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A life-saving invention that prevents human stampedes

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    I was only nine
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    when my grandfather first described to me
    the horrors he witnessed six years earlier
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    when human stampedes killed 39 people
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    in our hometown of Nashik, India.
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    It was during the 2003 Nashik Kumbh Mela,
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    one of the world's largest
    religious gatherings.
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    Every 12 years,
    over 30 million Hindu worshippers
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    descend upon our city --
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    which is built
    only for 1.5 million people --
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    and stay for 45 days.
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    The main purpose
    is to wash away all their sins
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    by bathing in the river Godavari.
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    And stampedes may easily happen
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    because a high-density crowd
    moves at a slow pace.
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    Apart from Nashik, this event happens
    in three other places in India,
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    with varying frequency,
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    and between 2001 and 2014,
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    over 2,400 lives have been lost
    in stampedes at these events.
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    What saddened me the most
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    is seeing people around me
    resigning to the city's fate
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    in witnessing the seemingly
    inevitable deaths of dozens
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    at every Kumbh Mela.
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    I sought to change this,
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    and I thought, why can't I try
    to find a solution to this?
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    Because I knew it is wrong.
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    Having learned coding at an early age
    and being a maker,
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    I considered the wild idea --
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    (Laughter)
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    [Makers always find a way]
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    I considered the wild idea
    of building a system
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    that would help regulate
    the flow of people
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    and use it in the next Kumbh Mela in 2015,
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    to have fewer stampedes
    and, hopefully, fewer deaths.
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    It seemed like a mission impossible,
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    a dream too big,
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    especially for a 15-year-old,
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    yet that dream came true in 2015,
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    when not only did we succeed
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    in reducing the stampedes
    and their intensity,
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    but we marked 2015
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    as the first Nashik Kumbh Mela
    to have zero stampedes.
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    (Applause)
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    It was the first time in recorded history
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    that this event
    passed without any casualties.
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    How did we do it?
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    It all started when I joined
    an innovation workshop
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    by MIT Media Lab in 2014
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    called the Kumbhathon
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    that aimed at solving challenges
    faced at the grand scale of Kumbh Mela.
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    Now, we figured out to solve
    the stampede problem,
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    we wanted to know only three things:
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    the number of people, the location,
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    and the rate of the flow
    of people per minute.
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    So we started to look for technologies
    that would help us get these three things.
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    Can we distribute radio-frequency tokens
    to identify people?
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    We figured out that it would
    be too expensive and impractical
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    to distribute 30 million tags.
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    Can you use CCTV cameras
    with image-processing techniques?
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    Again, too expensive for that scale,
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    along with the disadvantages
    of being non-portable
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    and being completely useless
    in the case of rain,
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    which is a common thing
    to happen in Kumbh Mela.
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    Can we use cell phone tower data?
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    It sounds like the perfect solution,
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    but the funny part is,
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    most of the people
    do not carry cell phones
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    in events like Kumbh Mela.
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    Also, the data wouldn't have been
    granular enough for us.
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    So we wanted something that was real-time,
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    low-cost, sturdy and waterproof,
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    and it was easy to get
    the data for processing.
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    So we built Ashioto,
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    meaning "footstep" in Japanese,
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    as it consists of a portable mat
    which has pressure sensors
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    which can count the number
    of people walking on it,
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    and sends the data over the internet
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    to the advanced data analysis
    software we created.
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    The possible errors,
    like overcounting or double-stepping,
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    were overcome using design interventions.
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    The optimum breadth of the mat
    was determined to be 18 inches,
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    after we tested many different versions
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    and observed the average
    stride length of a person.
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    Otherwise, people might step
    over the sensor.
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    We started with a proof of concept
    built in three days,
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    made out of cardboard and aluminum foil.
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    (Laughter)
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    It worked, for real.
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    We built another one
    with aluminum composite panels
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    and piezoelectric plates,
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    which are plates that generate a small
    pulse of electricity under pressure.
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    We tested this at 30 different
    pilots in public,
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    in crowded restaurants,
    in malls, in temples, etc.,
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    to see how people reacted.
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    And people let us run these pilots
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    because they were excited to see localites
    work on problems for the city.
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    I was 15 and my team members
    were in their early 20s.
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    When the sensors were colored,
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    people would get scared
    and would ask us questions like,
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    "Will I get electrocuted
    if I step on this?"
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    (Laughter)
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    Or, if it was very obvious that it was
    an electronic sensor on the ground,
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    they would just jump over it.
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    (Laughter)
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    So we decided to design
    a cover for the sensor
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    so that people don't have to worry
    what it is on the ground.
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    So after some experimentation,
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    we decided to use an industrial sensor,
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    used as a safety trigger
    in hazardous areas
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    as the sensor,
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    and a black neoprene rubber sheet
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    as the cover.
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    Now, another added benefit
    of using black rubber
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    was that dust naturally
    accumulates over the surface,
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    eventually camouflaging it
    with the ground.
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    We also had to make sure that the sensor
    is no higher than 12 millimeters.
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    Otherwise, people might trip over it,
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    which in itself would cause stampedes.
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    (Laughter)
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    We don't want that.
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    (Laughter)
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    So we were able to design a sensor
    which was only 10 millimeters thick.
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    Now the data is sent
    to the server in real time,
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    and a heat map is plotted,
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    taking into account
    all the active devices on the ground.
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    The authorities could be alerted
    if the crowd movement slowed down
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    or if the crowd density
    moved beyond a desired threshold.
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    We installed five of these mats
    in the Nashik Kumbh Mela 2015,
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    and counted over half a million people
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    in 18 hours,
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    ensuring that the data was available
    in real time at various checkpoints,
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    ensuring a safe flow of people.
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    Now, this system, eventually,
    with other innovations,
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    is what helped prevent stampedes
    altogether at that festival.
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    The code used by Ashioto during Kumbh Mela
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    will soon be made publicly available,
    free to use for anyone.
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    I would be glad if someone used this code
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    to make many more gatherings safer.
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    Having succeeded at Kumbh Mela
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    has inspired me to help others
    who may also suffer from stampedes.
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    The design of the system
    makes it adaptable
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    to pretty much any event
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    that involves an organized
    gathering of people.
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    And my new dream is to improve,
    adapt and deploy the system
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    all over the world to prevent loss of life
    and ensure a safe flow of people,
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    because every human soul is precious,
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    whether at concerts or sporting events,
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    the Maha Kumbh Mela in Allahabad,
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    the Hajj in Mecca,
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    the Shia procession to Karbala
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    or at the Vatican City.
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    So what do you all think, can we do it?
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    (Audience) Yes!
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    Thank you.
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    (Cheers)
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    (Applause)
Title:
A life-saving invention that prevents human stampedes
Speaker:
Nilay Kulkarni
Description:

Every three years, more than 30 million Hindu worshippers gather for the Kumbh Mela in India, the world's largest religious gathering, in order to wash away their sins. With massive crowds descending on small cities and towns, stampedes inevitably happen, and in 2003, 39 people were killed during the festival. In 2014, then 15-year-old Nilay Kulkarni decided to put his skills as a self-taught programmer to use by building a tech solution to help prevent stampedes. Learn more about his invention -- and how it helped the 2015 Nashik Kumbh Mela have zero stampedes and casualties.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
07:45

English subtitles

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