Robotics for Healing
Young India’s bandwagon of global influencers and contributors is burgeoning in leaps and bounds and their intense fervor to offer resourceful solutions to society’s pressing problems is amazing. Meet Balaji Lakshmanan, Founder and CEO of Geeky Technology and Consulting who uses robotics for amputees, the army, movies and banks…
The Chief Operating Robot is not exactly a robot. In his own words, Balaji is a ‘troublemaker for fun’ and a comedian in robotic guise.
Balaji Lakshmanan, Founder and CEO of Geeky Robotics/imakerobots.com did his research in robotics and robot learning from IIT Madras, published two research papers at international IEEE Robotics conferences, has been a reviewer for international IEEE robotics conference and holds four provisional patents from USPTO.
In a decade of his romance with robotics, Balaji Lakshmanan has developed various types of robots right from tiny bug robots to Humanoid robots. He worked with the Indian army’s robotics division and also built an indigenous, autonomous six-feet humanoid robot with seven degrees of freedom, one of the first of its kind in India. His work ‘Robo fingers’, affordable robotic prosthetic fingers for amputees, had recently won Asia’s best work award at a prosthodontics conference. With collaborations, he is also involved in designing a non-intrusive breast cancer diagnosis robot and the world’s first banking robot.
Balaji’s has contributed immensely to society. He has worked with doctors for a decision support handheld medical device for quality and affordable healthcare in rural and remote locations. From being one of 50 invited students, selected from across the world for Asia Pacific Student Entrepreneurship Society (ASES) Entrepreneurship and Future Leadership summit, Stanford, California, USA, Balaji has received several international and national awards and honors.
Recently, his team has developed a 3D molded footwear for leprosy patients. “Patients cured of leprosy are constantly exposed to threats to their feet from the environment. Since they have limited sensation in their feet, often proper protection is not taken, which results in infections. With their feet affected by leprosy, they cannot wear normal footwear. Moreover, they have low self-confidence due to their damaged limbs and are exposed to social boycott. Hence we took up the idea of making 3D, molded footwear which looks like normal feet, with suitable skin tone. This medical footwear covers the wounds and prevents exposure to the environment, reducing infections. It also improves self-confidence and prevents social boycott. We are doing trials now and are working with Ramakrishna Mutt,” says Balaji Lakshmanan.
But the Geeky Robot is not one to rest on his laurels; he continues to seek out-of-the-box solutions to help the world…