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Technology to make smart clothing wins top science prize

Published: Tue 12 Nov 2013 03:56 PM
Media Release: 12 November 2013
Technology to make smart clothing wins top science prize
An Auckland scientist who is converting his cutting edge research into a high-technology start-up business has won the 2013 Prime Minister’s MacDiarmid Emerging Scientist Prize.
Dr Ben O’Brien has pioneered the development of small, light and soft, stretchy sensors that can measure movement of the human body and transmit the information to a smart phone app.
Earlier this year, he formed a company - StretchSense - to start selling the technology to global customers in healthcare, rehabilitation, sports training, animation and gaming.
“Our sensors are so precise and reliable that they can be used for anything you want to measure,” says O’Brien. “One example is rehabilitation where a healthcare professional wants to track something, like how an injury is improving over time.”
O’Brien plans to use his prize money to take the technology to the next level by developing an intuitive skin-tight under garment that can monitor and interpret body language, gestures and posture to accurately read the emotions of the wearer.
His goal is to create an ‘emotionally aware’ body suit that he expects will produce a range of practical technologies that can be commercialised by his company.
The Prime Minister’s MacDiarmid Emerging Scientist Prize is worth $200,000, with $150,000 of the money to be used for further research.
“Huge investment is going into clothing and accessories that have technology embedded in them, (such as the Google glass wearable computer),” O’Brien says, “but if those portable products are not able to pick up non-verbal messages and be sensitive to people’s emotions it could be disastrous.
“If you become frustrated while sitting at a computer, you can get up and walk away but that’s not the case if the computer is embedded in your t-shirt or your shoes. Wearable technology that can listen to body language is so far an unexplored area, but I see it as a crucial enabler to this fast growing industry.”
O’Brien received his PhD in bioengineering from the University of Auckland in 2010 and was awarded the Vice-Chancellor’s Prize for Best Doctoral Thesis. He subsequently received a two-year Rutherford Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship to work in the Biomimetics Laboratory of the University’s Bioengineering Institute and, in 2011, spent six months at the Microsystems Systems for Space Technologies Lab at École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne in Switzerland to work on miniaturising his technology.
StretchSense was spun out of the Biomimetics Laboratory and O’Brien continues to work at the Lab as an Honorary Research Fellow while also being CEO of his fledgling company.
His field of expertise is electroactive polymers, materials that are designed to change in size or shape when stimulated by an electric field. O’Brien invented a dielectric elastomer switch which allows the technology to be directly embedded into artificial muscle devices, giving them life-like reflexes.
He helped build a computer, which shows that artificial muscles can be made to ‘think’, to demonstrate the capability. It was a feature exhibit at the Big Data exhibition, held earlier this year at the National Library of New Zealand.
O’Brien says StretchSense’s point of difference is its ability to customise sensors to the needs of the customer, providing them with “everything they need to take the technology and put it straight into their product”.
“This is a boom time for soft sensing and we are riding the wave.”
O’Brien says running a start-up business combines his two passions of carrying out scientific research and using it to make a difference in the world.
“A lot of academics invent great things but relatively few actually quit their job and have a go at commercialising them. I want to create high-tech jobs that deliver back to the economy.”
In addition to the four founders, StretchSense employs two staff full time and one part time.
O’Brien says receiving the Prime Minister’s MacDiarmid Emerging Scientist Prize is a great honour.
“I don’t want to be someone who talked about it but didn’t do it. I am determined to deliver good results from the prize money.
“The recognition is also important. At StretchSense, we’ve gone out on a limb to push our research out into the world and it’s fantastic to get support from the Government for doing that.”
Last month, StretchSense took out two top prizes at the New Zealand Innovator Awards - the Emerging New Zealand Innovator title and the award for Innovation in Design and Engineering.
To find out more about the Prime Minister’s Science Prizes visit:
www.pmscienceprizes.org.nz
ENDS
About the Prime Minister’s Science Prizes
The Prime Minister’s Science Prizes combine recognition and reward, with total prize money of $1 million. Presented annually, they are New Zealand’s most valuable science awards and were introduced to raise the profile and prestige of science. The prizes celebrate scientific achievement, highlight the impact science has on New Zealanders’ lives and aim to attract more young people into science careers. There are five prizes with the top award, valued at $500,000, recognising a transformational science discovery or achievement which has had a significant impact on New Zealand or internationally. The prizes are:
• The Prime Minister’s Science Prize: $500,000
• The Prime Minister’s MacDiarmid Emerging Scientist Prize: $200,000
• The Prime Minister’s Science Teacher Prize: $150,000
• The Prime Minister’s Future Scientist Prize: $50,000
• The Prime Minister’s Science Media Communication Prize: $100,000

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