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View Full Version : Finalists named for $10m Star Trek 'tricorder' X Prize....Scanadu is the Real Tricorder



Cidersomerset
28th August 2014, 22:33
We are all familiar with how Scy Fy and Mainstream Science drive each other heres
another concept coming into reality.


Scanadu is the Real Tricorder

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27 August 2014 Last updated at 14:31

Finalists named for $10m Star Trek 'tricorder' X PrizeBy Edwin Lane

Technology reporter, BBC News


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Star Trek scanner The Star Trek tricorder diagnosed any illness at once



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Ten finalists have been chosen in a $10m (£6m) competition to develop a real-
life "tricorder" - the medical scanner used in the Star Trek series.The Qualcomm
Tricorder X Prize, launched last year, challenges anyone to develop a wireless device
capable of detecting a range of diseases.The technology employs sensors and imaging
to measure vital signs and diagnose conditions non-invasively.

X Prize officials said the technology was now "fact, not science fiction".

The 10 finalists come from a range of backgrounds, including universities, medical
device manufacturers and tech start-ups.One research team is backed by Nasa and the
Bill Gates Foundation, while another is made up of engineering students at Johns
Hopkins University in the US.They now have until the middle of next year to develop
workable prototypes of their devices in the hope of winning the prize.

Tuberculosis and diabetes

It is not clear what any of the devices will look like yet, but Dr Erik Viirre, technical and
medical director for X Prize, told the BBC that they ranged from conventional
smartphones with attachments to more "utilitarian-looking" devices that "get the job done".

One of the finalists, the Silicon Valley-based start-up Scanadu, showcased a handheld
scanner at the CES conference this year.

It works with smartphone software to monitor vital signs such as heart rate and blood
pressure, but it is not clear how such a device would address the more complicated task
of diagnosing disease.

To win the $10m, the device is expected to be able to monitor vital signs as well as
accurately diagnose 16 different conditions, including anaemia, tuberculosis and
diabetes.

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Finalist Scanadu has developed a handheld scanner to monitor vital signs

The technology must be presented in a portable device that can deliver the information
in a user-friendly way, so that patients can self-diagnose without the help of doctors.

Anil Vaidya, founder of SCANurse, one of two UK-based finalists, told the BBC his device
would not look exactly like the Star Trek device.

It "won't have electrodes sticking out that you will have to touch", he said, but would
have a wearable and a handheld component.

Opinions divided

He said the device would employ a range of sensors to take readings from a patient's
skin and even their breath, alongside cameras to take visual readings.Health
professionals and medical engineers point out that much of the relevant technology is
already available.For example, it is already possible to use light sensors to gather
information about blood flow and oxygen levels without taking a blood sample.

Sensors are also able to pick up gases in breath that may indicate certain diseases,
while electrocardiogram (ECG) readings are regularly used to assess heart health.

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Anil Vaidya London-based finalist Anil Vaidya says much of the technology already
exists Mr Vaidya also said his design would use cameras to take visual samples of symptoms to aid diagnosis.

The challenge, he said, was to bring the technology together in one portable device.

"Opinions on whether it can be done or not depend on who you're talking to," he told the BBC.

"Among many physicians the feeling is it can't be done. I come from a medical
engineering background, which is quite different."

Dr Viirre, of the X Prize, said the winning device could have a role in the developing
world, in areas where people have little or no access to medical services.

But Dr Richard Seabrook, head of business development at the Wellcome Trust
health charity, said there was "a debate to be had" on whether such devices should
be placed in the hands of patients, stressing the need for training and education.

But he said doctors may welcome the opportunity to offload simpler cases to
computers.

"If it creates time for them to spend on more complex cases, then that would be a
good thing," he told the BBC.

More on This Story

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-28950201


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ghostrider
28th August 2014, 23:51
Holy crap batman !!! back in the day , uncle GR was made fun of , someday we will have all the toys of star trek , they laughed ... now go to wal=mart whoosh the doors automatically open , we have lasers , communicators , and now drum roll please . . . wait for it ... yes now we have tricorders , spock would be proud ... I deserve this one , told you so , told you so , man if I could go back to being twelve for a day ... I gotta say it , galaxy class starships , transporters , one day we will have what seemed impossible ...