Post by account_disabled on Feb 28, 2024 5:40:40 GMT -5
Awarded at the Ariel Awards in Mexico for Best Screenplay Adapted from Another Source with director Roberto Sneider. He is currently part of the editorial board of Nexos magazine along with his partner, the writer Héctor Aguilar Camín. He writes for many publications, both in Mexico and abroad. Her work is outstanding in the field of literature and she ranks as one of the most successful women in the field. 12. Judit Giró Recognized for being a biomedical engineer, Giró is only 25 years old but has already won the Dyson Award 2020 thanks to her project The Blue Box. Nius Diario shares that this is a biomedical device that in the future will allow women to undergo a breast cancer test in their own home, through urine, without pain or radiation and at a low cost. Graduated in Biomedical Engineering from the University of Barcelona, Judit continued her training at the University of California in Irvine (United States) with a master's degree. And it was in this final work of hers that she presented her first project of The Blue Box. But inspiration had come much earlier.
While at the University of Barcelona, a professor told us that there was a study in which a dog was able to detect that a patient had cancer just by smelling his breath. I thought, then, that if a dog was capable of doing that "Perhaps with engineering it could be replicated," he says. Judit's master's thesis at the University of California was about the creation and development of The Blue Box. In the midst of everything, his mother fell ill with breast cancer, one more motivation to Lithuania Phone Number continue with the project. Judit explains that The Blue Box consists of a little blue box with some sensors. After placing a small bottle of urine inside, the sensors react differently depending on the composition of the urine, depending on whether or not you have breast cancer. The information collected by the sensors is sent via Bluetooth from the Blue Box to the mobile phone and, thanks to an application, from there, directly to the cloud.
In the cloud, a server with an artificial intelligence algorithm classifies the urine based on what has been detected. Finally, the information is sent to the user's phone so that she can see it herself. "The key is a mix between two areas that are not normally mixed, such as diagnosis based on biochemistry and artificial intelligence," says Judit. 13. Amika George BBC Information shares that Amika George is a young woman who after reading that a charity that generally sends menstrual products to girls in Africa had to redirect those products to the English city of Leeds because there were girls who could not afford them, she decided that had to do something to fight so-called “period poverty” in the United Kingdom. George founded #FreePeriods when he was 17, organizing a protest outside Downing Street – the British Prime Minister's residence – in December 2017, attended by 2,000 people dressed in red demanding that the government do something. Under pressure, the British government announced in March 2019 that it would fund free sanitary products in all English schools and colleges. For me, #FreePeriods highlighted how a single angry teenager can have a real political impact simply through activism. who became interested in animal behavior from an early age, left school at.
While at the University of Barcelona, a professor told us that there was a study in which a dog was able to detect that a patient had cancer just by smelling his breath. I thought, then, that if a dog was capable of doing that "Perhaps with engineering it could be replicated," he says. Judit's master's thesis at the University of California was about the creation and development of The Blue Box. In the midst of everything, his mother fell ill with breast cancer, one more motivation to Lithuania Phone Number continue with the project. Judit explains that The Blue Box consists of a little blue box with some sensors. After placing a small bottle of urine inside, the sensors react differently depending on the composition of the urine, depending on whether or not you have breast cancer. The information collected by the sensors is sent via Bluetooth from the Blue Box to the mobile phone and, thanks to an application, from there, directly to the cloud.
In the cloud, a server with an artificial intelligence algorithm classifies the urine based on what has been detected. Finally, the information is sent to the user's phone so that she can see it herself. "The key is a mix between two areas that are not normally mixed, such as diagnosis based on biochemistry and artificial intelligence," says Judit. 13. Amika George BBC Information shares that Amika George is a young woman who after reading that a charity that generally sends menstrual products to girls in Africa had to redirect those products to the English city of Leeds because there were girls who could not afford them, she decided that had to do something to fight so-called “period poverty” in the United Kingdom. George founded #FreePeriods when he was 17, organizing a protest outside Downing Street – the British Prime Minister's residence – in December 2017, attended by 2,000 people dressed in red demanding that the government do something. Under pressure, the British government announced in March 2019 that it would fund free sanitary products in all English schools and colleges. For me, #FreePeriods highlighted how a single angry teenager can have a real political impact simply through activism. who became interested in animal behavior from an early age, left school at.