“…Because efficient and specific amplification only occurs within a narrow range of reaction conditions, − discrepancies between the estimated and actual hybridization states of the targets and primers cause PCR failure. Consequently, temperature set points, cycle timing, and reaction contents must be precisely maintained to ensure complete target melting, stringent primer annealing, and efficient polymerase activity during each cycle. − Achieving these conditions at the programmed temperature set points, however, is often compromised by variations in prepared DNA samples, ,, error in the volumes of pipetted reagents, ,, or inaccuracies in thermal cycler temperature calibrations. ,, These challenges are particularly acute in applications seeking to make PCR accessible outside of well-controlled laboratory settings, such as in point-of-care settings where the contents of prepared samples and reaction temperatures are more difficult to control. ,− Methods that more directly monitor the reaction using fluorescence probes have shown promise for overcoming some of the challenges with indirect thermal sensing, − yet these methods still rely on temperature calibrations to estimate primer annealing and target melting and do not compensate for variation in reaction contents that impact primer and target hybridization. To enable PCR-based nucleic acid amplification in settings that have insufficient resources to precisely maintain sample contents and reaction temperatures, new PCR designs are needed that more directly monitor the key hybridization events during the reaction, rather than relying on rigid temperature cycling programs and consistent sample preparation.…”