What Is a Biosensor?—A Terminological Guide From Biomolecular Recognition to Bioindicators
Tim E. Weber, Anna Fritschen, Menno W. J. Prins, Andreas Blaeser

TL;DR
This paper clarifies the evolving definition of biosensors, covering diverse technologies and applications from molecular recognition to living systems.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive terminological guide to biosensors, redefining their scope in light of technological advancements.
Findings
Biosensors now encompass a wide range of technologies including spectroscopic sensing and synthetic biology.
The term biosensor includes both devices with molecular recognition and those using living systems for sensing.
Applications span from medical diagnostics to wearable consumer devices.
Abstract
Biosensors are an integral part of modern medicine, are used in basic research, and are increasingly used by consumers as point‐of‐care and wearable devices. Meanwhile, the underlying technological approaches are rapidly expanding, including spectroscopic sensing, artificial bioreceptors, synthetic biological approaches, whole‐cell biosensors, and artificial intelligence. With these diversifications in applications as well as technology, the scope and meaning of the term biosensor is blurring. This paper attempts to give an overview of the sensing approaches, with their physical, chemical, biochemical, and biological principles, and an overview of the fields of application, including nonliving systems and living systems. This leads to a comprehensive overview and a reappreciation of the term biosensor, including not only devices with a molecular biorecognition element and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElectrochemical sensors and biosensors · Polydiacetylene-based materials and applications · Advanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques
