The patch would be powered by a specially designed microchip that
will be made in Minnesota at a chip factory operated by SkyWater
Technology in collaboration with Ohio-based chip design firm Linear
ASICs and New York investment firm Asymmetric Return Capital. The
patch is intended to be worn on the skin and to connect wirelessly
to a smart phone to monitor a person's body temperature, the
companies said.
The group aims to produce a device to monitor temperatures remotely
that can be manufactured in high volumes.
"This will be especially important as we head into flu season later
this year," Bryan Wisk, a founding partner at Asymmetric Return
Capital, said in a statement.
The work is part of a broader partnership with two other firms:
Software maker SensiML, a subsidiary of QuickLogic Corp, and Upward
Health, a provider of in-home health care.
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The companies hope to use artificial intelligence to analyze signals such as the
sounds of coughs to identify unique patterns for COVID-19 symptoms. Those
findings could then be used create sensor-based systems that could screen for
the virus and slow its spread.
“There is tremendous need for better pre-diagnostic screening tools as
return-to-work measures are put into place across the U.S. and worldwide," Chris
Rogers, the chief executive of SensiML, said in a statement.
(Reporting by Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)
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