Mary Lou Jepsen: How we can use light to see deep inside our bodies and brains
Mary Lou Jepsen pushes the edges of what's possible in optics and physics, to make new types of devices, leading teams and working with huge factories that can ship vast volumes of these strange, new things. Full bio
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near-infrared light
just like this.
faster and cheaper health care.
this key and a couple of other keys
and the spot it makes on my hand?
the lights down, please --
spreads out, it scatters.
what scattering is,
optical properties as human flesh.
putting it on the light.
using red light and infrared light,
piece of chicken on it,
about the scatter
the early part of my career on
in physics in the 70s,
it enables you to do with light.
all of the rays, all of the photons
and all of the angles, simultaneously.
bouncing off of the barriers,
being scattered by our bodies.
of the scattering maze,
and bouncing everywhere.
at the bottom inside of the screen,
of each marble exiting the maze.
marbles from below
to exactly the right position and angle,
at the top of the scatter matrix.
to your eyes than red or infrared,
in front of this brain
of densely scattering tissue.
no one's done this before,
to ever see this.
that we can focus deep into tissue.
is the second key
of our bodies and brains.
skull and bones?
without seeing through bone?"
at our lab and here at TED.
and bones and flesh with just red light.
but they cause tumors.
to come back here
than making a brain lase.
we could focus through brain tissue.
we put a bare camera die in front of it.
of a millimeter wide.
full width half max --
in the human brain.
through skull and brain to a neuron.
we're doing this for the first time here.
so we've made a breakthrough.
that's not just 50 marbles.
by the hologram,
densely scattering brain,
it fills a room,
what I just showed you.
could enable dramatically lower cost,
the light going in here,
but that's kind of a big system.
a honking-big MRI machine,
to shrink it down?"
big element in that system
of a child's fingernail.
inventing, prototype-developing
of consumer electronics --
and test the corner cases
to fabricate each chip.
slim down the system, speed it up
and de-scattering of light
better, faster and cheaper health care.
that can replace the functionality
line a ski hat, put inside a pillow.
de-scattering the light.
chip inventions, exactly,
the integrated circuits
of our current bulky system.
emits a sonic ping,
through that sonic spot
of the police car siren changes
I haven't told you yet,
can make a hologram.
that's coming off of the sonic spot,
of orange light
on the camera chip.
information just about that sonic spot,
all of the red light.
focus the light back down into the brain
or part of the brain.
to shift the sonic focus to another spot.
we scan out the brain.
this iconic image of X-ray diffraction
for the first time.
with our chips,
and decoding the information,
at finding blood.
red light and infrared light.
going right through it.
you can see it on the -- there it is.
the light goes everywhere.
than a cubic millimeter or two
as normal flesh.
detecting cancers early,
as it grows or shrinks.
at finding out where blood isn't,
versus not carrying oxygen,
is the best disinfectant.
by shining light deep inside of lungs.
noninvasively.
of what this technology can do.
within an hour or two,
reduce the damage to the brain.
within an hour or two of a stroke.
inexpensive imaging,
can decode the type of stroke
lacks access to medical imaging.
medical imaging can save countless lives.
focusing through skull and brain
you can activate or inhibit neurons,
we can match spec by spec
at the color change in the blood,
that with fMRI scanners today,
images and dreams of those being scanned.
that puts all three of these capabilities
with light and sound,
mapping oxygen use in the brain --
brain-computer communication,
no optional brain surgery required.
that suffer globally with brain disease.
the whole body's in reach.
you want to see it again?
is not knowing about our bodies,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Mary Lou Jepsen - Inventor, entrepreneur, optical physicistMary Lou Jepsen pushes the edges of what's possible in optics and physics, to make new types of devices, leading teams and working with huge factories that can ship vast volumes of these strange, new things.
Why you should listen
Mary Lou Jepsen is one of the world’s foremost engineers and scientists in optics, imaging and display -- inventing at the hairy, crazy edge of what physics allows, aiming to do what seems impossible and leading teams to achieve these in volume in partnership with the world’s largest manufacturers, in Asia. She has more than 200 patents published or issued.
Jepsen is the founder and CEO of Openwater, which aims to use new optics to see inside our bodies. Previously a top technical exec at Google, Facebook, Oculus and Intel, her startups include One Laptop Per Child, where she was CTO and chief architect on the $100 laptop. She studied at Brown, MIT and Rhode Island School of Design, and she was a professor at both MITs -- the one in Cambridge, Mass., and the Royal Melbourne Institute of Tech in Australia.
Mary Lou Jepsen | Speaker | TED.com