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My simple invention, designed to keep my grandfather safe

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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
    societal challenge.
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    My family has experienced firsthand
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    the struggles of caring
    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,
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    my grandfather and I
    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
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    that my grandfather
    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 smartphone.
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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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    (Ringing) --
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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 lifelong love
    for sensors and technology.
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    When I was six years old,
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    an elderly family friend
    fell down in the bathroom
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    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 to translate my idea into reality,
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    but nonetheless, my research experience
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    really implanted in me a firm desire
    to use sensors to help the elderly people.
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    I really believe that sensors can improve
    the quality of life 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, designing 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
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    with electrically conductive
    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 signal 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 Bluetooth low 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
    my knowledge of coding with Java and XCode
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    and I also had to learn about how to code
    for Bluetooth low 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
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    in detecting the over 900
    known cases 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
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    to further improve the device
    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 needed
    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 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)
Title:
My simple invention, designed to keep my grandfather safe
Speaker:
Kenneth Shinozuka
Description:

Sixty percent of people with dementia wander off, an issue that can prove hugely stressful for both patients and caregivers. In this charming talk, hear how teen inventor Kenneth Shinozuka came up with a novel solution to help his night-wandering grandfather and the aunt who looks after him ... and how he hopes to help others with Alzheimer's.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
05:46

English subtitles

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