The winning projects included student organized hackathons, several apps, and educational toys, such as a subscription service that delivers new science experiments to kids each month. Many of the winners were budding electrical engineers:
- Daniil Frants, 16: created a wearable device that displays live closed captioning so that people with hearing disabilities can participate in naturally flowing conversations.
- Raquel Hosein, 18: developed a hat that can detect seizures before they happen. The wireless device has a Bluetooth chip and analog to digital converter, a biosignal receptor and a power source.
- Burhan Azeem, 18: developed a new production method to create larger carbon microtubes, which can be used to conduct electricity or to transport liquid in biomedical devices.
- Dylan Kirdahy, 17: invented a USB device called “Crypta” that creates unique, secure and randomized passwords and autofills them after verifying the user with fingerprint recognition.
- Alyssa Kapasi, 14: created a robot that can lift, stack and move everyday objects of almost any shape.