Environmental and Agricultural Resources
Originating Technology/NASA
Contribution
The National Biocomputation Center is a joint partnership
between the Stanford University School of Medicine’s Department
of Surgery and NASA’s Ames Research Center. Founded in
1997, the goal of the Biocomputation Center has been to
develop advanced technologies for medicine. Researchers
at this center apply 3-D imaging and visualization technologies
for biomedical and educational purposes, as well as support
NASA’s mission for human exploration and development of
space. It is the test bed for much of NASA’s advanced telemedicine
research.
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Intelesense
Technologies provides global integrated monitoring
products and services for environmental, public
health, and other data. |
Telemedicine, the remote delivery of medical care, is important
to the Space Agency, because often times those who are
in need of clinical care and monitoring are as far away
as the International Space Station (ISS), orbiting roughly
240 miles above the Earth. Researchers on the ISS often
have backgrounds in aeronautics, physics, geology, and
engineering, and are expected to conduct a wide variety
of experiments in these fields, as well as perform sophisticated
repairs and construction projects. While these astronauts
are always well skilled and capable, what they are usually
not, are medical doctors. Even if a crewmember were a doctor,
though, the strict equipment weight restrictions and tight
quarters aboard the orbiting laboratory would prevent the
station from supporting a clinic full of medical testing
equipment. The approach of telemedicine, then, aims to
give astronauts in space access to a full range of medical
expertise and tests, while leaving bulky equipment and
large medical staffs on the ground.
With astronaut health being a top priority of the Space
Agency, astronauts manning the ISS year-round, plans to
set up a permanent research station on the Moon (about
238,900 miles away), and eventual travel to Mars (a whopping
46,500,000 miles away), it becomes clear that NASA has
a great deal invested in learning how to monitor astronaut
health and provide emergency care, while keeping the medical
support facilities and crews on Earth. These techniques
and technologies developed for space travel also have applications
here on Earth, where some areas are so remote that they
may seem as easily accessible as the Moon.
Toward these efforts, a team of researchers at the joint
research center developed a personal physiological monitoring
device called Lifeguard. The device is an unobtrusive,
easy-to-wear system of lightweight, rugged medical sensors.
It is capable of logging physiological data, as well as
wirelessly transmitting it to a portable base station computer
for display purposes or further processing. The system
was extensively tested for monitoring people in remote
locations performing high-risk activities, including mountain
climbers, and astronauts training underwater at the NASA
Extreme Environment Mission Operations facility in Florida.
The system proved successful and generated a great deal
of interest in the medical community, for athletic training,
for first responders, and for military field use. Interestingly,
though, the first commercial application of the technology
is for environmental monitoring.
Partnership
In early 2005, researchers at the National Biocom-putation
Center formed a spinoff company, Intelesense
Technologies,
to provide integrated global monitoring systems, using
the sensors developed at the center for monitoring astronaut
health in space. One of nine companies to spin off from
work conducted at the center, Intelesense uses the monitoring
systems to help researchers understand how environments
and people are linked, in order to monitor and protect
natural resources, predict and adapt to environmental changes,
and provide for sustainable development, as well as to
reduce the costs and impacts of natural disasters and provide
an effective and intelligent response to such disasters.
Dr. Kevin Montgomery, technical director at the center
and chief executive officer of Intelesense, has a history
of developing systems for image processing, 3-D reconstruction,
visualization, and simulation of biomedical imaging data
for space-related research at Ames. On the company’s team,
Dr. Carsten Mundt, the chief technology officer, is also
actively engaged in several NASA-related studies, mostly
in developing vital sign monitoring systems for astronauts
and microsatellites. Montgomery has yet another NASA connection
on his Intelesense team in Valerie Barker, who worked with
Ames in 2002, designing free-flyer satellites for biological
research in space.
The company’s corporate offices are in Honolulu, and it
has research and development offices in Milpitas, California,
as well as field offices with collaborative partners in
deployment zones worldwide. Montgomery, who also holds
a position as an adjunct associate professor at the University
of Hawaii’s John A. Burns School of Medicine, where he
works with other researchers developing surgical simulators,
was visiting the island university when the idea for the
company gelled.
He was visiting the Hawaiian school and met with Dr. Kenneth
Kaneshiro and Michael Kido of the Center for Conservation
Research and Training, a research program within the Pacific
Biosciences Research Center at the University of Hawaii
at Manoa that was established to address the rapid extinction
of various species unique to the islands. While explaining
the work done in developing Lifeguard, Montgomery had the
realization that the technology could also be used for
environmental monitoring. Kaneshiro and Kido invited him
to
a workshop on environmental sensing, at which he had a
remarkable experience.
Participants of the workshop were flown by helicopter to
what Montgomery describes as “one of the most pristine,
unspoiled, biodiverse, untraveled, remote parts of the
island of Kauai, where only a handful of humans have been
over the past hundred years.
“After the helicopter took off,” he recalls, “leaving us
all there, the indescribable uniqueness impressed upon
me the importance of preserving and protecting places
like these.”
He took this newfound excitement back to the NASA/Stanford
lab, where he insisted that Mundt accompany him on the
next trip back. Both researchers were impressed with the
magnificence of the unspoiled area and agreed that the
wireless sensor networks could be used to help in its conservation.
As Montgomery explains, “The need exists everywhere to
understand the interrelationships of humans with their
environment and, in order to do that, we need to acquire
and integrate information from many sources and visualize
and understand it in intuitive ways—that’s what Intelesense
is all about.”
Product Outcome
Employing networks of wireless sensors for air, water,
weather, and imagery, and then integrating the sensor information
with other data sources, Intelesense helps clients better
understand interrelationships in a wide variety of areas,
including environmental preservation, monitoring waterborne
illnesses, detecting infectious diseases, and providing
remote health care. Current projects range from protecting
the environment, to tracking emerging infectious diseases
like avian influenza (bird flu), and to helping people
from around the world connect and interact with each other
to better understand their environment and themselves.
The company does this by deploying a worldwide wireless
sensor network that communicates data from anywhere in
the world, and then integrates with data from other sources
automatically. The aggregated data
is then turned into real-time advanced, informative graphical
displays.
The company developed three technologies to accomplish
the collection, sharing, and presentation of the aggregated
data.
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Using
NASA-developed technology, Intelesense makes rugged,
wireless sensor devices for air, water, weather,
and imagery that communicate their data over the
Internet from anywhere in the world, integrate
with data from many other sources automatically,
and provide real-time advanced analysis and intelligent,
collaborative visualization. |
The first component is the InteleCell, a small, remotely
deployable, wireless, secure data acquisition platform.
Global Positioning System (GPS)-enabled, the rugged device
interfaces with a variety of sensor types, such as those
that monitor water, weather, air, and soil, as well as
imagery and biosensors. The ultra-low-power device is rugged
enough to be left unattended in harsh regions for data
collection, but it is also small enough to be used as a
hand-held geographic information system device or data
logger. Running off of a battery sustained by solar power
and several sleep modes, the remotely programmable InteleCell
addresses the challenges of deploying real-world, long-range,
unattended networks in areas that are often difficult to
access. It was designed by Mundt and Barker and is a direct
result of their NASA work on microsatellites. In fact,
according to Montgomery, “The InteleCell is essentially
a microsatellite on the ground—with sensors, radio telemetry,
and self-powered.”
Multiple InteleCells form the second component, a self-organizing
InteleNet, a global, wireless sensor network that provides
users with advanced graphics and analysis capabilities.
The InteleNet is capable of collecting data from many sensors
and sending this information to users over the Internet,
providing real-time access to sensor data. The data can
then be integrated with information from a variety of other
sources, such as public health records or historical climate
data, providing users with a more complete picture of the
area being analyzed.
The third technology, InteleView, is an interactive
3-D program that allows the user to access the secure,
real-time data from around the world. Built upon the NASA
World Wind software platform, it provides an intuitive
interface that helps users navigate multiple, diverse data
sets and display the data in meaningful ways.
Altogether, the three-component system can be used for
a variety of applications, including, but not limited to:
weather monitoring, water and air quality monitoring, biotelemetry,
image and audio capture, field data collection, earthquake
monitoring, tsunami warning, buoy networks, emergency telemedicine,
and disaster response.
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One
innovation from Intelesense Technologies is a network
of integrated water, weather, and other sensors
with GPS localization over a custom wireless voice/data
network with secure uplink to an Internet-based
GIS Web site. |
With the company headquarters in Honolulu, much of its
initial testing of the network technology took place in
that region, on the island of Kauai. An average rainfall
of over 460 inches per year makes Kauai one of the wettest
places on the planet. This rainfall rushes through steep-walled
gorges from 5,148 feet at the top of the island’s extinct
volcano, Mount Waialeale (Hawaiian for “rippling waters”)
to the sea far below. This area, with its lush vegetation
and cascading waterfalls, is as beautiful as it is inaccessible.
With no cellular coverage, and much of the area only accessible
via helicopter, it proved the perfect test bed for
the radio frequency-based, self-powered electronic sensors
dependent upon line-of-sight transmission and solar power.
The Kauai test zone was in the Limahuli Valley, which,
according to the ancient Hawaiian method of land division,
consists of four ahupua’a: Waipi’o, Lumahai, Wainiha, and
Haena (an ahupua’a is a strip of land that extends from
a mountain to the sea). Inhabitants of these areas lived
off of the land and developed a deep-felt appreciation
for it, a holistic understanding of the interconnectedness
of terrestrial, freshwater, and marine ecosystems that
supported them. These well-preserved tracts were the ideal
location to test the network’s use as an environmental
monitoring system, not just as extreme, worst-case scenarios
of terrain and climate, but also because they needed to
be monitored and maintained in their pure states.
The network was comprised of a series of InteleCells: sensor
computers connected to a radio frequency module, a large
battery and enclosed in a ruggedized case, with strong,
weatherproof external connectors for the antennas, solar
panels, and sensor. The units were strategically placed
throughout the canyons, then left to gather their data
and send it to the central base station, via repeaters,
where the secure data were then sent to a central server
over the Internet. Again, the area had to be accessed by
helicopter, as the canyon walls are too steep for hiking
to be a viable option. The helicopter hovered at a ridge
top, and the researchers had to jump out in order to gain
access to this ultra-remote area.
The sensors were deployed to monitor water quality parameters
in the streams, stream depth and flow, weather, and rainfall,
among other factors. The sensors also provided live video
and photographic imagery. Despite the obstacles presented
by the harsh environment, the sensor network was a success,
and it is still in place today. In fact, the company has
even added a prototype system for tracking two feral goats
wearing GPS collars.
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Intelesense
Technologies produces inexpensive, real-time, field-deployable
systems for environmental monitoring that integrate
data from many sources (including public health
data) and provide for easy analysis and intelligent,
collaborative display. |
Intelesense has since spread its operation to other parts
of Kauai, recently establishing a site as part of a conservation
and educational outreach project in collaboration with
the National Tropical Botanical Garden at Lawai.
Elsewhere in Hawaii, another network has been established
for use by Maui Land and Pineapple Company Inc., for use
in agricultural monitoring and preservation in a managed
land region. On Oahu,
the company has established a small urban test site at
the University of Hawaii campus in Manoa for research and
educational purposes.
This system is, according to Jane Herrington, program director
for the National Science Foundation’s Office of Experimental
Program to Stimulate Competitive Research, “the most advanced
environmental sensing network in existence,” but the time
spent on the islands of Hawaii taught the founders of Intelesense
more than just how to monitor and improve the environment.
During the time on the islands, the company has learned
to embrace a series of traditional Hawaiian values: kokua,
kuleana, pono, lokahi, malama, and hiki no (respectively:
helping, responsibility, doing the right thing, unity,
taking care of the land and each other, and enthusiasm).
The Intelesense team, seeing the interconnectedness between
the native people and the land, realized that it is not
just people affecting their environments, but the environments
affecting people. With that understanding, combined with
the commitment to harness their abilities for helping people
connect with their environments and each other, the company
steered its technology toward monitoring the interconnectivity
between environments and public health.
Environmental factors and public health are often inextricably
linked, and waterborne illnesses affect millions of people
worldwide, especially in remote, undeveloped areas like
Vietnam, where, according to the United Nations Development
Program (UNDP), 80 percent of human illness in rural areas
is caused by waterborne disease or pollution, and 32 million
people (about 36 percent of Vietnam’s population of 90
million) do not have access to clean water. According to
the UNDP, worldwide, the situation is similarly appalling,
with 5 million people dying every year due to waterborne
illness, and waterborne illness is implicated in 60 percent
of infant mortalities.
As part of a collaboration with the University of Hawaii,
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the U.S.
Army Medical Research and Materiel Command’s Telemedicine
and Advanced Technology Research Center, the Vietnamese
Academy of Science and Technology, and the Hanoi School
of Public Health, Intelesense deployed an advanced system
of environmental monitoring sensors that will be integrated
with public health data to research how waterborne illnesses
form.
Intelesense realized the importance of being able to link
environmental factors with public health data. As Montgomery
explains, “If we could show that humans and their environments
are linked in this way, our system could have a big impact
on the world by monitoring drinking water supplies and
producing alerts, thus potentially impacting lots of people
and preventing waterborne illness.”
This system, which is also tracking other major public
health concerns like avian influenza, integrates data from
a network of widely deployed sensors with daily public
health information, providing governments, public health
workers, and researchers with real-time statistics on emerging
infectious diseases. This timely information would allow
for rapid assessment and intervention in the event of an
outbreak.
Intelesense has also set up shop in Ethiopia, one of the
harshest, driest regions of the world and the third most
populated nation in Africa. There, the company is developing
a network for communicating public health information from
126 remote medical clinics to 5 corresponding hospitals.
The sensors connect all these players with a robust, wireless
infrastructure, in an area where there is no reliable cellular
or telecommunications network, and even power supplies
are unreliable.
The InteleCell sensors designed for this deployment interface
with PDA sensors that provide patient information, interact
with radio frequency identification tags on medical and
blood product packages, and also provide real-time, two-way,
self-powered video telecommunication. They are part of
a large-scale antiretroviral (ARV) study, for which patients
receiving treatment are regularly monitored at clinics,
and the information is then collected, reviewed, and analyzed
at the hospitals. The hospitals can use this system to
track supplies of ARV drugs and ensure that sufficient
supplies are in areas where the drugs are currently most
needed, as well as conduct virtual training classes. With
these classes, doctors at hospitals can telementor clinic
staff and spread the medical expertise from hospitals to
the remote villages. Like in Vietnam, this Ethiopian network
will also be used to track the spread of bird flu.
Intelesense is currently planning future deployments in
other areas of the Pacific, including Palau, Palmyra, and
Okinawa; and in Thailand.
InteleCell™, InteleNet™, and InteleView™
are trademarks of Intelesense Technologies.





