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  • MILES O'BRIEN: "Wearing your heart on your sleeve" is taking

  • on a whole new meaning. At the 2016 pilgrimage to Las Vegas for

  • gadget geeks - CES - wearable health tracking devices broke

  • into full stride, winning much more than a bit of flashy floor

  • space and heated hype. An estimated 500 million people

  • worldwide apparently now feel the need to copiously log their

  • steps, leaps, strokes and spins, while recording their breathing,

  • heart rate, blood pressure, sleep patterns and food intake --

  • just to name a few. And then of course, brag about it online.

  • Peter Neilson is CEO of a Denver startup called femtoScale

  • Miles O'Brien: Seems like there's no limit to the amount of data

  • people want to get, right? Would you agree with that?

  • What's going on?

  • PETER NEILSON: In wearables?

  • MILES O'BRIEN: Yeah.

  • PETER NEILSON: Blowing up. That's half of CES this year.

  • It looks like it's wearable trying to compute everything.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: Neilson's company is developing a portable

  • - and eventually wearable - sensor that can provide real

  • time readings of air quality by weighing airborne particles much

  • too small to see. The scale is just barely visible. I needed a

  • jeweler's magnifying glass to see it. FemtoScale was among

  • the nearly two-dozen small businesses supported by the

  • National Science Foundation, displaying their wares in the

  • Eureka Park section of CES. Eureka Park was cofounded by NSF

  • in 2012 as a way to showcase the "bleeding edge" technology it is

  • helping along. Steven Konsek is director of the Small Business

  • Innovation Research Program at NSF.

  • STEVEN KONSEK: Our program funds small businesses, mainly

  • startup companies that are developing game-changing

  • technologies that have big commercial upside.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: This year wearables dominated Eureka Park

  • - thanks to a perfect storm of technological advances: Sensors

  • are rapidly shrinking in size and cost; communications between

  • devices has improved; and so has battery life. And of course

  • none of it could happen without the ubiquity of smartphones -

  • our mobile switchboard for all things technological. San Jose-

  • based Stratio has shrunk a spectrometer down to palm size.

  • The device shines a bright light on food and medicine to

  • determine if they are what they purport to be. In this

  • demonstration, CEO Jae Hyung Lee compared counterfeit, generic

  • and genuine Viagra to the fingerprint-like spectroscopic

  • pattern of the real McCoy. It was instantly obvious which

  • were the imposters.

  • JAE HYUNG LEE: So far people were just interested themselves,

  • right? But now, they want to know what they're eating.

  • They want to know more about what they're buying. They want to know what's

  • going on around them, right.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: Clearly, exercise and nutrition tracking

  • alone, are not enough to satisfy entrepreneurs or consumers in

  • the health-tracking space. Kaustubh Kale is CEO of a Boca

  • Raton startup called AventuSoft. They are developing a wearable

  • heart monitor and electrocardiogram.

  • KAUSTUBH KALE: There's not a pushback anymore, you know? People are

  • already wearing Fitbit or any of the other wearables so they're

  • already accepting of these new technologies. And now as

  • the technology improves, you can now push it into the

  • medical grade domain.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: The wearable industry is all about heart

  • and sole too. Salt Lake City-based Veristride is

  • developing highly "sensorized" insoles.

  • STACY BAMBERG: So this version right here has two big square

  • sensorsthese are the pressure sensors -- and then underneath the

  • arch is where we put the electronics, so

  • MILES O'BRIEN: CEO and founder Stacy Bamberg got the idea as a

  • way to help amputees and stroke patients in physical therapy.

  • The real-time data provides visual or auditory cues to help

  • them walk with better balance. But Stacy believes as the

  • insoles get thinner and more comfortable, the real-time

  • feedback might catch on with runners.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: What's the future going to be then? Are we

  • just going to be sensors from head to toe?

  • STACY BAMBERG: I think the future is this stuff is built

  • into our clothes. We don't have to think about it. It connects -

  • it sends it to our app wirelessly. We're able to get

  • the information we want without feeling like we got something

  • latched onto us.

  • STEVEN KONSEK: Almost all the companies that are here have

  • gone on and raised now private capital based on some of the

  • work that we've helped them do.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: And maybe one day this seed money will yield a

  • crop of better, more sophisticated sensors for us all

  • to wear in good health.

  • For Science Nation, I'm Miles O'Brien.

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