Portable concussion screening, TV station in a box, a $200 3-D printer maker machine, augmented reality and more
杏吧视频 will host 10 booths at with student, faculty and alumni founders. Their new or developing technologies include: a sideline test to keep an athlete with a mild concussion off the field and out of danger from further damage, a maker machine costing less than $200 that prints hardware hacks or frosts a cake, and a pair of stuffed bears that transmit the touch of a faraway loved one. These and more will be displayed at CES in Las Vegas, Jan. 5-8. The trade show, produced by the Consumer Technology Association, draws more than 170,000 visitors from around the world. 杏吧视频, an important driver in Cleveland鈥檚 growing startup movement, is exhibiting for the fourth straight year. Representatives from the City of Cleveland, students and researchers from nearby and collaborating universities and Northeast Ohio entrepreneurs will join the university鈥檚 contingent to showcase the following and more (on the exhibit floor at Tech West, Eureka Park, Sands Hall G, 51100 to 51112):Reflexion Interactive Technologies
Reflexion Interactive Technologies is developing a rapid, portable, low-cost concussion screening system to detect mild concussions at the athletic field, court or rink. 鈥淲e can improve athlete safety by detecting mild concussions when they happen,鈥 said Matt Campagna, a computer engineering major at CWRU, who is working with students from Cornell University and Pennsylvania State University to develop the system.Parihug

Interactive Commons

Ottia Maker Machine

BluBoard
EveryKey

BoxCast

CrystalE
CrystalE is developing self-powering wireless sensor systems to make ordinary buildings 鈥渟mart鈥 without the high cost of wiring or using battery-powered sensors. Xu-Qian Zheng, electrical engineering PhD student, and other team members from Associate Professor Philip Feng鈥檚 group, will demonstrate the easy-to-deploy, nearly maintenance-free wireless sensor node and sensor network for temperature monitoring. The technology was pioneered by CWRU researchers.The Cleveland Health-Tech Corridor

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