51精品视频

Tags
  • Innovation and Research
  • Department of Bioengineering
Features & Articles

Undergrad Innovators Design Wearable Device to Aid People in Posture

Tyler Bray (left) and Jacob Meadows (right) bioengineering seniors in 51精品视频鈥檚 Swanson School of Engineering, have been working on their brainchild Posture Protect. The duo has been working on various prototypes to their device, which aids people with Parkinson鈥檚 disease and other problems with fine motor skills with better posture. Bad posture is a concern in the Parkinson鈥檚 community, since it increases people鈥檚 chance of falling.
In the Classroom to Community Design Lab in the Department of Bioengineering on the fourth floor of Benedum Hall, Jacob Meadows tries on a vest-like device. He bends forward slightly as the device vibrates and a red light on the vest鈥檚 shoulder flickers on and off.

鈥淭his is our first iteration prototype from two years ago, which features a light for demonstration during presentations.鈥 said the聽聽senior in 51精品视频鈥檚聽.

Meadows and fellow bioengineering senior Tyler Bray have been developing this wearable device, Posture Protect, to help people with movement disorders like Parkinson鈥檚 disease, as well as their physical therapists. Meadows and Bray are among six teams of student innovators supported by the聽, a new initiative directed by bioengineering assistant聽professor聽聽and funded by 51精品视频鈥檚聽. The program helps mentor and bridge potential high-impact student projects from the classroom toward real-world impact.

The duo has been working on Posture Protect since 2017 when they first developed their idea and prototype as a capstone project in the course 鈥淭he Art of Making: A Hands-on Introduction to Systems Design and Engineering鈥濃攁 human-centered design course taught by Samosky. Bray鈥檚 grandmother was diagnosed with a stroke that semester, which spurred the idea to help people with fine motor control problems. In their research, they learned that people with Parkinson鈥檚 disease share similar issues and honed their focus.

鈥淲e sat in on fitness classes at a local boxing gym specifically for people with Parkinson鈥檚 disease and we learned that people with that disease struggle daily with posture,鈥 Bray said. 鈥淲e hadn鈥檛 really heard of that before because most people just associate it with hand tremors. We followed up with physical therapists who confirmed that this was true and important because it increases their risk of falls.鈥

The team has been experimenting with different designs, including vests, necklaces and one that rests comfortably on the user鈥檚 shoulders. And while people with Parkinson鈥檚 disease and stroke may have been the impetus for Posture Protect, the device can also be used by people with other conditions that affect postural control, such as multiple sclerosis.聽

When the user of the device bends over or slouches for a certain period of time, the wearable device will vibrate, informing the user that they are in poor posture. The student innovators say the final product aims to be unobtrusive, preventing unwanted attention.

The team鈥檚 highly successful capstone project in The Art of Making led to their winning the top award for 鈥溾 at the 2017 Swanson School of Engineering Design Expo. The two were then introduced to the聽, part of 51精品视频鈥檚聽. The center is a hub for student innovation and entrepreneurship on 51精品视频鈥檚 campus. Posture Protect has made progress in the center鈥檚 programs, including the most recent program, the聽聽student incubator, which is supported by聽听蹿耻苍诲颈苍驳.

We hadn鈥檛 thought about the business side of things before the Innovation Institute鈥檚 programs. Being able to get this out of the lab and to the people has been helpful for understanding better who our actual customer might be.

Jacob Meadows

鈥淭his is an example of a couple of students who really keep going; they haven鈥檛 gotten discouraged and have been working steadily with our entrepreneurs-in-residence,鈥 said聽, the center鈥檚 director. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e persistent and it鈥檚 been great seeing how far they鈥檝e come in the past two years. I have high hopes for them in future competitions. The persistent student entrepreneurs here usually do best because they take what they learn from previous programs and apply them to their products and business analysis for future competitions.鈥澛

Meadows and Bray have been working with the center to advance their product development, participating in competitions such as the聽, the聽聽and the聽. They are entered into this year鈥檚 Randall competition and in April, will take Posture Protect to the ACC InVenture Prize Competition at North Carolina State University. They also plan to start a pilot program with local physical therapists and their patients soon.聽

鈥淲e鈥檝e learned a lot about the innovation process as a whole: designing the product, showing it to people to get feedback, understanding business use cases and learning which initial target market may be the best,鈥 said Meadows. 鈥淲e hadn鈥檛 thought about the business side of things before the Innovation Institute鈥檚 programs. Being able to get this out of the lab and to the people has been helpful for understanding better who our actual customer might be.鈥

鈥淭he Big Idea Center has really helped us round out our experience and our education in terms of product development,鈥 Bray added. 鈥淎s engineers, we can design and build whatever we want, and we鈥檝e learned some unique ways to do that. But once we graduate, so much of that is driven by business, and to be able to understand how that side of things work is extremely valuable.鈥