Telly Award winning video on Nanotechnology.
Rather than infer that nanotechnology is safe, members of the public who learn about this novel science tend to become sharply polarized along cultural lines, according to a study conducted by the Cultural Cognition Project at Yale Law School in collaboration with the Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies. The report is published online in the journal Nature Nanotechnology. These findings have important implications for garnering support of the new technology, say the researchers. The experiment involved a diverse sample of 1500 Americans, the vast majority of whom were unfamiliar with nanotechnology, a relatively new science that involves the manipulation of particles the size of atoms and that has numerous commercial applications. When shown balanced information about the risks and benefits of nanotechnology, study participants became highly divided on its safety compared to a group not shown such information. The determining factor in how people responded was their cultural values, according to Dan Kahan, the Elizabeth K. Dollard Professor at Yale Law School and lead author of the study. “People who had more individualistic, pro-commerce values, tended to infer that nanotechnology is safe,” said Kahan, “while people who are more worried about economic inequality read the same information as implying that nanotechnology is likely to be dangerous.” According to Kahan, this pattern is consistent with studies examining how people’s cultural values influence their …
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Aarkstore Enterprise -Worldwide Nanotechnology Dental Implant Market Shares, Strategies, Forecasts, Aarkstore Enterprise -
Worldwide Nanotechnology Dental Implant Market Shares, Strategies, and Forecasts, 2009 to 2015
Table of Contents :
Dental Implant Executive Summary ES-1
Global Dental Implant Market ES-1
Nanotechnology Impacts The Dental Implant Market ES-3
Dental Implant Market Driving Forces ES-4
Innovation Drives Dental Implant Markets ES-9
Dental Implant Market Trends ES-9
Aging of the Population ES-11
Dental Implant Market Shares ES-11
Dental Implant Market Forecasts ES-13
Dental Implant Market Forecasts Reflect Uncertainty
In The Global Economy ES-15
1. Dental Implant Market Description and Market Dynamics 1-1
1.1 Dental Implant Definition 1-1
1.1.1 American Dental Association Recommended
Types Of Dental Implants 1-2
1.1.2 Dental Implant Longevity 1-2
1.1.3 Types of Dental Implants 1-4
1.1.4 Titanium Dental Implants 1-4
1.1.5 Root-Form Dental Implant 1-4
1.1.6 Ramus-Frame Dental Implant 1-5
1.1.7 Transosseous Dental Implant 1-5
1.1.8 Blade-Form Dental Implant 1-6
1.1.9 Types of Dental Implant Devices 1-6
1.2 Dental Implants Require Follow-Up Treatment 1-8
1.2.1 Poor Oral Health And Tooth Loss Associated
With Serious Health Problems 1-9
1.2.2 Dental Implant Target Markets 1-10
1.3 Dental Implants 1-10
1.3.1 Small-Diameter Dental Implants
Increasingly Popular In the US 1-11
1.3.2 Clinical Research on Osseo-integrated Dental Implants 1-11
1.3.3 Osseo-Integrated Dental Implants Placed In Bone 1-12
1.3.4 Success Of Implants Attributed To Osseo-Integration 1-12
1.3.5 Implant Failure Higher In Smokers 1-13
1.3.6 Proactive, Integrated, And Patient Centric Solutions 1-13
2. Dental Implant Market Shares and Market Forecasts 2-1
2.1 Dental Implant Market Driving Forces 2-1
2.1.1 Innovation Drives Dental Implant Markets 2-5
2.1.2 Dental Implant Market

Outlook for Nanotechnology in Japan
HTML clipboard
The 2009-2014 Outlook for Nanotechnology in Japan
This econometric study covers the latent demand outlook for nanotechnology across the prefectures and cities of Japan. Latent demand (in millions of U.S. dollars), or potential industry earnings (P.I.E.) estimates are given across some 1,000 cities in Japan. For each city in question, the percent share the city is of it’s prefecture and of Japan is reported. These comparative benchmarks allow the reader to quickly gauge a city vis-à-vis others. This statistical approach can prove very useful to distribution and/or sales force strategies. Using econometric models which project fundamental economic dynamics within each prefecture and city, latent demand estimates are created for nanotechnology. This report does not discuss the specific players in the market serving the latent demand, nor specific details at the product level. The study also does not consider short-term cyclicalities that might affect realized sales. The study, therefore, is strategic in nature, taking an aggregate and long-run view, irrespective of the players or products involved. ( 
Water Based Nanotechnology
Nanotechnology, commonly called as Nanotech, is the field of controlling matter on a molecular or atomic scale. It is an applied science that deals with microscopic engineering of drugs, bots and machines. Due to the developments in Nanotechnology, it has now become possible to make changes and control things at the molecular level in any compound.
Numerous biotech companies are now commercializing and developing unique water based resources that will prove to be beneficial for numerous industries such as chemicals, pharmaceutical and biotechnology. These water-based resources, with the help of nanoparticles present in the water alter the water properties and hence help to create water-based biomaterials.
Many companies are now involved in research in the field of life sciences and have started commercializing the solubilization services and water-based products, which are easily soluble in water as well as other fluids.
Water-based Nanotechnology is nothing but these solubilization services. These services play an important role in nanotechnology drug delivery applications. Apart from this, they also play a vital role in the stabilization of a drug.
Benefits of Water-based Nanotechnology
One of the major advantages of Water-based Nanotechnology is its ability to alter the nanoparticles and the properties of water. This provides organization of the water molecules in and around the
