As BiOS grows... - BioOptics World

As BiOS grows...


Mar 1, 2010

Attendance at the largest annual event in biophotonics grew 19% this year over 2009. According to the SPIE, the Biomedical Optics Symposium (BiOS) at Photonics West 2010 drew 5,448 participants, including 3,191 conference attendees, 646 exhibition-only visitors, and 1,611 exhibitor representatives from 179 exhibiting companies.

The BiOS conferences saw a record number of paper submissions across the broad range of topics, and most attracted increased attendance as did the poster session. Among highlights:

  • Ophthalmic Technologies is an area still growing after 20 years; and, on a related note,
  • Optical Coherence Tomography, a technology growing from its base application in ophthalmology, continued to advance in numbers of papers and applications.
  • Frontiers in Pathogen Detection: From Nanosensors to Systems, where attendance was about three times the number of papers.
  • Otolaryngology: Lasers, Optics, Radio Frequency, and Related Technology, held this year in conjunction with the second Scientific Meeting of the Head and Neck Optical Diagnostics Society; they plan to meet together again in 2012.
  • Photons Plus Ultrasound Imaging and Sensing, also a standout last year, showed a nearly 30% increase in papers and almost 40% increase in audience.
  • Plasmonics in Biology and Medicine. According to the SPIE, "plasmonics continues to grow as people are gaining more understanding of what it is." 

According to the SPIE, Photonics West attendees said the event provided indicators of strength in biomedical optics and photonics. A number of the exhibitors I spoke with also indicated that their bio-focused business was holding its own. Although the dismal economy took its toll, anecdotal evidence suggests that bio-optics business did not trend downward throughout 2009. One exhibitor described the slope of his business through the past year as resembling a hammock–dropping from January through the summer and then picking back up later in the year.

The BiOS event focuses on system components (in addition to full systems) and life sciences (in addition to medical applications) more than the market study I reported last issue which proclaimed 2009 "another bad year for cosmetic and elective medical procedures," the largest segment in medical lasers.

BiOS has become such a large event that it's impossible to partake of all the offerings. Nonetheless, this issue includes a number of gleanings from BiOS/Photonics West 2010, and we'll continue through the coming months to follow developments reported there–and elsewhere.

Barbara Goode
Editor in Chief

More Brand Name Current Issue Articles
More Brand Name Archives Issue Articles


Editor's Picks

Incapable connectors shut down Large Hadron Collider

Amphenol: Bulking up via buyout

NASA unveils deep space MPCV exploration craft; Lockheed Martin responds

As UAV market surges, connectors adapt

NHTSA pressures Ford into mass F-150 truck recall on airbag wiring danger

Esterline acquiring Souriau for $715 million

Report: Single trader holds half of world's copper


Top Blog Posts

Inside Foxconn's deadly iPad factory after the blast

Fireproof electronic connectors: design challenges

Connector industry giants saw banner 2010 sales growth

Tearing down Apple's Thunderbolt cable

Massive solar tower will rank among world's tallest buildings


Most Popular Articles
Top Articles for 2011

Boeing exec admits 787 outsourcing strategy backfired

Foxconn staggering after full year net loss of $200M+

The Motley Fool' pits Amphenol vs. Molex

ITT issues military-aerospace connector sourcebook

SATA-IO unveils portable consumer storage specification

Raytheon locks in LaBarge for cruise missiles' wiring harnesses post-Libya bombing

Union group denies Verizon fiber lines vandalized

Northrop Grumman seeks to replace copper-based aircraft wire, cabling

Driving wiring harness design data toward manufacturing


Latest Community Discussions

Video: Fire breaks out at Foxconn's Shandong plant
Bystander video shows the scene of a fire breaking out on September 27 at Foxconn's Yantai Shandong plant where Sony consumer electronics products are reportedly assembled.

Testing the Boeing 787 Dreamliner's in-flight entertainment systems
Boeing video shows what was involved in testing (i.e. "trying to break") the in-flight entertainment, connectivity, and power systems on board the new 787 Dreamliner.

Belden FiberExpress Brilliance LC Connector Installation
Video details installation of a 900-micron OM3/OM4 prepped fiber into an LC connector.

Visit the Community >


Receive Free E-mail Newsletters from Interconnection World


You may select more than one newsletter  
Interconnection World
Connector Specifier
Wire & Harness Specifier

 
Name  
 
Email  
 
Country  
 
 
 

 
Sponsor Information

Interconnection World Content Categories:

Wire & Harness
 Data & Telecom
Standards Distributors
Design & Test Applications
Business Wire News
Video