Collaboration in the air: Cough detection sensors combine Sickweather, Mycroft tech
October 18, 2018 | Elyssa Bezner
You can’t manage what you can’t measure, said Sickweather CEO Graham Dodge, describing the need for cough detection sensors that are slated to be rolled out in public places across Kansas City in 2019.
Illness forecaster Sickweather is teaming up with fellow Kansas City startup Mycroft, a leader in artificial intelligence-infused tech, to develop the devices in conjunction with the Kansas City Health Department’s smart city initiatives, Dodge said.
The cough sensors are expected to record the number of coughs picked up on city streetcars and buses, collecting data on illnesses relating to respiratory issues in the city, he said.
“This will be our first step in trying to measure that activity in real time so that the health department can deploy resources as needed to communities,” Dodge added.
The collaborators are also exploring the possibility of installing air quality sensors in schools, said Dodge, noting the prime directive of the projects is to study childhood asthma.
Like all Mycroft products, the cough detection sensor keeps privacy in mind, said Joshua Montgomery, CEO of Mycroft, noting the only data collected is the number of coughs heard in each location. The data cannot be attributed to a specific individual.
“The idea is very similar to a traffic counter that sits in an intersection,” he said. “It can’t tell you which cars go through that intersection; all it can do is give you a count and a location and a time. Cities use that information to make decisions about traffic lights and other things.”
“We can do the same with the sounds of human illness in order to make decisions about, and get better information about things like vaccinations, public health efforts and other items of that nature,” he added.
Privacy and security considerations are a key differentiator between what Mycroft and Sickweather are building in Kansas City and what big tech firms on the West Coast have built in Silicon Valley, Montgomery said.
“I think what we’re seeing in the media and what we’re seeing from regulators in Europe for example, is people becoming sensitive to exactly how invasive some of the Silicon Valley models are, and being willing to explore new technologies that do provide privacy, and that’s a great opportunity for us and a great opportunity for Kansas City,” he said.
Technologies like Mycroft products, the cough sensors, and the Sickweather app are steps in the right direction in terms of how active listening technology and public information from social media can be used, said Dodge.
“In our case, with [Sickweather’s] technology, we’re only listening to your public reports, so we aren’t invading anyone’s privacy when it comes to our social listening technology,” he added. “Anyone who’s using our app and volunteering this information, knows that this is going toward the maps and the forecast, and is contributing to the entire Sickweather community.”
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Kauffman Foundation grants $78K to KC Startup Foundation, Startland hires managing editor
Continuing a commitment to cultivate its hometown entrepreneurial community, the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation has awarded a $78,600 grant to the Kansas City Startup Foundation. The foundation’s gift helps the KCSF expand the capacity and marketing of its programs to connect, educate and tell stories about area innovators. The KCSF — which recently merged with…
Eclipse watch: Drones to help UMKC-led researchers analyze gridlock
With all eyes on the sky for Monday’s rare solar eclipse, the heavens will be watching back. A team of volunteer drone pilots, research specialists and emergency management officials plan to use a fleet of unmanned aerial vehicles to provide real-time observation and analysis of Kansas City-area traffic at two likely congestion points during the…
Universe of ‘things’ expanding rapidly, Big Bang says
Editor’s Note: To stay in consistent contact with founders, Startland News is launching a weekly follow-up series featuring top area startups and entrepreneurs. Imagining the future of the “Internet of Things” — a universe of connected devices — is as impossible today as accurately fathoming in 1995 how then-fledgling Internet technology would change the world,…
Four KC area firms land spots in Inc. 500 fastest growing list, dozens in top 5000
Forty Kansas City area firms are featured on the annual Inc. 5000 list, which includes the nation’s fastest growing businesses. Among them, four local firms were included in the more exclusive Inc. 500 list, with Lever 1 nabbing a No. 44 ranking. In 2016, only one Kansas City company made the 500 list, ranked No.…


