Inspiration

By creating YEIGO [yay-go], our team is driven by the goal to create access to an AR mobility aid ensuring that people who use walkers have the right information making height and posture adjustments when using a walker, which will prevent further strain and injury- 55% of walker users use them at the wrong height, and 47,000 people are injured a year through incorrect mobility aid usage.

YEIGO means “keep going” in the Navajo language.

Yeigo as an emerging catalyst for inclusive technological medical assistance for Indigenous communities, an important tool after reduced healthcare on Native American reservations despite federal treaties that promised robust health care for Native Americans.

We’re inspired by our close family members who have had to use canes or walkers unexpectedly, and we think it'd be great to have an immersive tool they can use to facilitate a speedy recovery. Most Americans will go to CVS or Walgreens, buy whatever cane or walker in stock, and use it as is. 55% of people have their walkers set at the wrong height. And 47 thousand people will end up in the ER because of injuries related to their mobility aid.

Reduced Mobility is a significant predictor of loneliness but our goal with YEIGO is to connect people with community and to empower people in their bodies.

The Snapchat Spectacles offered a platform for bringing our ideas to life.

What it does

When you put on a pair of Spectacles to launch our app, you can use a pinch gesture, enabling the option to choose your experience in either Diné Bizaad or English.

First, you can use Snaps new webview component to scroll the trending #babewithamobilityaid hashtag and connect with other mobility babes.

Our product then helps you measure the correct height your walker should be by holding your phone down to your side. This process will spawn a line in your physical environment, showing how high up from the floor you should adjust your walker to. Your phone will then be used to triangulate between your head, phone and floor, this detects your posture and the correct length your walker should be from the ground. While your phone is in your back pocket, you’ll walk towards a bouncing ball while you go through a path of encouraging words, with friendly reminders to stand straight as your walk if you begin to slouch. This helps you learn the correct ways to use your mobility aid and optimize your healing journey.

How we built it

YEIGO is programmed in Lens Studio with TypeScript, Visual Studio Code, Spectacles Interaction Toolkit. Figma was used to create UI/UX. Blender 3D was used to create assets. We used Audacity for sound design. We integrated a scrollable webview component so users can get motivated through the #babewithamobilityaid hashtag. We enabled use of a phone/mobile device as a sensor for setting the height of a walker, utilizing the phone's built-in gyroscope to gather data and trigger actions and audio on the pair of connected Snap Spectacles. Sensors on the headset detect if you start leaning forward or start looking at your feet.

Challenges we ran into

Technical limitations: -Internet connectivity between device and computer. -lost of handtracking when controller is enabled. -Studio bugs, emergent technology bugs. -Cache clearning

Accomplishments that we're proud of

No one cried.

What we learned

-We perfected pitching -Enabling web component

What's next for YEIGO

AOO (meaning "yes" in Diné Bizaad), a feature to optimize posture, and build a MVP.

Built With

  • blender-3d
  • figma
  • spectacles
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