During this session we will explore cutting-edge initiatives to accelerate research & development via Big Data, crowdsourcing, technologies for the extended mind, and a range of data-rich pervasive neurotechnologies such as virtual reality.
-Chair: Alison Fenney, Director of Industry Alliances at the Neurotechnology Industry Organization (NIO)
-Dr. Walter Greenleaf, Distinguished Visiting Scholar at Stanford University’s Virtual Human Interaction Lab
-Michael Meagher, President of Cogniciti
-José Barrios, Co-Founder & CEO of Cognilab
-Dr. Peter Reiner, Co-Founder, National Core for Neuroethics at the University of British Columbia
Presentation @ The 2015 SharpBrains Virtual Summit http://sharpbrains.com/summit-2015/agenda
2. At the frontier of Big Data and Brain Health
Chaired by: Alison Fenney,
Director of Industry Alliances at the
Neurotechnology Industry (NIO)
Dr. Walter Greenleaf,
Distinguished Visiting Scholar
At Stanford University’s
Virtual Human Interaction Lab
Michael Meagher,
President of Cognicity
Jose Barrios
Co-Founder & CEO
Of Cognilab
Dr. Peter Reiner,
Co-Founder, National Core for Neuroethics
at the University of British Columbia
President of Cognicity
6. For 31 of the past 40 years, health care costs have
increased at a greater rate than the economy as a
whole
Health care costs constitute 18% of U.S. GDP
30% increase in personal income over the past decade
effectively eliminated by a 76% increase in health care
costs
$750B in waste
Healthcare Costs Are Growing Fast
11. New Technologies for Healthcare
Major Trends:
Transformation from analog to digital
Transformation from location-based and time
limited to any location, and available 24/7.
Patient focused - patient engaged in their own care
Emphasis on prevention and behavior change
15. HD display
Cloud computing
Internet access
Computing power
Always with you
The Transformative Power of a Smartphone
Accelerometers
Gyroscope
Magnetometers
GPS
Cameras
Infrared
Touchscreen
Finger print
Force
NFC
WiFi/Bluetooth/Ce
llular
16. The Impact of Mobile Technology on Healthcare
MOBILE DEVICES HAVE OVERTAKEN
WORLDWIDE POPULATION
More people have access to cell phones than
drinking water, electricity or a toothbrush
17. Digital Health Apps Have Arrived
In 2014, nearly 260 digital
health startups raised a record
$4.0 billion in venture capital,
equivalent to the combined
amounts raised in 2011, 2012,
and 2013
24. eFormulations are pharmaceuticals co-packaged with unique software access codes,
allowing for combined clinical use
Patient receives a prescription for an
eFormulation including both a medication and a
software access code
Access code enables entry
to the Pear Portal, which
provides therapeutic
software that compliments
the medication
Synergistic therapeutic
effects are achieved through
concomitant use of
pharmaceuticals and
software
Continuous data
feedback from
patient and
software enables
outcomes
monitoring and
limits SAEs
Data allows clinician
decision-making support
and patient tailored “fine-
tuning” of therapeutic
approach
25. This therapeutic software has shown the ability to be as effective as
traditional psychotherapy
2
•“Computerized CBT for anxiety and
depressive disorders, especially via
the internet, has the capacity to
provide effective acceptable and
practical health care for those who
might otherwise remain untreated.”
26. Therapeutic software is currently the hottest area for development of
new CNS therapies
2
•Many groups are currently developing apps,
virtual environments, and games to diagnose
and treat CNS disorders
•By playing NeuroRacer, adults 60 to 85 years
old improved multitasking and cognition
versus control subjects, attaining levels
mirroring 20-year-old participants
•Cognitive and performance gains persisted
for more than 6 months
•Brain function of trained older brains
resembled younger brains
28. Now is the time for VR
VR technology is now affordable, scalable and
accessible to the marketplace.
The VR category is attracting interest and investments
from major players.
Facebook - Oculus
Samsung - GearVR
Sony - Project Morpheus
Microsoft - HoloLens
30. Medical VR Can Address Several Key Problems
Annual cost of problems in the U.S. alone:
WEIGHT
LOSS
$289B
SMOKING
CESSATION
$528B
ADDICTION
$181B
CHRONIC
PAIN
$635B
POST
TRAUMATIC
STRESS
$300B
Stroke & TBI
$86B
Alcoholism
$223B
Autism
$126B
31. Academic research has proven Virtual Reality can effectively treat a wide
variety of mental health disorders – ranging from addictions to PTSD
32. Phobia and anxiety disorders
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
Developmental disabilities
Depression
Drug and alcohol abuse
Anger management
Eating disorders
Attention disorders
Learning disabilities
Neuro-cognitive disorders
Virtual environments are used clinically to treat several
important behavioral health problems
33. Proven ability to change attitudes and behavior after “being” one’s
future self.
34. Neuroscience Rationale
It is necessary to activate the associated
brain system to enable neuro-plasticity
Repetition is required
Attention drives Cholinergic system
Novelty drives Noradrenergic/Serotonergic system
Reward drives Dopaminergic system
41. 41
We now need to bring proactive care to
We now need to
bring proactive
care to
Brain
Health
A key ingredient
to getting this done:
The right early-
warning test
46. 46
How you perform
vs. your peers
Yes/no answer to
whether your brain
health is normal
Results stored so that
you can track
changes over time
Real-time report for test takers
48. 48
2014
• Original study
• 361 healthy adults ages 50-
79
• 87% tests started were fully
completed
• Reliability: test-retest 0.72
• Validity: positive correlations
of performance with age
• Cut-off: 2% of test takers
below normal
The Science
2015
• From general public test
takers
• 23,000 adults ages 50-79
• Results very similar to our
controlled 2014 study
49. 49
The benefits of proactive
cognitive assessment to
Home Care
Patients
Family
Caregivers
Healthcare
Professionals
Healthcare
Funders
Better manage their
cognitive health
More effectively
support their loved
ones
Move from reactive
to proactive care
Better control
escalating costs of
cognitive care
50. 50
We’ve designed the study to measure
impacts
3 months
Plan,
Develop,
Train
6 months
Test Administration,
Patient Follow Up
3 months
Gather
Data,
Analysis
Double-blind study 750 – 1,000 adults
Patient experience survey
Professional experience survey
Input patient
user panel
Economic
evaluation
52. 52
We have begun our work . . .
Research collaboration
underway with a major
pharmaceutical firm
Cracked code of
converting test
completers to
research registrants
Objective 5%
Actual 19%
53. 53
What’s next . . .
Home Care
Clinical
Research
Find a U.S. firm to join us in studying the
patient outcomes and healthcare savings
of proactively cognitively assessing
older adults in home.
Find our next pharma/research
memory-related research firm with a
strong interest in lowering its
cost/time of volunteer recruitment.
54. Jose Barrios, CEO
Cognilab Technologies
Better Cognitive Models are Essential to
our Digital Healthcare Future
84. How can consumers and professionals
harness this opportunity to better monitor
and enhance brain health, and to improve
work and life?
• LinkedIn Group
• #sharpbrains2015
• Watercooler chats
• Session @ Expo Day
THE CHALLENGE
Reminders: key business issues & potential applications
Ideas:
Weight Loss Product
Questions: how use with Nutrisystem’s current business?
Integrated or not with current product offering?
Distributed product (before in-home avail) – work with “retail” partners with ability to help
Promotional/marketing application/tool (e.g., events around the country; positive PR). Do while refining approach & doing rigorous testing on product