Manu Prakash: Lifesaving scientific tools made of paper
TED Fellow Manu Prakash is on a mission to bring radical new technology to global health. Full bio
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and sharing them with people.
was actually a microscope
from my brother's eyeglasses.
because of that moment,
is for moments like this.
black things in my hair --
in the Bay Area.
far supersedes our imagination
such a universal phrase.
to 130 countries in the world,
a million microscopes
of people around the world,
to Kathmandu to Kansas.
that I love about this
mosquito species that carry dengue
under a microscope.
who came up with a new way
of crystalline formation in glitter.
screening with this tool.
a species of flea
one centimeter deep.
of these as anomalies.
the experience of science,
no infrastructure:
on this planet that live in poverty.
of solution makers?
that we put on the line
bare-minimum tools and resources.
of frugal science
for these communities.
diagnosis under a tree, off-grid.
today of new tools.
schistosomiasis with Foldscopes,
being used as a doorstop.
is good as a doorstop."
who don't know,
to do sample processing.
of blood or body fluids
and identify pathogens.
about solving this problem,
the physics of these objects
throw I could make.
the safe space of toys --
or a buzzer, or a rundle.
with this as a kid?
in the history of mankind ...
hidden around on our planet.
how this little thing works.
that you put in,
to mathematically solve this.
the complete analytical solution
all the centrifuges
of strings and a handle.
to go all the way to a million rpm.
in human anatomy,
of this object is about 10 hertz,
than two or three hertz.
to achieve with this object
and have it spin,
of forces you would experience.
a quick demo here, where --
to make a little finger prick,
is going to come out.
you don't have to look at it.
with a drop of blood --
I have malaria right now or not.
by putting it in clay.
to make a sealed cavity.
if you can hear this --
all the blood cells with the plasma.
cells to plasma --
a separated volume
whether I might be anemic.
we build many types of Paperfuges.
malaria parasites
that are in the blood
with something like a centrifuge.
to separate nucleic acids
out in the field itself.
to separate bulk samples,
multiplex test on an object like this.
and the chemistry in the same object.
we just got back from Madagascar;
for malaria look like --
members of the community
that excites me the most --
tools with people around the world.
could help us fight mosquitoes;
malaria, Zika, chikungunya, dengue.
don't know where our enemies are.
mosquitoes are is missing.
identify them under a microscope.
with each other looks like.
with their wingbeat frequencies.
signatures from mosquitoes.
going to release them.
to record from this.
which has microphones --
are so damn good already,
this near-field signature.
that I made a day ago.
that you heard before
with a regular cell phone
acoustic databases
that carry human pathogens.
you're actually working with.
and if any of you want to sign up,
and dear to my heart.
is we have terrible problems.
with absolutely no health care,
is going to provide the answer.
literacy a human right.
feeling of making a discovery
the next group of people
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Manu Prakash - Physicist, inventorTED Fellow Manu Prakash is on a mission to bring radical new technology to global health.
Why you should listen
An assistant professor of bioengineering at Stanford University, Manu Prakash is a physicist working at the molecular scale to try and understand no less than how the world really works. As he told BusinessWeek in 2010, he is humbled and inspired by nature’s own solutions to the world's biggest problems. "I build and design tools to uncover how and why biological systems so often outsmart us. I believe one day we will be able to understand the physical design principles of life on Earth, leading to a new way to look at the world we live in."
Born in Meerut, India, Prakash earned a BTech in computer science and engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology in Kanpur before moving to the United States. He did his master’s and PhD in applied physics at MIT before founding the Prakash Lab at Stanford.
Prakash's ultra-low-cost, "print-and-fold" paper microscope won a $100,000 grant from the Gates Foundaton in 2012.
Manu Prakash | Speaker | TED.com