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I was born and raised in Sierra Leone,
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a small and very beautiful country
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in West Africa,
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a country rich both in physical resources
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and creative talent.
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However, Sierra Leone is infamous
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for a decade-long rebel war in the '90s
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when entire villages were burnt down.
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An estimated 8,000 men, women and children
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had their arms and legs amputated during this time.
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As my family and I ran for safety
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when I was about 12 from one of those attacks,
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I resolved that I would do everything I could
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to ensure that my own children
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would not go through the same experiences we had.
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They would, in fact, be part of a Sierra Leone
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where war and amputation
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were no longer a strategy for gaining power.
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As I watched people who I knew, loved ones,
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recover from this devastation,
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one thing that deeply troubled me
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was that many of the amputees in the country
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would not use their prostheses.
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The reason, I would come to find out,
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was that their prosthetic sockets
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were painful because they did not fit well.
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The prosthetic socket is the part
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in which the amputee inserts their residual limb,
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and which connects to the prosthetic ankle.
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Even in the developed world,
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it takes a period of three weeks to often years
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for a patient to get a comfortable socket, if ever.
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Prosthetists still use conventional processes
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like molding and casting
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to create single-material prosthetic sockets.
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Such sockets often leave intolerable amounts
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of pressure on the limbs of the patient,
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leaving them with pressure sores and blisters.
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It does not matter
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how powerful your prosthetic ankle is.
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If your prosthetic socket is uncomfortable,
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you will not use your leg,
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and that is just simply unacceptable in our age.
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So one day, when I met professor Hugh Herr
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about two and a half years ago,
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and he asked me if I knew how to solve this problem,
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I said, "No, not yet,
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but I would love to figure it out."
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And so, for my Ph.D. at the MIT Media Lab,
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I designed custom prosthetic sockets
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quickly and cheaply
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that are more comfortable
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than conventional prostheses.
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I used magnetic resonance imaging
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to capture the actual shape of the patient's anatomy,
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then use finite element modeling to better predict
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the internal stresses and strains
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on the normal forces,
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and then create a prosthetic socket for manufacture.
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We use a 3D printer to create
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a multi-material prosthetic socket
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which relieves pressure where needed
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on the anatomy of the patient.
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In short, we're using data
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to make novel sockets quickly and cheaply.
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In a recent trial we just wrapped up
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at the Media Lab,
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one of our patients, a U.S. veteran
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who has been an amputee for about 20 years
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and worn dozens of legs,
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said of one of our printed parts,
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"It's so soft, it's like walking on pillows,
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and it's effing sexy."
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(Laughter)
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Disability in our age
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should not prevent anyone
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from living meaningful lives.
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My hope and desire is that the tools and processes
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we develop in our research group
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can be used to bring highly functional prostheses
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to those who need them.
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For me, a place to begin healing the souls
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of those affected by war and disease
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is by creating comfortable and affordable interfaces
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for their bodies.
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Whether it's in Sierra Leone or in Boston,
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I hope this not only restores
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but indeed transforms their sense of human potential.
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Thank you very much.
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(Applause)