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A 15-Year-Old Google Science Fair Finalist Has A Simple Idea To Help Alzheimer's Patients

Kenneth Shinozuka, a 15-year-old from New York City, won a spot as one of Google's 15 Global Science Fair finalists for his project about finding a way to stop Alzheimer's patients from wandering at night.

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Shinozuka's grandfather is one of the 5.2 million Americans dealing with Alzheimer's and among the 65% given to wandering, especially at night.

Kenneth Shinozuka
Kenneth Shinozuka walking with his grandfather. Screenshot / YouTube

Shinozuka's grandfather suffered many accidents because his caregiver, Shinozuka's aunt, would seldom wake up when he started wandering. Once, police found him on a freeway two miles away from his home. 

To help his grandfather and millions of other patients and caregivers, Shinozuka created a system that wirelessly triggers an alert on a caregiver's smartphone when a patient steps out of bed.

To make this system work, he created a super-thin film sensor printed with pressure-sensitive, electrically conductive ink and a coin-sized wireless circuit that can either be embedded in a sock or attached to a foot or shoe. When a patient steps out of bed, pressure causes the system to send an alert to an app that Shinozuka also designed and coded. 

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During Shinozuka's six-month trial, his prototypes detected 100% of the 437 known times that his grandfather started wandering out of bed, without any false alarms. He is also using the sensor data to study whether there's any correlation between his grandfather's daily activities and whether he wanders at night.

Shinozuka is in the process of manufacturing hundreds of sensors that he will donate to nursing homes for Alzheimer's patients to use.

Here's what his systems look like:

Kenneth Shinozuka google project
Kenneth Shinozuka

"I will never forget how deeply moved my entire family was when they first witnessed my sensor detecting Grandfather’s wandering," Shinozuka writes in his project. "At that moment, I was struck by the power of technology to change lives."

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Shinozuka is one of 18 incredibly intelligent teenagers who made it to this year's Google Science Fair finals. Google will announce the top project in September, and the winner gets a 10-day trip to the Galapagos Islands, a visit to the Virgin Galactic Spaceport, and $50,000 in scholarship funding.

On February 28, Axel Springer, Business Insider's parent company, joined 31 other media groups and filed a $2.3 billion suit against Google in Dutch court, alleging losses suffered due to the company's advertising practices.

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