, is to increase accessibility and reduce costs.
Stretchable electronics to monitor the body
One of the most exciting areas of Johnston鈥檚 research is stretchable electronics 鈥 flexible, skin-like circuits that can be worn comfortably on the body. These devices are designed to monitor movement, track chronic conditions, and even interface with virtual reality systems.
The potential impact of this technology is enormous. Imagine a future where patients can monitor their hydration, glucose, and stress levels from a patch, or where a senior citizen can track their heart health with a soft, stretchable sensor embedded in their clothing. Johnston鈥檚 lab is working to make that future a reality.
Collaboration with clinicians and HP
But innovation doesn鈥檛 happen in isolation. Johnston鈥檚 team collaborates closely with researchers across disciplines 鈥 from bioengineering to artificial intelligence 鈥 and with clinicians to ensure their devices solve real-world problems.
鈥淲e collaborate a lot with people in our own department as well as in bioengineering for building new types of biosensors,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat often also involves collaborations with people in information processing, artificial intelligence, as well as clinicians, so that we are solving real problems with real clinical utility.鈥
One of the lab鈥檚 most fruitful partnerships is with HP, which has a major research facility in Corvallis. Together, they鈥檙e exploring how HP鈥檚 microfluidics and dispensing technologies 鈥 initially developed for inkjet printing 鈥 can be repurposed for life sciences.
鈥淲e鈥檝e had an ongoing collaboration with HP,鈥 Johnston said. 鈥淥ne facet of the collaboration involves cell counting, where we do cell analysis and counting of biological cells. It鈥檚 a natural connection point where our background and the things we can actually do in the lab are highly relevant to what their long-term goals are in the life science space.鈥
The collaboration serves as a model for how academia and industry can work together to accelerate innovation. HP brings manufacturing expertise and infrastructure; Johnston鈥檚 lab brings cutting-edge research and a deep understanding of biosensing and electronics. The result is a pipeline of technologies that could soon be commercialized and deployed in homes, clinics, and communities.
From bench to real-world apps鈥uickly
Johnston sees this kind of translation 鈥 from lab bench to real-world application 鈥 as the future of university research.
鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to solve problems that are identified by clinician partners or by community partners,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd we鈥檙e all playing a more active role now in translation鈥攔eally getting these ideas, whether they鈥檙e new technologies or new algorithms, out into the world.鈥
That world is changing fast. The COVID-19 pandemic made at-home diagnostics mainstream, and Johnston believes we鈥檙e just scratching the surface.
鈥淲e鈥檙e all very familiar with the home COVID test,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut for a lot of applications, we really need a quantitative answer, not just a yes/no. Some of the technologies we鈥檙e working on would allow you to move that electronic readout directly into a low-cost, disposable product.鈥
From fingertip biosensors to AI-assisted diagnostics, Johnston鈥檚 work is helping to redefine what healthcare looks like 鈥 and where it happens.
鈥淲e have all of these tools now at our disposal that we can apply to really important problems in healthcare and medicine,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd hopefully, we鈥檒l solve those problems much more rapidly.鈥