UC Davis Students’ Seizure-Predicting Device Wins Big Bang! Business Competition

A team of University of California, Davis, students received the $25,000 first prize for the best innovation in the 24th annual Big Bang! Business Competition on Tuesday, May 21. The competition is organized by the UC Davis Mike and Renee Child Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship.

The team, which has won several awards already, developed EpiSense — a wearable electroencephalogram, or EEG, that predicts seizures and can give patients about 30 seconds advance warning. That is enough time for them to move to safety and prevent many common seizure-related injuries such as head trauma, choking and broken bones.

The team said it will use the $25,000 prize to support device prototyping and help refine the software and app. They then plan to conduct clinical trials and seek FDA approval to begin marketing their device.

About Big Bang!
The UC Davis Big Bang! Business Competition has been helping entrepreneurs start or grow business ventures for more than two decades through the competition, workshops, mentoring and networking opportunities. The Big Bang! is open to teams with a founder or team lead affiliated with a college or university in California. The prizes are funded by corporate, nonprofit and various other sponsors.

EpiSense previously won $10,000 in the Blackstone Launchpad Ideas Competition and $1,000 in the Little Bang Poster and Pitch competition, both hosted by the UC Davis Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship. The team also won the top prize in the PLASMA accelerator program at the Student Startup Center at UC Davis.

Over $100,000 in prizes
The UC Davis Big Bang! Business Competition has been helping entrepreneurs start or grow business ventures for more than two decades through the competition, workshops, mentoring and networking opportunities. The Big Bang! is open to teams with a founder or team lead affiliated with a college or university in California. The prizes are funded by corporate, nonprofit and various other sponsors.

The annual awards ceremony on Tuesday night celebrated the contestants and announced the winners of $100,000 in cash awards and residencies valued at $8,000 for innovations in animal health, education and educational tools, energy/sustainability, food and agriculture, human health and social entrepreneurship.

Twenty-two finalist teams pitched their ventures before five judges in an eight-hour marathon judging session. Judges considered the teams’ integrated strategy, steps toward implementation and market opportunity to determine prize winners.

Preventing injuries and providing peace of mind for epilepsy patients
About 83% of the 65 million people with epilepsy are injured during seizures, amounting to many millions of patients sustaining injuries each year. Medication is ineffective for many patients, and for the ones who use medication, side effects can cause significant health concerns.

“EpiSense provides a solution to these problems, giving patients back their control and freedom and reducing their health care costs,” said team co-founder Simran Lallian, a neurobiology, physiology and behavior major at UC Davis.

EpiSense is a wearable device that wraps around the back of the neck and rests on the ears, allowing electrodes to contact the back of the head. When the device detects irregular spikes in brain-wave activity, it sends a mobile alert to the wearer and their designated emergency contacts. It can also alert emergency services if a seizure exceeds five minutes, which can reduce the risk of long-term brain damage. The EpiSense app also allows patients to access their past EEG data and log information about an episode.

Team co-founder Jaya Athuluru, a cognitive science major at UC Davis, said participating in the Big Bang! Competition helped them focus on what was most important in the development process.

The best advice we received was to focus on market fit as we translate clinical science into a product patients will wear in their daily lives. Balancing these two is critical to our overall success because it ensures the product is effective and fits into the realistic constraints of everyday life.” — EpiSense co-founder Jaya Athuluru

Providing maternal health security to Black women

UC Davis medical student Ijeoma Uche and co-founder Mercy Oladipo, an MIT graduate based in Chicago, took home the $12,500 Social Entrepreneurship Award for their innovation that helps with the childbirth process. The pair built a new vision for maternal health by combining data analytics with resources that can help patients achieve their best possible outcomes for themselves and their families.

Birth By Us is a digital platform that merges medical research with Black-focused, patient-centered care. It provides comprehensive check-ins at critical points in pregnancy and postpartum using research-focused questionnaires. The app analyzes users’ responses about their health and their experiences with care providers. It yields tailored visit preparation and recommends culturally responsive resources, which are especially crucial during the postpartum period, when parents often experience a drop off in provider support, the innovators said.

Providing lower-cost basic veterinary education
Equine Teaching Innovations, which took home the $12,500 Animal Health Award, offers a silicone injection pad that enables student animal health professionals to learn basic injection skills in a life-like way without injecting a live animal.

Team members are all based at the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine and include co-founder Melyssa Rehman, clinical skills laboratory manager; co-founder Lais Costa, DVM; marketing officer Nicole Gonzales; and development officer Amanda Ayers.

Their innovation eliminates a need for high cost, full-size silicone animal models. Beginners can start by learning basic needle and syringe handling using the injection pad alone. Advanced students can apply restraint and handling concepts by mounting the injection pad to a live animal for a more realistic simulation. The relatively low product cost enables a broader range of students to have access, including those in undergraduate programs, high schools and veterinary technician institutions.