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HEALTH-WEARABLES/FDA
RTX1Z79C 
December 18, 2015 
Rosalind Picard, MIT professor and chief scientist at Empatica, wears the company's Embrace device while... 
Cambridge, UNITED STATES 
Rosalind Picard, MIT professor and chief scientist at Empatica, wears the company's Embrace device at... 
Rosalind Picard, MIT professor and chief scientist at Empatica, wears the company's Embrace device while talking to Matteo Lai, CEO of Empatica, at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Massachusetts November 25, 2015. A new wave of wearable computing devices that detect and monitor serious diseases is moving from the laboratory to the market, potentially transforming the treatment of conditions ranging from epilepsy to diabetes and creating business opportunities estimated to be worth tens of billions of dollars. Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Empatica, is developing a wristband designed to alert epilepsy patients and their caregivers of seizures in the hope of averting a dangerous post-seizure condition that can cause sudden, unexpected death. Empatica founder Picard, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor and inventor, told Reuters the company has just started large clinical trials using its wristband device on individuals with depression. Picture taken November 25, 2015. To match Insight HEALTH-WEARABLES/FDA REUTERS/Brian Snyder 
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