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What's the fastest growing threat
to Americans' health?
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Cancer? Heart attacks? Diabetes?
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The answer is actually none of these:
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it's Alzheimer's disease.
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Every 67 seconds,
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someone in the United States
is diagnosed with Alzheimer's.
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As the number of Alzheimer's patients
triples by the year 2050,
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caring for them, as well as
the rest of the aging population,
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will become an overwhelming
society challenge.
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My family has experienced firsthand
the struggles of caring
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for an Alzheimer's patient.
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Growing up in a family
with three generations,
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I've always been very close
to my grandfather.
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When I was four years old,
my grandfather and I
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were walking in a park in Japan
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when he suddenly got lost.
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It was one of the scariest moments
I've ever experienced in my life,
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and it was also the first instance
that informed us that my grandfather
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had Alzheimer's disease.
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Over the past 12 years,
his condition got worse and worse,
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and his wandering in particular
caused my family a lot of stress.
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My aunt, his primary caregiver,
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really struggled to stay awake at night
to keep an eye on him,
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and even then often failed
to catch him leaving the bed.
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I became really concerned
about my aunt's well-being
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as well as my grandfather's safety.
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I searched extensively for a solution
that could help my family's problems,
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but couldn't find one.
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Then, one night about two years ago,
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I was looking after my grandfather
and I saw him stepping out of the bed.
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The moment his foot landed on the floor,
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I thought, why don't I put
a pressure sensor on the heel of his foot?
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Once he stepped onto the floor
and out of the bed,
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the pressure sensor would detect an
increase in pressure caused by body weight
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and then wirelessly send an audible alert
to the caregiver's smart phone.
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That way, my aunt could sleep
much better at night
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without having to worry
about my grandfather's wandering.
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So now I'd like to perform
a demonstration of this sock.
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Could I please have
my sock model on the stage?
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Great.
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So once the patient steps onto the floor,
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an alert is sent
to the caregiver's smartphone.
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Thank you. (Applause)
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Thank you sock model.
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So this is a drawing
of my preliminary design.
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My desire to create
a sensor-based technology
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perhaps stemmed from my life-long love
for sensors and technology.
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When I was six years old,
an elderly family friend
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fell down in the bathroom
and suffered severe injuries.
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I became concerned
about my own grandparents
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and decided to invent
a smart bathroom system.
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Motion sensors would be installed
inside the tiles of bathroom floors
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to detect the falls of elderly patients
whenever they fell down in the bathroom.
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Since I was only six years old at the time
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and I hadn't graduated
from kindergarten yet,
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I didn't have the necessary
resources and tools
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to translate my idea into reality,
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but nonetheless, my research experience
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really planted in my a firm desire
to use sensors to help the elderly people.
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I really believed that sensors
could improve the quality of life
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of the elderly.
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When I laid out my plan, I realized
that I faced three main challenges:
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first, creating a sensor;
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second, design a circuit;
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and third, coding a smartphone app.
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This made me realize that my project
was actually much harder to realize
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than I initially had thought it to be.
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First, I had to create a wearable sensor
that was thin and flexible enough
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to be worn comfortably
on the bottom of the patient's foot.
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After extensive research and testing
of different materials like rubber,
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which I realized was too thick to be worn
snugly on the bottom of the foot,
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I decided to print a film sensor
with electrically conducted
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pressure sensitive ink particles.
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Once pressure is applied, the connectivity
between the particles increases.
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Therefore, I could design a circuit
that would measure pressure
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by measuring electrical resistance.
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Next, I had to design
a wearable wireless circuit,
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but wireless [???] transmission
consumes lots of power
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and requires heavy, bulky batteries.
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Thankfully, I was able to find out
about the blue tooth energy technology,
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which consumes very little power
and can be driven by a coin-sized battery.
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This prevented the system
from dying in the middle of the night.
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Lastly, I had to code a smartphone app
that would essentially transform
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the care-giver's smartphone
into a remote monitor.
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For this, I had to expand upon
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my knowledge of coding
with Java and S Code,
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and I also had to learn about how
to encode for bluetooth energy devices
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by watching YouTube tutorials
and reading various textbooks.
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Integrating these components, I was able
to successfully create two prototypes,
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one in which the sensor
is embedded inside a sock,
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and another that's
a re-attachable sensor assembly
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that can be adhered anywhere
that makes contact
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with the bottom of the patient's foot.
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I've tested the device on my grandfather
for about a year now,
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and it's had a 100 percent success rate
in detecting the over 900 known cases
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of his wandering.
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Last summer, I was able
to beta test my device
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at several residential
care facilities in California,
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and I'm currently incorporating
the feedback to further improve the device
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into a marketable product.
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Testing the device on a number of patients
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made me realize that I need
to invent solutions
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for people who didn't want
to wear socks to sleep at night.
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So sensor data, collected
on a vast number of patients,
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can be useful for improving patient care
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and also leading to a cure
for the disease, possibly.
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For example, I'm currently examining
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correlations between the frequency
of a patient's nightly wandering
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and his or her daily activities and diet.
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One thing I'll never forget
is when my device first caught
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my grandfather's wandering
out of bed at night.
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At that moment, I was really struck
by the power of the technology
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to change lives for the better.
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People living happily and healthfully:
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that's the world that I imagine.
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Thank you very much.
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(Applause)