Two UMKC-linked research teams earn Comeback KC Ventures funding for COVID innovations
January 23, 2023 | Startland News Staff
Two research teams tied to the University of Missouri-Kansas City have received proof-of-concept funding support through Comeback KC Ventures and will take the next step toward bringing their innovations from the university lab to market to solve problems related to the COVID-19 pandemic, the funding program announced.
Funds from Comeback KC Ventures focus on the translation of research to a commercial setting: building the technology development plan and the business concept to accompany the sophisticated technology.
“Along with the funding, we aim to support these research teams with outside experts to serve as a braintrust as they map their path to market,” said Chris Rehkamp, associate director of the UMKC Innovation Center’s Technology Venture Studio. “Comeback KC Ventures and these proof-of-concept funds aim to build real pathways to market and amplify the efforts of our local researchers.”
Comeback KC Ventures, funded by a SPRINT Challenge grant from the U.S. Economic Development Administration, wrapped 26 local, early-stage innovations in support, resources, mentorship and financial assistance to accelerate COVID-related solutions. Led by KC Digital Drive and the UMKC Innovation Center, the program is sprinting toward 10 new businesses, 30 new jobs and $5 million in follow-on funding in 18 months.
Meet the next two Comeback KC Ventures fellows
These innovators are commercializing new solutions to problems in measuring the safe health practices of communities and consumer research.
- AI2Insight LLC (Dr. Ye Wang and Dr. YugYung Lee) — Provides solutions to time-sensitive consumer/user feedback for business/marketing development and evaluation in health care, advertising and campaigning, with a focus on big data from qualitative and mixed methods. Its solutions aim at shortening the research cycle for consumer insight/experience, quantifying a large amount of qualitative data and offering interpretable analytics by leveraging natural language processing and AI/machine learning.
Comeback KC Ventures funding will help the business with crucial research and development on creating a pipeline that connects the database, natural language processing/AI models and user interfaces.
- MOSAIC, Dr. Sejun Song —Growing evidence shows that face masks and social distancing can considerably reduce the spread of respiratory viruses like COVID-19. However, the current pandemic trajectory predictions take overly simplified static policy input rather than actual and dynamic observations of practices in a crowd. MOSAIC (Modeling Safety Index in Crowd) is a vision-based machine-learning system for building a safe community cluster by monitoring and understanding the extent of safety policies (e.g., masking and social distancing) in practice and assessing the safety level in a scalable manner.
“Thanks to the Comeback KC Ventures proof-of-concept funding, we can quickly prototype MOSAIC as a front-end app for intelligent cameras and a smartphone application,” said Sejun Song, associate professor of science and engineering at University of Missouri-Kansas City. “MOSIAC can illustrate each community’s detailed safety levels and trends and predict users’ exposure by applying the routes. The data and experience acquired by the feasibility and usage test of MOSAIC in the field will offer significant societal safety measures against COVID and beyond.”
Featured Business

2023 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Coding at age 3? Operation Breakthrough connects STEM to program’s circuitry
Two small boys are standing on stools at a workbench, pretending to talk on outdated handset telephones. They might not yet know how the phones work, but they’re clearly familiar with how to take them apart. And they do. A few feet away, three children from low-income families are on iPads beginning a new lesson.…
Education network CAPS snags $145K from Kauffman Foundation
A homegrown education innovation network announced Wednesday it was awarded a $145,000 grant to expand its programming across the nation, courtesy of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation. The Center for Advanced Professional Studies (CAPS) program began in the Blue Valley School District in 2009 and is now expanded to 33 programs encompassing 69 school districts…
Pioneering KCI airport vote should help land top talent, startup leaders say
Capping a six-year journey fraught with turbulence, delays and political drama, voters overwhelmingly ratified plans to build a new $1.3 billion airport terminal, which would replace the existing Kansas City International Airport (KCI). “Kansas City has never been about being just mediocre,” said Michael Wilson, founder of luxury watch brand Niall and a frequent traveler…
WillCo Tech’s sale allows founder guilt-free $200K investment in smart grid startup
Selling a majority stake in his IT consulting firm will allow Kevin Williams to focus on and expand his startup venture, the Kansas City tech entrepreneur said. Although the exact amount was undisclosed, the acquisition by Ohio-based Metisentry earlier this month provided a big enough payoff to fund Williams’ and his wife’s future retirement, as…

