Ag Tech: Entering a New Era of Innovation

On Thursday, I attended the 2016 Agriculture Technology Innovation Summit, the first conference of its kind on the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign campus.

The goal of the conference — organized by Research Park — was to bring together ideas from innovators, companies, and academics and create a forum about where agricultural entrepreneurship is headed for the future. It’s an exciting area of innovation, and you could definitely feel this excitement at the conference.

Speakers presented on topics such as precision agriculture and the future of food. Where are we headed? The future of precision agriculture might include a more “interconnected” farm. Julian Sanchez from John Deere said we should imagine what “things” on the farm would say if they could talk to each other. What kind of information could they provide, and how would this affect precision agriculture?

The real challenges of precision agriculture became clear from the moderated discussion panel. Most of the challenges spur from data, and the massive amounts of data related to agriculture. Panelist discussed how it’s confusing to know what data is meaningful, and how we should value this data in the marketplace. And what’s the best way to collect the right data in a seamless fashion so that it’s beneficial to the farmer?

Questions like these must be answered with innovation, which is why entrepreneurship may have been the most important point addressed at the conference. This was reinforced by one speaker, Aaron Gilbertie of Aptimmune Biologics. He encouraged anyone with a valid idea related to the food animal health to seriously think about starting their own company that will drive innovation.

Panelists encouraged budding entrepreneurs to have mentors, position themselves for success, and overcome their fear of failure in order to succeed.

To feed a world population of 9 billion by 2050, we need a lot of change. A lot of people are going to have great ideas that will turn into some real, tangible change, and they need solid platforms to be able to do this. As a science communicator, there’s a lot to write about. But even more, as someone who’s interested in technology and innovation in general, there’s even more to be excited about.

Winter Weather at UIUC

This semester has allowed me to partake in a part of journalism I have never before experienced: photojournalism. In my multimedia journalism class, I’ve been challenged to move past my comfort zone of writing.

I’m no photographer, but attempting to be one has made me appreciate what photojournalists do every day. In my articles, I can use hundreds of words to tell one story. Photographers have to get an entire story into one picture, one specific moment in time. Just learning about how photographers master this is inspiring.

My first attempts of photography tried to capture the variability of a Central Illinois winter — the frigid temperatures, snow, rain, fog, and 60-degree weather that all happened within the span of two weeks.

01_myLifeInPhotos
The Main Quad at the University of Illinois, blanketed in snow on Jan. 21, 2016.
emilyS_160202_005_02_winterWeather_004.JPG
Green Street in Urbana, Ill., is shrouded in fog on the night of Feb. 2, 2016.
emilyS_160204_007_02_winterWeather_006.JPG
Two days later, on Feb. 4, 2016, it’s a sunny day on the Main Quad.

 

The New Normal: UI Professor Deana McDonagh’s Research in Empathic Design

IMG_5897Every morning, Deana McDonagh makes tea. She puts the leaves in a teapot and carefully pours the boiling water in. As the leaves soak, she patiently waits and watches what she calls the “ritual of the fusion.”

Each step — listening to the sound of the water pouring over the leaves, making sure the color of the tea is just right, adding the perfect amount of milk — is a part of McDonagh’s own ritual, one that represents her belief that material objects can make a person more emotionally stable and allow them to live a more fulfilling life.

This belief is one to which she has devoted her life’s work. McDonagh is a professor of industrial design at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign who researches empathic design. In the past year, her research has led her to become involved in designing products — most recently, in developing a voice amplifier for people with disabilities.

She is also a researcher at Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology and is involved in product development and advising emerging startups at the University’s Research Park.

“My area is empathy and emotion, so it’s really important that as we age, as we grow old, as we develop disabilities, everything that we surround ourselves with is empowering us,” she said.

As an industrial designer, McDonagh believes that the products that make up everyday life should work for the user instead of against them. If somebody pushes a door that instructs them to pull, McDonagh said it’s the door’s fault.

“Bad design slaps us in the face every day,” she said. “Good design goes relatively unnoticed because that’s what good design should do.”

Whether it’s food packaging, shower gel, or a car seat, McDonagh believes these products have value because they satisfy needs: emotional, cultural, social, functional, and aspirational. She said these needs can be met if products accommodate everyone’s perspective.

McDonagh said she has looked at the world through an industrial perspective since she was a child. She credits this outlook to being born and raised in the industrial city of Manchester, England.

“Mancunians, which is what I am, they are very industrious,” she said. “. . . I think that suits me well for coming into the American culture.”

Prior to coming to the America in 2004, McDonagh earned a bachelor’s degree in three-dimensional design from Manchester Metropolitan University, a master’s degree in industrial design from the University of Salford, and a Ph.D. in industrial design from Loughborough University. At Loughborough, she was a lecturer and reader before she got the opportunity to teach at the University of Illinois.

The chance to work in a different culture that spoke English was what she said prompted her to teach in another country. Eleven years later, she said she feels more established in the U.S. than anywhere else.

“The longer I’m here, the less I feel the need to go back,” McDonagh said. “. . . I think the more you achieve and the more you prove yourself, the less you have to prove yourself. There’s a track record.”

But McDonagh said it was a track record that did not come easy. Twenty years ago, when McDonagh would attend design conferences and be the only woman in attendance, she would often have to fight to have her voice heard in a male-dominated field.

“I’d be the one talking about empathy and emotion, and it was perceived as, shall we say, trivial, at best,” she said.

In a space that at first did not respect her views on empathic design, McDonagh said she feels the tide changing. She said more designers are now realizing the value of empathy in the design process.

Within her efforts to ensure all perspectives are included in the design process, she personally places a high value on the female perspective. In her opinion, many everyday products have been designed by men, which means they were designed for men — for example, car and plane seats.

“I cannot get comfortable in a plane seat. And it’s like, I want that seat to fit me,” McDonagh said. “I’m paying just as much as everyone else, why doesn’t it fit me? Why am I uncomfortable in it?”

McDonagh said she is fascinated with challenging the “conventional wisdom of the dominant group,” and that it is her goal to “sensitize males to the female experience.” This includes dealing with subjects that may be viewed as uncomfortable. But McDonagh said “being provocative is okay.”

She enjoys embarrassing her students by referring to products such as the P-Mate, a paper funnel that allows females to urinate standing up. She has a few P-Mates stored in her desk and, after shuffling through her drawers to find one, is more than eager to explain how they work.

“You should imagine all the male faces when I give these out,” she said. “. . . Just because we urinate sitting down or squatting, doesn’t mean that we shouldn’t consider standing up. You can pick up all kinds of infections off of toilet seats. Women know that. Men don’t know that.”

McDonagh is also especially passionate about ensuring that the perspectives of people with disabilities are included in the design process. She teaches a course in the University’s School of Art and Design called Disability and Relevant Design that allows disabled and non-disabled students to collaborate on creating products for people with disabilities.

The idea began with a project that was initiated by Lydia Khuri, the program director of four living-learning communities on the University campus and a practicing psychologist.

“I had seen an exhibit documenting race and racism on campus and found it very powerful,” Khuri said. “I thought it would be cool if somebody did that around disability issues.”

She got in contact with McDonagh and pitched her idea. Once the plan was in action, Khuri recruited Susann Sears, the acting director of Beckwith Residential Support Services, a program that supports students with disabilities who live in the University’s Nugent Hall.

“We worked collaboratively together and had this amazing art exhibition display at the Illini Union,” Sears said. “Truly, it was an interdisciplinary initiative, meaning we came from different disciplines, different ways of looking at the world, and worked together collaboratively to come up with these solutions.”

Khuri said working with McDonagh was “a lot of fun,” and that McDonagh’s creativity, energy, and charisma serve her well for her career path.

“She’s got her heart and mind in the right place in terms of doing this work,” Khuri said.

McDonagh, Khuri and Sears decided to continue their research and develop a course around the topic of disabilities and design. Since 2007, McDonagh has taught students how to bring empathy into the design process to create effective products for people with disabilities. The kind of products the class produces depends on who is in the class and what disabilities are represented. McDonagh said they are always diverse, which allows the class to have far-reaching impact.

“If I have somebody with no vision and a seeing-eye dog, or I have somebody who can’t hold a pen, then we have to be really creative and innovative with how they engage with the designing process,” McDonagh said.

The course has brought to life products such as better raincoats for wheelchair users, something that Khuri said was needed since the standard product resembles garbage bags.

“Who wants to ride around in a wheelchair looking like they’ve got a garbage bag on? Let’s get something nice, you know? Let’s make something fashionable, useful, practical, but also really hip,” Khuri said. “Then you’re going to want to wear that raincoat.”

Sears said the aesthetic features of the products they make are just as important as the functional features. “That’s what gives people their dignity, that’s part of it,” Sears said. “That’s why what [McDonagh] does is so important.”

The course recently provided an opportunity for McDonagh to literally give a voice to people with disabilities. In the past several months, she has been working on developing a voice amplifier called AmpliMy. It was designed for Alexis Wernsing, a student with cerebral palsy who took McDonagh’s course and was a teaching assistant for the course this past spring.

Wernsing was collaborating with McDonagh on the project until her death on Oct. 1, 2015. In her honor, McDonagh said she will continue to develop AmpliMy in the hopes of helping anybody who has difficulty in projecting their voice.

From experiences like these, McDonagh has learned that the perspectives of people with disabilities can enrich the world in more ways than one, especially when it comes to her course.

“They bring to us not only a great level of academic capital, but it makes our population a little bit more diverse than it is,” she said. “. . . You look at real people through a new lens to help you develop empathy for others and also see how you can have an impact for your community beyond just doing the ordinary.”

Beyond just doing the ordinary could also be a way to describe McDonagh’s approach to the future of design. She has plenty of ideas for products that can provide functionality and emotional stability.

Essentially, McDonagh sees a future where every product can be tailored to the user’s specific needs. It’s a future that includes products like a toilet that analyzes waste and tells the user if they are dehydrated or lacking certain nutrients, a refrigerator that gives meal options based on its contents, and self-cleaning showers.

Not only does she believe products should improve lives and meet the user’s needs, she believes they should make life more fun.

“I just challenge everything. Why does the dentist drill sound so awful? Why can’t it chirp or sound engaging?” McDonagh said. “From the moment you wake up, everything you touch should be joyful. The color and flavor of toothpaste should give you joy. Don’t leave all that fun stuff for the children. Let us have some enjoyment.”

For this reason, McDonagh encourages her students to look at the world from the viewpoint of a five-year-old, as if anything is possible.

She said that might seem crazy, but for her, crazy is the next normal.

“When I was young, the thought of a phone and a camera, putting them together, was seen as ridiculous and crazy speak. And now it’s like we’ve all got them in our pockets,” McDonagh said. “So it’s just interesting, what sounds crazy today, we have to talk this way.”

She said this will direct and shape what will be developed in the next 15 years.

McDonagh also hopes that more designers will see the benefits of empathic design. She said she is glad to already see this change happening, along with the change of seeing that what she brings to a research group or to students is perceived to have value without the need to assert herself, as it was when her career began.

“For a lot of women in numerically male dominated fields, they don’t feel worthy. You feel like the imposter. It is a well-known situation, where females feel like this,” she said. “That’s way gone. I have a right to be here and so do female students.”

As the first full female professor of industrial design on the University campus, McDonagh is not afraid to make waves. “I’m on a rant and a mission,” she said of her work and her belief in empathic design, which has not wavered since she discovered its benefits.

“You have to really be sure that everything you surround yourself with gives you joy, and it helps you complete tasks in a very seamless way, and that helps with your emotional well-being as well,” she said. “I know it sounds weird, but this works.”

Reflections on Freshman Year

The weather’s getting warmer, classes are winding down and finals are looming, libraries are full to capacity, and summer is so close you can taste it.

My freshman year at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign is over, but I don’t want it to be. Mainly because I can’t imagine it getting any better than this.

I went into my freshman year with a lot of slanted expectations, and of course nothing ended up going exactly as I’d imagined. Some aspects of this year ended up going in an entirely different direction. But for that, I’m grateful. For the most part, I ended up being pleasantly surprised, both at the great opportunities that came my way as well as the things that I accomplished. I never knew what I could do until I was truly challenged.

You know you’re doing something right when everything seems to fall into place. Nine months later, I’m getting paid to write about brilliant, talented and interesting people (I still can’t believe this one), I have an amazing group of friends, I’ve been published on the front page of The Daily Illini, I was able to travel to a foreign country for the first time in my life thanks to the College of Media James Scholar Program, and I’ve seen my perspective on journalism and the rest of the world be enriched by my studies and experiences.

Proof that I've been an Illini fan my whole life.
Proof that I was destined to come to this school.

As a fifth-generation Illini, I have always loved this university. I went to basketball and football games my whole life, visited campus often, and dreamed of going to school here. I wrote in a sixth-grade journal that I wanted to study journalism at U of I one day, and here I am doing exactly that. I wish I could go back to my sixth-grade self and tell her all that I’ve done and accomplished, because I’m pretty sure she’d be shocked.

IMG_3591Though I’m sad this year is over, I’m looking forward to the opportunities that are bound to come my way as my college career continues. And I’m continually amazed by how blessed I have been this year, not only to have had so many opportunities and challenges, but for the friends I’ve made this year. I’m surrounded by incredibly talented, incredibly brilliant and all-around amazing people that have shIMG_3888ared their experiences with me and opened up my small world to a much larger one. I’m more grateful for that than anything else I’ve experienced this year, and I’m so glad I get to spend the next three years with them.

Number of requested SafeWalks increasing on University of Illinois campus

Many soon-to-be college students are frequently given the same advice regarding campus safety: to avoid walking alone at night.

This advice has become easier for University students to follow with SafeWalks, a free service offered by the University Police that allows students, staff, and faculty of the University to request an escorted walk home by calling a number or pressing a button on their newly released mobile app.

SafeWalks runs from 9 p.m. to 2:30 a.m. Sunday through Wednesday and from 9 p.m. to 3 a.m. Thursday through Saturday, according to the University Police website. Walks can be requested from any location on campus, and the escorts are members of the University Police Student Patrol.

According to Ryan Johnson, the Student Patrol Coordinator, the number of requested SafeWalks has increased in the past couple of years. Two years ago, he said around 1,000 to 1,100 walks were requested, and in 2014, around 1,400 walks were requested.

Jacob Fleener, a team leader for the Student Patrol, said that since the beginning of 2015, around 400 SafeWalks have been requested, averaging four to five requests per night.

The increase can be attributed to better campaigning and marketing efforts by SafeWalks, Johnson said. They are continuing their efforts to raise awareness about this free service through their newly released mobile SafeWalks app, which will automatically pinpoint the location of the user and allow them to request a walk with the press of a button.

We’re trying to better connect with this generation of student, when everybody seems to be on a smartphone,” Johnson said.

Johnson said the app will make it easier to request a walk, and will also benefit non-English speakers and students who may be too intoxicated to make a phone call.

“There is no other kind of app available in the country at any other university that’s like it,” Johnson said.

Informing students about the unique benefits of SafeWalks has also been a key part of their marketing campaign. Though SafeRides, a free late night ride service by the Champaign-Urbana MTD, is also offered, it can only service people from specific bus stop locations. SafeWalks, on the other hand, can pick people up from any location.

Fleener said that after a request is made, a Student Patrol member is usually there within five to 10 minutes, whereas SafeRides usually takes 15 to 30 minutes.

He said there are a variety of reasons for why students may not utilize SafeWalks — either they don’t know it exists, or they know it exists and choose not to use it. This could be because of the walking aspect or because they are afraid to get in trouble for being intoxicated when requesting a walk.

“A lot of people think we are the police, when we’re not, we’re just normal students,” Fleener said. “We can’t get you in trouble or anything like that; our goal is just to get you home safely.”

Aside from escorting SafeWalks, the Student Patrol fulfills other campus safety duties such as nightly campus building checks, working pedestrian traffic, setting up police barricades, and assisting at events such as football games.

Fleener, a senior who has been a member of the Student Patrol since 2012, said that members are trained for police and radio codes as well as correct behavior in specific scenarios. After passing a veteran exam, they are assigned to one of three patrol teams and are required to work a minimum of one out of every five days.

“I absolutely love my job,” Fleener said. “I’m excited to go to work every night.”

He added that the job teaches valuable skills such as communication, presentation, and self-defense, and allows members to serve the community in a different aspect.

The Student Patrol and the SafeWalks program have resolved countless dangerous situations over the years, such as breaking up fights, ensuring dangerous persons are off the streets, finding vehicles or items the police have been looking for, or helping students get medical attention, according to Fleener.

Johnson said the program has an “unblemished” track record so far.

“Every person that request a safe walk makes it home safely,” he said.

As far as improving campus safety overall, Johnson said SafeWalks has definitely contributed.

“To have a successful public safety program and have a safe community, we’re one slice of the pie,” he said. “It takes several different aspects to make it successful.”

 

 

 

A Day at UIUC: Joe Biden and a Camel

In one day at the University of Illinois, you can see some pretty exciting things.

For starters, Vice President Joe Biden visited our campus today to participate in the Illinois Student Senate’s “It’s On Us” rally. It’s On Us was launched last year by the Obama administration to campaign to raise awareness for sexual assault on college campuses. The campaign urges students to commit to speak up about sexual assault, whether they are a victim or a witness.

The Illinois Student Senate has been active in the campaign for the past year. Once it was announced that Joe Biden would visit UI to speak, the campus was buzzing in preparation for this high profile visit. Tickets to the rally were limited and ran out by the end of the day on April 21.

Today, classes were considerably more empty and everyone was talking about the vice president’s visit. Unfortunately, by the time I went to pick up my tickets a few days ago, they were already gone. But I made sure I got to see the next best thing, the motorcade taking Biden to the location of the rally. It was a pretty cool sight to see.


 Biden’s speech focused on the role of men in this problem that is very present on college campuses, and urged everyone to do what this campaign focuses on: speak up, even if it’s not the easiest thing to do.

But that’s not all. On a side note, Illini Chabad brought a camel to the south quad to celebrate Israel Independence Day. Students waited in line to either sit or ride on the camel, who also provided for a great photo op.


 

 

Trashed: it starts (and ends) with us

What if not recycling was seen to be as socially unacceptable as drunk driving, smoking indoors, or not wearing your seatbelt?

What if bringing your own container to the grocery store became the new norm?

What if recycling something was as habitual and common practice as throwing something away?

Obviously we’d be living in a much cleaner, healthier and more efficient world. But what exactly does that mean? These questions are answered by the 2012 documentary “Trashed,” which explains the growing problem of consumer and industrial waste that our planet faces.

On April 22, Earth Day, the UIUC Students for Environmental Concerns and Lambda Theta Phi, Inc. hosted a screening of “Trashed,” the award-winning documentary about the issue of waste, followed by a panel discussion with University of Illinois faculty and administration, including Bart Bartels, zero-waste coordinator at the Illinois Sustainable Technology Center, Professor Zsuzsa Gille of the Department of Sociology, and Professor Ann Reisner of the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Science and the College of Media and Cinema Studies.

“Trashed” is an eye-opening film for anyone who’s not really sure how much waste our planet truly creates. Spoiler alert: it’s a lot. This film gives both the facts as well as a solution proposed by actor and the film’s maker, Jeremy Irons.

It opens with a scene in Lebanon, where they’ve resorted to dumping their trash on beaches that once could have been enjoyed for sunbathing. Now, the beaches surrounded by beautiful blue water have been resorted to a landfill, overflowing with plastic, food waste, and toxic fluids that seep into the ground below.

Looking at this picture, one can only think: is this what we’re all coming to?

We don’t really understand the amount of waste that we create until we see it. But it’s not something that people want to think about. As I watched this film, I was amazed by the statistics that I heard and the images that I saw.

For example, every person living today has dioxins (highly toxic compounds) inside their bodies at some concentration level. Dioxins are environmental pollutants that enter our bodies mainly when we intake food that is also polluted. And the human body can’t get rid of them naturally, which means they stay in your body for a long time and can have effects even at low concentrations.

Yet, we still only recycle 33% of our waste.

“Trashed” makes the consequences and the facts plain. But the solution it proposes is where it gets tricky. The film ends on a much happier note than the horrific scenes that it opened with. It shows how things can get better if we stop ignoring this problem. It ends with a rallying cry that sounds familiar: if we all do our part individually, things will get better.

After the screening, Professor Gille voiced her concern with this solution, stating that she is skeptical of the diagnosis and the solution it tries to promote – the one against the many.

In agreement with that statement was Professor Reisner, who said: “Nothing’s going to work unless we get government behind us.”

Professor Ann Reisner speaking at the panel after the "Trashed" screening.
Professor Ann Reisner speaking at the panel after the “Trashed” screening.

Yet the point of this film was mainly to educate, and that it did. It’s a problem we truly can’t ignore. You can’t ignore the landfills that are filling up faster than we can control them, the wildlife that is being harmed both internally and externally by our waste, the human health defects that pollutants are causing, and the beautiful landscapes and oceans that are full more with trash than life.

“Our stupidity was well documented,” Bartels said. That, in essence, is what sums up this film. And that, I believe, was the goal that the filmmakers achieved.