/ Resources
/
Blog
/
Grant for wearable device incorporating behaviour change

Grant for wearable device incorporating behaviour change

Tackling diabetes using AI and behaviour change

The potential of using wearable technology to tackle global health issues like diabetes will now be explored thanks to a $2.15M grant awarded by the Australian Government through its Cooperative Research Centres Projects (CRC-P) scheme.

BehaviourWorks is one of six research institutes involved in the Nutromics project, which will develop a digitally-enabled wearable device incorporating a deep learning behaviour change engine to elicit the positive lifestyle behaviour changes required to reduce the risk of type 2 diabetes, a largely preventable lifestyle disease.

The “Smart Sensor & Deep Learning Behavioural Engine for Personalised Health Monitoring” project involves the University of New South Wales, the CSIRO, Melbourne Health, Monash University and the Baker Health and Diabetes Institute, along with several design and product development companies based in Australia and Silicon Valley.

The application, which was co-led by former BehaviourWorks Senior Research Fellow, Annet Hoek and Research Fellow Alexander (Zan) Saeri, will capitalise on emerging research in the field of personalised nutrition, real-time biosensors and artificial intelligence-driven behaviour change strategies to develop effective early interventions for metabolic diseases such as type 2 diabetes.

With BWA Research Fellow, Peter Slattery, Zan will lead the behaviour change research stream to design and implement real-time and adaptive dietary interventions for pre-diabetics, who comprise about 50% of the Australian population.

The calibre of the project, which has a total value of $7.5M (of which $2.15M million is the CRC-P grant; the rest is being made up of cash or in-kind contributions), is evidenced by the fact that, in this CRC-P funding round, just 1 in 5 applications were successful.

Nutromics was founded in 2017 with the purpose of leveraging technology to empower individuals to take greater control of their health and minimise the risk of chronic disease.

Visit: nutromics.com.au

Sign up to the broadcast

Get monthly behaviour change content and insights


I'm an alumnus, friend or supporter (including donors, mentors and industry partners)
I'm a Monash student
I'm interested in studying at Monash
I recently applied to study at Monash
I'm a Monash staff member
I recently participated in research activities or studies with Monash
Other

I agree to receive marketing communications from Monash University. Monash University values the privacy of every individual's personal information and is committed to the protection of that information from unauthorised use and disclosure except where permitted by law. For information about the handling of your personal information please see Data Protection and Privacy Procedure and our Data Protection and Privacy Collection Statements.

If you have any questions about how Monash University is collecting and handling your personal information, please contact our Data Protection and Privacy Office at dataprotectionofficer@monash.edu.

Education & training

Looking to upskill?

Check out our Monash University accredited courses, along with our short and bespoke training programs.

home-orange-arrow-right
Research

Have a project for us?

We offer a broad range of research services to help governments, industries and NGOs find behavioural solutions.

home-orange-arrow-right
Resources

Explore our resources

We believe in building capacity and sharing knowledge through multiple channels to our partners, collaborators and the wider community.

home-orange-arrow-right