Title,Publications,"Looking for Collaborations","Monitoring Category","Short Device Description","Company / Institution","Team Description","Website for device","Monitoring Category Description","How is the Device Worn? (Check All that Apply)","Device Worn description","If device is an implantable or external wearable, where on the body is it worn","Device Action (Check All that Apply)","Device action Description",About,"List of Publications","Is the device inter-operable with other devices","How is the Data from Device Transmitted to a Platform?" "SPEAC System",Yes,Yes,"EMG, Self-Report, Sound","The SPEAC surface electromyography (sEMG) monitor is worn on one arm at the belly of the biceps muscle. This lightweight, non-invasive monitor continuously senses and monitors sEMG signals which reflect the activity in the motor cortices of the brain. The sEMG monitor takes 1,000 sEMG samples every second. Brain Sentinel’s SparkSenseTM diagnostic algorithm analyzes those samples in real time, looking for tonic-clonic muscle activity that is indicative of a GTC seizure. Once recorded, the data are sent to and stored securely by Brain Sentinel where we begin analyzing all the hours of data. At the end of a monitoring period, the ordering physician will receive a summary report to help with clinical decisions.","Brain Sentinel","Mike Girouard, our President and CEO, and Dr. José E. Cavazos, M.D., PhD, a renowned Epileptologist, founded Brain Sentinel in 2009. The team searched for a seizure signal to measure and monitor. After years of testing and developing, Brain Sentinel created a System that harness sEMG, a biomarker for seizure activity. In February 2017, the SPEAC® System became the first FDA-cleared, non-EEG, physiological, signal-based system for seizure monitoring.",http://speacsystem.com/,,"N/A, External Wearable",,"The device is worn on the belly of the biceps","Alert System for Caregiver, Alert System for Person Wearing the Device, Other","Surface electromyography signal, audio, post-ictal assessment, and a seizure diary are available to the physician to understand more about seizure events.","Data is stored in a secure cloud environment.","Szabó, C. Á., Morgan, L. C., Karkar, K. M., Leary, L. D., Lie, O. V., Girouard, M. and Cavazos, J. E. (2015), Electromyography-based seizure detector: Preliminary results comparing a generalized tonic–clonic seizure detection algorithm to video-EEG recordings. Epilepsia, 56: 1432–1437. Doi:10.1111/epi.13083.",No,"Data is securely transmitted over the provided Wi-Fi network."