12 January 2012

CES 2012: Design a Star Trek tricorder and win $10million

  • Image courtesy of Theoban

Qualcomm has announced a bizarre competition for designers to develop a handheld device, equipped with sensors, that can enable doctors to noninvasively scan patients – in effect, a Tricorder as used by Dr Leonard 'Bones' McCoy (pictured) on cult sci fi show, Star Trek. First prize is a staggering $10million.

The augmented reality specialist has joined forces with the X-Prize Foundation in a bid to make such a device become reality by launching the Tricorder X-Prize at CES 2012. The winner will be the designer who develops a mobile solution that can diagnose patients better than or equal to a panel of board certified physicians, capturing key health metrics, diagnosing a set of 15 diseases and making '23rd Century science fiction a 21st Century medical reality'.

The full spec is as follows:
As envisioned for this competition, the device will be a tool capable of capturing key health metrics and diagnosing a set of 15 diseases. Metrics for health could include such elements as blood pressure, respiratory rate, and temperature. Ultimately, this tool will collect large volumes of data from ongoing measurement of health states through a combination of wireless sensors, imaging technologies, and portable, non-invasive laboratory replacements.

In a statement, the X-Prize Foundation said: "In virtually every industry, end consumer needs drive advances and improvements. Except in healthcare. Very few methods exist for consumers to receive direct medical care without seeing a healthcare professional at a clinic or hospital, creating an access bottleneck. Despite substantial investment to improve the status quo, even average levels of service, efficiency, affordability, accessibility, and satisfaction remain out of reach for many whom the system was intended to help. A prize is thus sorely needed."

Author
Chris Shaw

Supporting Information

Websites
http://www.xprize.org/

Companies
Qualcomm UK Ltd

This material is protected by Findlay Media copyright
See Terms and Conditions.
One-off usage is permitted but bulk copying is not.
For multiple copies contact the sales team.

Do you have any comments about this article?

Add your comments

Name
 
Email
 
Comments
 

Your comments/feedback may be edited prior to publishing. Not all entries will be published.
Please view our Terms and Conditions before leaving a comment.

 

Related Articles

3d ic and photonic integration

French National Research Agency, ANR, along with French Atomic and Renewable ...

IR detector breakthrough

Researchers from China and the US have utilised single walled carbon nanotubes ...

Memory breakthrough hailed

Researchers at UCL have developed the first purely silicon oxide based ...

The connected car

It's a somewhat chilling statistic; 1.2million people will die on the world's ...

Catalysing demand

"Fuel cells are the most promising new form of energy generation – and always ...

Image is everything

Medical imaging is one of the underrated miracles of modern medicine. Only a ...

Is digital power moving forward?

It is now several years since commercial products with 'added digital ...

The CHAMP-AV6: Maximising Performance with ...

This paper presents information from a benchmark prepared by Gedae Inc. which ...

Changing the embedded development model with ...

While there is a broad range of embedded applications in need of complete and ...

ROLEC aluCASE - Modern IP67 Diecast ...

These stylish IP67 enclosures have many intelligent design features including a ...

IBM tackles 22nm challenges

IBM has announced the semiconductor industry’s first computationally based ...

Touch interface innovation

A new contact microphone, when connected to a system, is able to process sound ...

The Ben Heck Show (New series)

In this season 2 premiere of 'The Ben Heck Show', modding guru Ben Heck puts ...

Ben Heck builds LAN computer

In this episode of The Ben Heck Show, Ben builds a retro inspired portable LAN ...

Bionic lenses and rabbits

A Terminator style bionic contact lens has been developed by researchers in a ...

Richard Noble's Bloodhound Project diary

I apologise – my web updates always seem to be late and I feel I am letting you ...

The worm hasn't turned

Every once in a while, you look at the results of a research project and ask ...

Brent Hudson, Sagentia

Sagentia's ceo tells Graham Pitcher how the consulting company is anticipating ...

Prof Donal Bradley, Imperial

Graham Pitcher talks to a researcher who was 'there at the start' of the ...

Geoff Halls, Roke Manor

Roke Manor continues to be a world leader in communications research, but ...