New talent snaffles awards with high-tech motion sensors
21 October 2013
Sensing Success – New talent snaffles awards with high-tech motion sensors
Fledgling high-tech engineering company StretchSense has been announced “Emerging New Zealand Innovator” sponsored by Unitec Institute of Technology in the New Zealand Innovators Awards announced last week. The company also snatched the coveted “Innovation in Design and Engineering” award sponsored by James & Wells Intellectual Property Limited.
The Emerging New Zealand Innovator award is given to the organisation that has shown commitment to developing a new-to-market technology which will transform the way people work and live.
CEO Ben O’Brien says that the StretchSense team are delighted to take out the two popular awards and hope the recognition will help raise their profile as they work aggressively to grow the business and bring more StretchSense-enabled products to market.
StretchSense develops small, light soft sensors made of polymers which can be sewn into clothing and give real time results and personal information about improvements and exercising. The company was incubated at the Biomimetics Laboratory (Auckland Bioengineering Institute) and began operating late 2012. It secured its first domestic sales in January followed by US sales in March this year, and now has a customer base across health, sports, animation, portable electronics and university sectors.
StretchSense sensors are part of a global wave of wearable technology which is transforming the health, film, and sports industries by simplifying the process of measuring body movement for people and potentially other living creatures.
Ben says, “Until now there has been no way to unobtrusively and comfortably measure the soft deformations of a human body. Our contribution is making this technology accessible and easy to use so that customers can reliably integrate it into their products and development cycles.
“Our sensors can transform everyday work in the health, gaming, and sports industries by assisting clinicians and coaches with goal setting and performance monitoring; helping engineers design devices with quantitative measurements of human interaction; and enabling film directors to move out of the mo-cap studio.”
The StretchSense sensors can be linked to a Bluetooth sensor transmission circuit that can be used with an app for android phones. “We can apply it to anything you can measure, because it is so precise and reliable,” says Ben.
In Ben’s view three components are required for successful innovation: customer need, curiosity the best feature of good engineers, scientists and technologists, and consolidation the exponential process where innovation builds on itself.
He hopes that the innovation at StretchSense will inspire others. “We have innovated to create an accessible stretch sensor – now others can build on our innovation to solve their own problems.”
StretchSense Limited
StretchSense
makes soft stretchy sensors for measuring human body
deformation and movement. The beauty of our sensors is that
they do not interfere with natural motion - they are soft,
unobtrusive, comfortable, wireless, and easy to use. Our
innovative sensor technology combined with our vertically
integrated engineering knowhow has enabled us to capture
major local and international customers in the healthcare,
sports training, portable electronics, and motion capture
markets. Prior to founding StretchSense the founding team
were working as academics in the Biomimetics Lab at the
Auckland Bioengineering Institute (UoA) where we developed
years of experience in working with sensing technology.
Since then the company has generated sufficient revenues to
support 2.5 additional staff, secured angel investment, and
won two categories of the New Zealand innovators
awards.
www.stretchsense.com
Auckland
UniServices Ltd
Auckland UniServices Ltd is the
largest research and development company of its kind in
Australasia and is a wholly-owned company of the University
of Auckland. UniServices manages the intellectual property
of the University of Auckland and is responsible for all
research-based consultancy partnerships, contract education
and
commercialisation.
ENDS