By Gregory Suematsu, MEng ’20 (BIOE)The watch — an accessory we traditionally used to track time — is transforming into a device that tracks our health. The wearable health technologies field is flourishing due to the emergence of MEMS technology, enab…
Category: Students
Students
Op-ed: Deepfakes — Don’t believe anything you see on the internet
Op-ed: Deepfakes — Don’t believe anything you see on the internetBy Ujjwal Singhania, MEng ’20 (EECS)One of the images below is real and the other has been manipulated by a computer (known as a deepfake image). Take a few seconds and try to figure out …
Op-ed: Virtual reality has powerful potential in education and experiential learning
By Melody Mao, MEng ’20 (EECS)Photo by stem.T4L on UnsplashIt’s dizzying.You open your eyes to a new world — or perhaps one long past. The full sky unfolds above your head, rippling with a thousand pterodactyl wings. Tilt your head back: they pass over…
MEng students test the market with Springboard, Dearduck, and Stackhawk
Silicon Valley veteran and lecturer Martina Lauchengco shows MEng the importance of product-market fit.For the past several years, Martina Lauchengco has taught the Berkeley Master of Engineering’s E270G: Marketing & Product Management boot camp co…
Rob Chesnut, Chief Ethics Officer at Airbnb: ‘You can’t outsource integrity’
By Ashley VillanuevaLaunched in 2008, Airbnb has grown into the world’s leading hospitality company with over seven million accommodations, 40,000 handcrafted activities powered by local hosts, and accessible in 62 languages and 220 countries and regio…
Fung Feature: Juhi Nandwani, MEng ’20 (NE)
On growing the healthcare system in Belize, the MEng program, and the importance of self-careJuhi Nandwani, MEng ’20 (NE), shares about her parents’ journey from India to Belize, how she decided to pursue radiation oncology, and her goals for the futur…
Op-ed: Have you Gotten Your Flu Shot?
By Julia LanohaThis op-ed is part of a series from E295: Communications for Engineering Leaders. In this course, Master of Engineering students were challenged to communicate a topic they found interesting to a broad audience of technical and non-techn…
Fung Feature: Li Yang Kat MEng ’20 (EECS)
On studying abroad, what it takes to be a great engineer, and sharing his passion for science and math with othersLi Yang Kat is an MEng student studying Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences (EECS). He is originally from Singapore and has studi…
Fung Feature: Dennis Zhang, MEng ’20 (BIOE)
On living around the world, healthcare innovation, and making STEM accessible for allDennis is an MEng student studying bioengineering. He has lived abroad in Germany and China, and is looking forward to exploring the innovative environment of the Bay …
On the road: MEng students visit Los Angeles with Blue Goji
By Tiffany Tao

Recently, Master of Engineering students at UC Berkeley got the opportunity to work directly with Blue Goji’s collaborators and partners at the Veteran Administration (VA) facility and the Jordan Jumpman LA store, both in Los Angeles. Their first stop was at the VA facility, and the students worked side-by-side with patients of the Gerofit Program, learning more about the mobility challenges of older veterans and assisting them in the use of Blue Goji’s Infinity Treadmills.
As members of the Capstone Teams Infinity and Velocity, these students are working with Blue Goji on its latest research and development endeavor. The students have been tasked with several goals for improving both the Infinity sensing algorithms and games. Essentially, they will fine-tune the data captured by the various sensors, as well as integrate the latest vision-based tracking technology, thereby improving Infinity’s motion-tracking capabilities. Similarly, they will develop methods for capturing and measuring the subtle, nuanced changes in the sensor data that can potentially predict fall probabilities. The students will work with Blue Goji engineers and incorporate their findings into future game-derived and VR experiences — targeting specific risk factors and health conditions.



At the Jordan Jumpman LA Store’s Flight Lab, the MEng students were exposed to different and new performance training technologies that helped provide background and context of current health monitoring and tracking technologies. Malcolm Jones — the Flight Lab manager, a Ph.D. student from USC, and a Blue Goji research collaborator — showed the students the Lab’s variety of mental training tools, such as exercising athletes’ memory, cognitive thinking, and critical thinking skills, which are equally critical to elite athletes as their physical training in improving their overall performance. The combination of these new cognitive improvements and physical performance training technologies for elite athletes can potentially be applied to help with conditioning older adults for healthy aging.
Being engineers of differing specialties, each student brings a unique perspective and expertise to the program. By providing these students with opportunities for hands-on experience with cutting-edge technologies and a population that will benefit directly from their potential applications, Blue Goji hopes to foster in each of them a greater sense of leadership, as well as a wider view of how their work can be used to improve the quality of life for older adults. Smiles abounded, as both students and patients embraced the potential fun and benefit that comes from playing our games on the Infinity Treadmill.
“By providing these students with opportunities for hands-on experience with cutting-edge technologies and a population that will benefit directly from their potential applications, Blue Goji hopes to foster in each of them a greater sense of leadership, as well as a wider view of how their work can be used to improve the quality of life for older adults.”


This is a continuation of a long-standing collaboration between the Fung Institute and Blue Goji. Working with the VA and Dr. Steve Castle, the Research Director of the Gerofit Program, the MEng students will extend and apply their technical, engineering-based expertise to health and wellness challenges faced by older adults. More importantly, they will gain meaningful insights on how new technologies like VR can be “translated” into impactful and beneficial solutions for health and wellness needs.
Learn more about Blue Goji.
On the road: MEng students visit Los Angeles with Blue Goji was originally published in Berkeley Master of Engineering on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.