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Application for Early Alzheimer's Disease Diagnosis

Detecting the onset of early-stage Alzheimer’s Disease, along with monitoring the progression of the disease, is well-known to be difficult and, often-times, unreliable. Simply put, there has yet to be a clinically validated tool or methodology for determining the biomarkers that indicate the presence and progression of Alzheimer’s disease. This student team worked to develop a digital tool that can integrate inputs from well-established, in-home, and wearable devices as data which, through an AI and ML programmatic approach, aims to synthesize that data, providing a reading which can indicate both the presence of Alzheimer’s Disease and the degree of change of that disease over time. Two key factors which are baseline and that the student team worked to incorporate into the tool were inputs which capture the patient's gate (wearable) and sleep patterns (wearable and/or smartphone). The student team sought to include other data inputs incrementally as project timing/cost/complexity allows. These included some or all of the following: speech patterns, eye tracking, reading tracking, device patterns (typing and gestures), home movement patterns. The essential concept here is that more inputs equal more data to integrate and provide a more focused and complete picture of the patient's condition. Outcomes this student team worked toward include: • Working prototype, end-user platform/tool • Solution accessible from tablet or smartphone • Name and branding for tool • Mapping and progressive design outputs (e.g. journey map, app map, flowchart, thumbnails, design comps, etc.) • Software which displays the appropriately modified information and diagnostic recommendations (personalized to their capability/level of ability) in a usable (accessible - UX standards) visual format (easy to use dashboard and navigation). • Demonstrated successful real world use/testing - patients can easily access the application with the follow-on understanding of the appropriate information/course of action through the interface

Faculty Adviser

Payman Arabshahi, Associate Professor, UW ECE, Electrical & Computer Engineering

Students

Aakash Neve
Bole Yi
Eugene Ngo
Francisco Luquin Monroy
Linh Truong
Lucas Ze Xia Wang
Nathanael Judah Hartanto
Sabrina Hwang

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