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Good, better, breast: Building a sensing mastectomy prosthetic with open hardware
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Author(s):
Kathy Reid
Location
Room 7
Date
jan Wed 15
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Start
13:30
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Duration
0:45:0
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End
14:15
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https://lca2020.linux.org.au/schedule/presentation/16/
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Good_better_breast_Building_a_sensing_mastectomy_prosthetic_with_open_hardware.json
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In Australia every year, around 18,000 women are diagnosed with breast cancer [1]. Many will go on to have breast removal surgery, called a mastectomy. Only 12% of women who have a mastectomy will have reconstruction, and will instead opt to wear a silicon-based prosthetic. These prosthetics are "dumb" - they're just silicone. They have 0 USB ports. What a great opportunity for open hardware! As part of her term project in the Masters of Applied Cybernetics at the 3A Institute at The Australian National University, Kathy Reid, herself a breast cancer survivor, developed a prototype called "SenseBreast" - a sensing, smart, mastectomy prosthetic based on an RPi 3B+ and a Sense HAT. This was a "mucking around" project to learn Python, and she didn't expect it to work. Narrator: It worked. In this poignant, funny, challenging, technical, entertaining and irreverent presentation, she explores; - motivations for the project, including a desire to keep sensor data private and personal - after all, who's watching? - hardware design and sensor challenges in open hardware and Python - prosthetic design and how to build a fake breast to contain hardware - lived experience wearing a smart prosthetic - implications for this technology, such as in post-mastectomy recovery - and reflections on the broader landscape of wearable technology [1] https://www.bcna.org.au/media/6101/bcna-2018-current-breast-cancer-statistics-in-australia-31jan2018.pdf
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