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Filed Under: Uncategorised

World-first smartphone concussion app trial in the Precinct

BioEYE CEO Richard Nash (second from left) with Southport Sharks players Zac Foot (L), Daniel Charlesworth (R) and Football Manager Jarrod Field

Players from Southport Sharks’ elite teams have taken part in a world-first testing of a smartphone brain health app that can help identify concussions. The final pre-release trials for the hand-held BioEYE phone app, which followed comprehensive trials with the AFL and other major sporting codes, were supported by researchers from Griffith University ahead of the app’s release to market later this year. The trial comes as the Precinct’s reputation for developing Sportstech continues to grow ahead of the Brisbane 2032 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

The BioEye app tracks a user’s eye movement to assess their current brain health. The 60-second test uses artificial intelligence to measure and compare more than 20 ocular biomarkers that are invisible to the naked eye, to assess changes in brain function.

It has been clinically validated through earlier trials of a fixed ‘tabletop’ version, and to date has helped identify concussions with 100 percent sensitivity, with the Southport Sharks’ elite VFL and QAFLW sides the first users in the world to undertake a test-retest study using the mobile-only version.

Gold Coast-based BioEye CEO Richard Nash says the trial is a major step in screening for neurodegenerative conditions.

“BioEye is putting accurate brain health assessments in the palm of a user’s hand, using technology that sees what the human eye can’t,” says Mr. Nash.

“This world-first trial is critical in building a brain health database on a smartphone because recognising concussion is difficult – some people may have severe symptoms while others may be asymptomatic.”

“Importantly, BioEye goes beyond concussion. We want to harness the power of our technology to help screen for neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s, while ensuring our app is low cost and accessible to everyone, everywhere.”

Southport Sharks General Manager of Football Operations, Jarrod Field says the club was eager to support the trial to both promote player wellbeing and nurture the Gold Coast Health and Knowledge Precinct’s sports technology offering.

“The health and safety of our players is of paramount importance to us. The BioEye platform is vital to our game—in fact it’s vital to every sport with a contact element—so of course it’s something we’re proud to support,” says Mr Field.

“Putting a tool this powerful in the hands of athletes at any level of competition is frankly a game-changer in the fight against concussion.”

 

May 18, 2023 By Kathy Kruger

Filed Under: Uncategorised

Queensland Academy for Health Sciences powers into 2023

Students and faculty from the Queensland Academy for Health Sciences have opened 2023 with a string of national and international wins. 

QAHS is based within GCHKP on the south side of Smith Street, where the Precinct anchor institution produces a steady pipeline of emerging STEM innovators. 

The selective-entry secondary school delivers the globally recognised IB Diploma Programme, a tertiary preparation curriculum known for its academic rigour. 

Already this year, QAHS graduates have been selected to represent Australian at the world’s largest high school science competition and senior QAHS leadership spoke at a global education forum. 

QAHS students also dominated CSIRO’s CREST research awards, a long-running student science competition where academy students have an outstanding track record. 

Principal Vanessa Rebgetz says she and her staff take educating their students “personally”. 

“It’s personal to the degree that these students will be the leaders of tomorrow in many fields and their decisions and their humanity will create the future society each of us will live in,” she says. 

QAHS Deputy Principal Alita Lee presenting at the 2023 International Baccalaureate Global Conference 2023 in Adelaide

STUDENT SUCCESS

At the 2023 CREST awards, QAHS students brought home a record 10 gold, 50 silver and two bronze awards. 

The result was in no way an anomaly—in the past 14 years, more than one third of the national Gold awards (which require at least 100 hours dedicated to a unique science project) have been given to QAHS students. 

“This was a phenomenal achievement,” says Ms Rebgetz, “and recognition of what’s possible when students are supported to exceed their own expectations of themselves.” 

A pair of students from QAHS’s 2022 class are also celebrating their selection to the Australian team competing at next month’s International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF) in Texas, the world’s largest science competition for high school students. 

Stanley Wey and Thien Tran will present their research at ISEF, which brings together students from 80 countries, after their success at the Australian Science and Engineering Fair (AUSSEF). 

Stanley’s work compares spectra absorbency between UV-filters, 2-Hydroxy-4- methoxybenzophenone and novel Hydroxyapatite, as well as their impacts on marine ecosystems, while Thien has investigated the adsorption of anionic azo dyes by clay-alginate composite. 

The pair are from QAHS’s outstanding class of 2022, which achieved average IB Diploma scores well above the global standard, and 19.3% of students scored at ATAR of 99+ and 69.3% achieved a 90+ ATAR.  

QAHS Principal Vanessa Rebgetz

QAHS STAFF IN THE SPOTLIGHT

Academy leadership were themselves honoured with a presentation berth at the International Baccalaureate Global Conference 2023 in Adelaide last month. More than 1,100 delegates attended from 342 schools across 34 countries. 

Principal Vanessa Rebgetz and Deputy Principal Alita Lee delivered a workshop to delegates titled The power of grit in enabling personal success in the Diploma Programme, where they shared QAHS’s strategic student wellbeing program that honours resilience and persistence. 

“Our workshop shared the evolution and practical takeaway strategies of our campus-wide student wellbeing framework we’re now at the three-year mark with,” says Ms Rebgetz. 

“The strategy has already improved student academic performance, generated a common language for our learning community and reduced the number of academic behavioural incidents.” 

April 17, 2023 By Gemma Bull

Filed Under: BUSINESS, INVEST Tagged With: ADaPT, Business Events, Destination Gold Coast

GCHKP stars as Gold Coast Business Events attract eyes of the world

Sheriff Karamat, President and CEO of the Professional Convention Management Association (second from left), visits ADaPT

Having launched its revitalised business events brand ‘Imagination Capital of Australia’ last year, Destination Gold Coast (DGC) has rebooted its Ambassadors program and tapped Precinct stars Dr Hal Rice and Dr Dinesh Palipana OAM as two of the first city ambassadors to sell the Gold Coast as a business events city on the world stage.

And in a series of promotional partnerships between the Precinct and DGC, exciting medical device and additive manufacturing projects by Griffith University’s Advanced Design and Prototyping Technologies Institute (ADaPT) were showcased at the business events industry’s peak conference. GCHKP also hosted a visit from the global President and CEO of the Professional Convention Management Association Sheriff Karamat, including a tour of ADaPT.

Business events are big business for the Gold Coast, injecting $570m into the city’s economy pre-Covid. The benefits of staging events goes beyond tourism and hospitality and extends to profiling the Gold Coast’s capabilities and offerings for talent and investment attraction.

The Gold Coast Health and Knowledge Precinct benefits from the investment focus that conferences bring to the city and, according to Destination Gold Coast’s Head of Business Events Selina Sinclair, is a key catalyst for attracting business events thanks to our talent and world-leading capabilities.

“With 50 percent of meetings globally in the medical field, like-minded professionals are provided a platform to come together to exchange knowledge, discuss and debate new ideas and forthcoming technologies,” Ms Sinclair says.

“At the heart of the Gold Coast’s advancement is a thriving innovation economy driven by our hospitals, three distinguished universities, innovative startups and the Gold Coast Health and Knowledge Precinct.

“Beyond the direct economic contribution these business events inject into the Gold Coast economy, they also lead to new partnerships and attract talent to our hospitals, universities and research institutes.”

Dr Dinesh Palipana OAM
Dr Hal Rice (left) with Mayor Tom Tate and Destination Gold Coast representatives
Dr Rice and Selina Sinclair at the Medtronic Neuorexchange conference

The Precinct is also playing a key role in the relaunch of the BE Connected Gold Coast Ambassador Program to attract business events to the city, with Queensland Australian of the Year 2021, Dr Dinesh Palipana OAM, and Gold Coast Australian of the Year 2022, Dr Hal Rice, among the first chosen for the revamped program, supported by Mayor Tom Tate as patron.

“Dr Hal Rice, the Gold Coast’s Australian of the Year 2022, renowned stroke specialist and one of the founding ambassadors from the original program, is a great example of partnering with Destination Gold Coast to not only bring events to our city but through his work put the Gold Coast on the world medical stage,” Ms Sinclair says.

“Dr Rice has continued to bring international medical conferences to the Gold Coast, generating millions of dollars in economic benefit for the city and is now, through both public and private sector investment, in the final stages of building a world-class training centre for image-guided surgeries right here at the Gold Coast’s $1bn Health and Knowledge Precinct.”

Business events marketing has also taken Precinct expertise to the industry’s peak annual conference, Asia Pacific Incentives and Meeting Events (AIMe) as part of a showcase of all that the Gold Coast has to offer conference organisers.

At the Melbourne event, a selection of custom 3D-printed items (including replica brain aneurysm training models, lightweight small satellite prototypes and even a 3D-printed metal skull of an extinct Australian animal) were displayed to highlight the broad design and prototyping capability at ADaPT.

Following the conference, global conference industry leader Sheriff Karamat, President and CEO of the Professional Convention Management Association, visited the Gold Coast for a first-hand look at the Precinct’s additive manufacturing capabilities and other opportunities.

Precinct showcase alongside Swell sculptures
3D printed bone model and cutting guide on display
Sheriff Karamat visits the Precinct

Destination Gold Coast has secured 146 events worth almost $200m in the events pipeline between now and 2030, with momentum building as the city’s reputation for business events grows.

March 13, 2023 By Kathy Kruger

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