11.13.18
The Centre for Process Innovation (CPI) has supported an entrepreneur’s vision to help runners find the most appropriate type of footwear.
CPI worked with Craig Downs on mymo, a wearable sock which uses artificial intelligence to gauge an athlete’s gait. By embedding electronics into the sock, Downs’ company, Shoes2Run, can measure how feet perform during a short walk, jog or run. Data gathered from the product is then sent to a smartphone app, via the Internet of Things, with the information used to direct athletes to the most suitable footwear on the market, minimizing their risk of injury. The information can also be shared with physiotherapists and podiatrists to monitor injuries.
CPI supported Downs by designing and implementing electronics to log sensor measurements, as well as adding wireless integration into a smartphone app and offline tool for algorithm development.
CPI has created rolls of thin, flexible inlays containing multiple electronic components. These can be converted into labels or embedded into smart products, such as pharmaceutical packaging capable of monitoring a drug’s condition. This printed electronics work takes place at NETPark, Sedgefield, and a sister base which opened earlier this year at Newton Aycliffe, County Durham.
“The work on mymo highlights further the organization’s expertise in printed electronics. This is exactly the type of project our Newton Aycliffe’s facility is geared towards,” said Gillian Kears-Fricker, business development manager at CPI.
Downs, whose company is based in Washington, Wearside, received further support from the North-East Business and Innovation Centre’s (BIC) SME Innovation Program, with Northumbria University working on an artificial intelligence algorithm for his product. The collaboration also included support from Creative Fuse North-East, the University of Sunderland, and RTC North.
“After suffering an injury by wearing inappropriate shoes, I wanted to make sure other runners didn’t experience the same problem,” Downs said. “By collaborating with CPI, the BIC and various other organizations, we have created this patent-pending innovation, knowing no other company is currently providing unbiased footwear recommendations via this kind of technology."
Downs hopes to launch this product in the new year.
CPI worked with Craig Downs on mymo, a wearable sock which uses artificial intelligence to gauge an athlete’s gait. By embedding electronics into the sock, Downs’ company, Shoes2Run, can measure how feet perform during a short walk, jog or run. Data gathered from the product is then sent to a smartphone app, via the Internet of Things, with the information used to direct athletes to the most suitable footwear on the market, minimizing their risk of injury. The information can also be shared with physiotherapists and podiatrists to monitor injuries.
CPI supported Downs by designing and implementing electronics to log sensor measurements, as well as adding wireless integration into a smartphone app and offline tool for algorithm development.
CPI has created rolls of thin, flexible inlays containing multiple electronic components. These can be converted into labels or embedded into smart products, such as pharmaceutical packaging capable of monitoring a drug’s condition. This printed electronics work takes place at NETPark, Sedgefield, and a sister base which opened earlier this year at Newton Aycliffe, County Durham.
“The work on mymo highlights further the organization’s expertise in printed electronics. This is exactly the type of project our Newton Aycliffe’s facility is geared towards,” said Gillian Kears-Fricker, business development manager at CPI.
Downs, whose company is based in Washington, Wearside, received further support from the North-East Business and Innovation Centre’s (BIC) SME Innovation Program, with Northumbria University working on an artificial intelligence algorithm for his product. The collaboration also included support from Creative Fuse North-East, the University of Sunderland, and RTC North.
“After suffering an injury by wearing inappropriate shoes, I wanted to make sure other runners didn’t experience the same problem,” Downs said. “By collaborating with CPI, the BIC and various other organizations, we have created this patent-pending innovation, knowing no other company is currently providing unbiased footwear recommendations via this kind of technology."
Downs hopes to launch this product in the new year.