ALEXANDRIA, Va., Dec. 9 -- United States Patent no. 12,490,927, issued on Dec. 9, was assigned to Northwestern University (Evanston, Ill.) and Trustees of Dartmouth College (Hanover, N.H.).
"Systems and methods for analyzing frequency-following response to evaluate central nervous system function" was invented by Nina Kraus (Evanston, Ill.), Jay C. Buckey (Hanover, N.H.), Abigail M. Fellows (Hanover, N.H.), Jennifer L. Krizman (Glencoe, Ill.), Trent G. Nicol (Libertyville, Ill.), Catherine C. Rieke (Hanover, N.H.) and Travis White-Schwoch (Evanston, Ill.).
According to the abstract* released by the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office: "Central nervous ("CNS") health in subjects who have human immunodeficiency virus ("HIV") or non-human-species...