The Breezing devise can be used in the field to check metabolic activity.
Photo by: Breezing

Breezing, a new startup based on technology developed by researchers at Arizona State University, is offering the world’s first portable device that can track an individual’s metabolism and use that information to provide diet and exercise recommendations for maintaining or reaching a healthy weight.

“The market is full of devices that help people track their exercise routines, such as miles ran or walked, but this is the first portable device that lets people track the most important component of all – their own metabolism,” said NJ Tao, director of the Center for Biosensors and Bioelectronics at the ASU Biodesign Institute.

Tao is also a professor in the School of Electrical, Computer and Energy Engineering, one of ASU’s Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering.

Breezing is a pocket-sized device that analyzes exhalations and transmits that information to an integrated app on a cell phone or tablet via Bluetooth. The user can then apply that information to customize a diet or exercise program through the app that will help achieve personal weight goals.

Breezing works via “indirect calorimetry,” the preferred measurement method of the American Dietetic Association, World Health Organization, and other institutions. Traditional indirect calorimeters are bulky, difficult-to-use and usually found only in doctor’s offices. Breezing replaces all that with a simple, handheld device based on cutting-edge sensor technology.

The core technology of Breezing was created at ASU, and further perfected by the ASU spin-off company. NJ Tao, Erica Forzani, Francis Tsow and Xiaojun Xian have been working on the technology to make it accurate, robust, and user-friendly for end-consumers.

Metabolic information flows via Bluetooth to an integrated app on a cell phone or tablet
Photo: Breezing

“With Breezing, we are taking something that would typically be available in a high-end sports training laboratory and making it available to anyone looking to change their behaviors to become healthier,” said Forzani. “In the long run, we can even apply this same technology to help with the prevention and management of chronic diseases.”

Forzani is deputy director of the Center for Biosensors and Bioelectronics at the Biodesign Institute and an assistant professor in the School for Engineering of Matter, Transport and Energy.

Breezing is being launched through a crowdsourcing campaign on Indiegogo, the largest global crowdfunding platform.

In the last decade, more than 50 companies have been formed out of business start-ups launched from ASU through Arizona Technology Enterprises (AzTE), the exclusive intellectual property management and technology transfer organization of ASU.  Start-up companies that have licensed ASU IP have attracted more than $300 million in financing from venture capital firms and other investors.

Since FY2009, based on annual licensing surveys by the Association of University Technology Managers, ASU, through the activities of AzTE, has been one of the top-performing universities in the country in terms of intellectual property inputs (inventions disclosed to AzTE by ASU researchers) and outputs (licensing deals, option agreements, and start-ups based on university IP) relative to the size of the university’s research enterprise. For more information: http://www.azte.com/.

Written by Derek Sarley, [email protected]
Arizona Technology Enterprises

View original story at Full Circle