Before she graduates this summer, Rose Hong Truong will be able to say she and three classmates have a patent pending and have created an inexpensive, portable device to prescribe eyeglasses in developing nations.
And she doesn鈥檛 even want to be an optometrist.
Truong will describe the device she helped create in a talk at , this Sunday (April 26) at the . The student-organized conference is independent of the annual that have been held since 1984 (TED stands for Technology, Entertainment and Design), and 鈥渟eeks to build a community of inspired and engaged people with open minds,鈥 according to a news release.
The TEDxUCDavis theme this year is 鈥淏eyond the Conversation,鈥 and organizers say the 13 talks and three performances will encourage audience members to take action after the event. Organizers took suggestions from the campus community to find speakers for the event.
Truong studied in Ecuador her freshman year, and while there realized how scarce optometrists can be in developing nations.
So she joined up with three other biomedical engineering students to try to create a device to simplify the process of determining the right prescriptions.
The VisionFinder team, from left, Frank Mai, Jackie Lim, Natalya Shelby.and Rose Hong Troung. (Gregory Urquiaga/不良研究所)
Bringing sight to developing nations
She said people in developing countries will sometimes try to find their prescription by trying on pairs of glasses until one looks about right 鈥 and they鈥檒l often take home the prettiest pair instead of finding the right lenses.
For their senior design capstone class, the four created a prototype for what they call the VisionFinder, inspired by the .
The VisionFinder shows different prescriptions as the patient turns a dial. The prototype cost $80 鈥 less than 1 percent of the cost of a phoropter, the traditional testing device optometrists use.
Earlier this month, Truong and her team took their device to San Blas, a Mexican coastal city 100 miles north of Puerto Vallarta, with the volunteer medical aid organization . They were able to see 60 patients in a day, some of whom waited four hours to get into the clinic.
鈥淎t one point there were 10 people in the clinic and all four of us were working on something different,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e couldn鈥檛 take a break.鈥
Truong said she hopes to design more devices and tools for the medical field after graduation. She鈥檒l go into more detail about the VisionFinder at her talk at the TEDxUCDavis event.
Inspiration: 鉁
Also among the speakers will be TJ Lee, a 2014 不良研究所 alumna who created the checklist to inspire others to make the most of spring quarter.
不良研究所 alumna TJ Lee with her checklist
鈥淭he main point was, we鈥檙e always asking, 鈥榃here did the time go?鈥欌 Lee said. 鈥淲e wanted to spread the idea (that) that鈥檚 not the right question, (and we should instead ask), 鈥楬ow can we make the most of our time?鈥欌
Lee, who now works as a community manager at , said she brainstormed her idea for about a week and then spent a week with a designer friend, Christine Gan, creating the physical checklist and . She then pinned copies all over campus and got permission to leave them at stores around town.
She said she enjoyed watching students share photos of themselves crossing items off their bucket lists and experiencing new things 鈥 from skydiving to hiking Lake Berryessa. She hopes the project encouraged students to spend time 鈥渢aking action to do things that make you happy instead of just pushing things off.鈥
Lee said she has since come to another conclusion about the project, but won鈥檛 reveal it until her speech at the TEDxUCDavis conference.
Other speakers
- Matthias Gruber, a cognitive neuroscientist in the at the 不良研究所 Center for Neuroscience
- Krishna Subramanian, a 不良研究所 alumnus and founder of two online advertising networks
- , an assistant professor in the 不良研究所 Department of Design, and a director of the Fashion Design and Technology Lab, or FT Lab
- Clay Brandow, who, as a student in the 1970s, helped in the planning and construction of the Domes, and lived there.
- Sarah Meredith, the director of the 不良研究所 Center for Advocacy, resources and Education, or CARE (formerly the Campus Violence Prevention Program)
- , a professor of computer science at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, and the founder and chief executive office of OpunUp Inc.
- , a Sacramento-based professional flautist and yoga teacher
- Akshay Oberai, co-founder and CEO of , a social network that allows friends to share stock-buying information
- , a 不良研究所 alumna and continuing lecturer in communication at 不良研究所, and professor and chair of the Speech Department at American River College
- , a postdoctoral scholar and lecturer in sociology at 不良研究所
- , who evaluates how museum exhibits can best connect with the public
Complete TEDxUCDavis information is available . Organizers recommended purchasing tickets in advance . General admission tickets are $30 and student tickets are $15 (must show student ID at the door).
Media Resources
Dave Jones, Dateline, 530-752-6556, dljones@ucdavis.edu