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Lifesaving scientific tools made of paper

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    So, I love making tools
    and sharing them with people.
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    I remember as a child,
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    my first tool I built
    was actually a microscope
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    that I built by stealing lenses
    from my brother's eyeglasses.
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    He wasn't that thrilled.
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    But, you know, maybe
    because of that moment,
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    30 years later,
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    I'm still making microscopes.
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    And the reason I built these tools
    is for moments like this.
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    (Video) Girl: I have
    black things in my hair --
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    Manu Prakash: This is a school
    in the Bay Area.
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    (Video) MP: The living world
    far supersedes our imagination
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    of how things actually work.
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    (Video) Boy: Oh my God!
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    MP: Right -- oh my God!
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    I hadn't realized this would be
    such a universal phrase.
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    Over the last two years,
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    in my lab,
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    we built 50,000 Foldscopes
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    and shipped them
    to 130 countries in the world,
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    at no cost to the kids we sent them to.
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    This year alone,
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    with the support of our community,
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    we are planning to ship
    a million microscopes
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    to kids around the world.
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    What does that do?
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    It creates an inspiring community
    of people around the world,
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    learning and teaching each other,
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    from Kenya to Kampala
    to Kathmandu to Kansas.
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    And one of the phenomenal things
    that I love about this
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    is the sense of community.
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    There's a kid in Nicaragua
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    teaching others how to identify
    mosquito species that carry dengue
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    by looking at the larva
    under a microscope.
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    There's a pharmacologist
    who came up with a new way
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    to detect fake drugs anywhere.
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    There is a girl who wondered:
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    "How does glitter actually work?"
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    and discovered the physics
    of crystalline formation in glitter.
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    There is an Argentinian doctor
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    who's trying to do field cervical cancer
    screening with this tool.
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    And yours very truly found
    a species of flea
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    that was dug inside my heel in my foot
    one centimeter deep.
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    Now, you might think
    of these as anomalies.
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    But there is a method to this madness.
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    I call this "frugal science" --
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    the idea of sharing
    the experience of science,
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    and not just the information.
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    To remind you:
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    there are a billion people on this planet
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    who live with absolutely
    no infrastructure:
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    no roads,
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    no electricity
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    and thus, no health care.
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    Also, there a billion kids
    on this planet that live in poverty.
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    How are we supposed to inspire them
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    for the next generation
    of solution makers?
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    There are health care workers
    that we put on the line
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    to fight infectious diseases,
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    to protect us with absolutely
    bare-minimum tools and resources.
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    So as a lab at Stanford,
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    I think of this from a context
    of frugal science
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    and building solutions
    for these communities.
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    Often we think about being able to do
    diagnosis under a tree, off-grid.
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    I'll tell you two examples
    today of new tools.
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    One of them starts in Uganda.
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    In 2013,
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    on a field trip to detect
    schistosomiasis with Foldscopes,
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    I made a minor observation.
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    In a clinic,
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    in a far, remote area,
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    I saw a centrifuge
    being used as a doorstop.
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    I mean -- quite literally, the doorstop.
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    And I asked them and they said,
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    "Oh, we don't actually have electricity,
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    so this piece of junk
    is good as a doorstop."
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    Centrifuges, for some of you
    who don't know,
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    are the pinnacle tool to be able
    to do sample processing.
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    You separate components
    of blood or body fluids
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    to be able to detect
    and identify pathogens.
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    But centrifuges are bulky, expensive --
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    cost around 1,000 dollars --
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    and really hard to carry out in the field.
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    And of course,
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    they don't work without power.
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    Sound familiar?
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    So we started thinking
    about solving this problem,
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    and I came back --
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    kept thinking about toys.
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    Now ...
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    I have a few with me here.
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    I first started with yo-yos ...
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    and I'm a terrible yo-yo thrower.
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    Because these objects spin,
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    we wondered,
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    could we actually use
    the physics of these objects
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    to be able to build centrifuges?
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    This was possibly the worst
    throw I could make.
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    But you might start realizing,
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    if you start exploring
    the safe space of toys --
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    we tried these spinning tops,
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    and then in the lab,
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    we stumbled upon this wonder.
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    It's the whirligig,
    or a buzzer, or a rundle.
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    A couple of strings and a little disk,
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    and if I push, it spins.
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    How many of you have played
    with this as a kid?
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    This is called a button-on-a-string.
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    OK, maybe 50 percent of you.
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    What you didn't realize --
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    that this little object
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    is the oldest toy
    in the history of mankind ...
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    5,000 years ago.
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    We have found relics of this object
    hidden around on our planet.
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    Now the irony is,
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    we actually don't understand
    how this little thing works.
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    That's when I get excited.
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    So we got back to work,
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    wrote down a couple of equations.
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    If you take the input torque
    that you put in,
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    you take the drag on this disc,
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    and the twist drag on these strings,
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    you should be able
    to mathematically solve this.
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    This is not the only equation in my talk.
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    Ten pages of math later,
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    we could actually write down
    the complete analytical solution
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    for this dynamic system.
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    And out comes what we call "Paperfuge."
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    That's my postdoc Saad Bhamla,
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    who's the co-inventor of Paperfuge.
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    And to the left, you see
    all the centrifuges
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    that we're trying to replace.
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    This little object that you see right here
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    is a disc, a couple
    of strings and a handle.
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    And when I spin
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    and I push,
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    it starts to spin.
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    Now, when you realize,
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    when you do the math,
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    when we calculate the rpm for this object,
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    mathematically, we should be able
    to go all the way to a million rpm.
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    Now, there is a little twist
    in human anatomy,
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    because the resonant frequency
    of this object is about 10 hertz,
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    and if you've ever played the piano,
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    you can't go higher
    than two or three hertz.
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    The maximum speed we've been able
    to achieve with this object
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    is not 10,000 rpm,
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    not 50,000 rpm --
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    120,000 rpm.
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    That's equal to 30,000 g-forces.
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    If I was to stick you right here
    and have it spin,
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    you would think about the types
    of forces you would experience.
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    One of the factors of a tool like this
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    is to be able to do diagnosis with this.
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    So, I'm going to do
    a quick demo here, where --
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    this is a moment where I'm going
    to make a little finger prick,
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    and a tiny drop of blood
    is going to come out.
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    If you don't like blood,
    you don't have to look at it.
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    Here is a little lancet.
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    These lancets are available everywhere,
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    completely passive.
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    And if I've had breakfast today ...
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    That didn't hurt at all.
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    OK, I take a little capillary
    with a drop of blood --
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    now this drop of blood has answers,
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    that's why I'm interested in it.
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    It might actually tell me whether
    I have malaria right now or not.
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    I take a little capillary,
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    and you see it starts wicking in.
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    I'm going to draw a little more blood.
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    And that's good enough for right now.
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    Now, I just seal this capillary
    by putting it in clay.
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    And now that's sealed the sample.
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    We're going to take the sample,
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    mount it on Paperfuge.
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    A little piece of tape
    to make a sealed cavity.
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    So now the sample is completely enclosed.
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    And we are ready for a spin.
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    I'm pushing and pulling with this object.
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    I'm going to load this up ...
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    And you see the object starts spinning.
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    Unlike a regular centrifuge,
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    this is a counter-rotating centrifuge.
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    It goes back and forth, back and forth ...
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    And now I'm charging it up,
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    and you see it builds momentum.
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    And now -- I don't know
    if you can hear this --
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    30 seconds of this,
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    and I should be able to separate
    all the blood cells with the plasma.
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    And the ratio of those blood
    cells to plasma --
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    (Applause)
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    Already, if you see right here,
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    if you focus on this,
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    you should be able to see
    a separated volume
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    of blood and plasma.
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    And the ratio of that actually tells me
    whether I might be anemic.
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    One the of aspects of this is,
    we build many types of Paperfuges.
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    This one allows us to identify
    malaria parasites
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    by running them for a little longer,
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    and we can identify malaria parasites
    that are in the blood
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    that we can separate out and detect
    with something like a centrifuge.
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    Another version of this allows me
    to separate nucleic acids
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    to be able to do nucleic acid tests
    out in the field itself.
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    Here is another version that allows me
    to separate bulk samples,
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    and then, finally,
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    something new that we've been working on
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    to be able to implement the entire
    multiplex test on an object like this.
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    So where you do the sample preparation
    and the chemistry in the same object.
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    Now ...
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    this is all good,
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    but when you start thinking about this,
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    you have to share these tools with people.
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    And one of the things we did is --
    we just got back from Madagascar;
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    this is what clinical trials
    for malaria look like --
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    (Laughter)
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    You can do this while having coffee.
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    But most importantly,
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    this is a village six hours from any road.
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    We are in a room with one of the senior
    members of the community
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    and a health care worker.
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    It really is this portion of the work
    that excites me the most --
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    that smile,
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    to be able to share simple but powerful
    tools with people around the world.
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    Now, I forgot to tell you this,
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    that all of that cost me 20 cents to make.
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    OK, in the negative time I have left,
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    I'll tell you about the most recent --
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    (Laughter)
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    invention from our lab.
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    It's called Abuzz --
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    the idea that all of you
    could help us fight mosquitoes;
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    you could all help us track our enemies.
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    These are enemies because they cause
    malaria, Zika, chikungunya, dengue.
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    But the challenge is that we actually
    don't know where our enemies are.
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    The world map for where
    mosquitoes are is missing.
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    So we started thinking about this.
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    There are 3,500 species of mosquitoes,
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    and they're all very similar.
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    Some of them are so identical
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    that even an entomologist cannot
    identify them under a microscope.
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    But they have an Achilles' heel.
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    This is what mosquitoes flirting
    with each other looks like.
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    That's a male chasing a female.
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    They're actually talking to each other
    with their wingbeat frequencies.
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    (Buzzing sound)
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    And thus, they have a signature.
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    We realized that using a regular phone,
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    a $5-10 flip phone --
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    how many remember what this object is?
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    (Laughter)
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    We can record these acoustic
    signatures from mosquitoes.
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    I'll tell you exactly how to do this.
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    I caught some mosquitoes outside.
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    Unlike Bill [Gates], I'm not
    going to release them.
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    (Laughter)
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    But I will tell you how
    to record from this.
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    All you do is tap them and they fly.
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    You can first test --
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    I can actually hear that.
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    And you bring your phone,
    which has microphones --
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    it turns out the mics
    are so damn good already,
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    even on regular phones,
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    that you can pick up
    this near-field signature.
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    And since I'm out of time,
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    let me just play the recording
    that I made a day ago.
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    (Mosquitoes buzz)
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    This is all the charming sound
    that you heard before
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    that you all love.
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    One of the contexts of this
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    is that being able to do this
    with a regular cell phone
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    allows us to map mosquito species.
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    Using a flip phone,
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    we mapped one of the largest
    acoustic databases
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    with 25 to 20 species of mosquitoes
    that carry human pathogens.
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    And from this and machine learning,
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    anybody who uploads this data,
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    we can identify and tell the probability
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    of what species of mosquitoes
    you're actually working with.
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    We call this Abuzz,
    and if any of you want to sign up,
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    just go to the website.
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    Let me close with something
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    that's very important
    and dear to my heart.
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    One of the challenges of today
    is we have terrible problems.
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    We have a billion people
    with absolutely no health care,
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    climate change, biodiversity loss,
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    on and on and on.
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    And we hope that science
    is going to provide the answer.
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    But before you leave this theatre today,
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    I want you to promise one thing.
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    We're going to make science accessible --
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    not just to the people who can afford it,
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    but a billion others who can't.
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    Let's make science and scientific
    literacy a human right.
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    The moment that you pass the tingling
    feeling of making a discovery
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    to another child,
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    you're enabling them to be
    the next group of people
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    who will actually solve these problems.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Lifesaving scientific tools made of paper
Speaker:
Manu Prakash
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
13:58
  • if you start exploring
    the safe space of toys --
    ->
    if you start exploring
    the space, space of toys --

  • One the of aspects of this is,
    ->
    One of the aspects of this is,

English subtitles

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