Pragmatica wins big in Velocity $5K Finals

Thursday, July 20, 2023

Karthik Prasad and Thomas Mastantuono with Velocity Campus director John Dick

Karthik Prasad and聽Thomas Mastantuono with Velocity Campus Director John Dick.聽

Pragmatica, a startup that aims to make speech therapy more accessible via VR, was one of four winners of $5000 at the Velocity $5K Finals yesterday.

Pragmatica is a joint venture by Computer Science master鈥檚 student Karthik Prasad and recent 蓝莓视频 Engineering graduate Thomas Mastantuono. They were among the seven finalists chosen from the twenty-three teams competing in the semi-finals.

Friends, faculty members, and potential investors came to the Theatre of the Arts yesterday to hear teams鈥 three-minute pitches as well as a fireside chat with Akash Vaswani, a Mechatronics Engineering alum and co-lead of the .

鈥淚t was a surreal experience to pitch in front of a crowd and have our idea evaluated by judges,鈥 Prasad says. 鈥淲hile it was a bit scary to pitch on such a stage, it was also really exciting to see the prospects of our company鈥e received a lot of valuable feedback from the judges and our session with Akash Vaswani after the event, making it a great learning opportunity to identify our weaknesses and work on improving them.鈥

The other three winning teams were Entangled Vision, a company creating macular degeneration testing equipment; EyesoBio, a biotechnology company improving eye product testing; and Swish, a company developing better cleaning solutions for solar panels. EmpathEase, a company that will collect patients with culturally aligned therapists, won the Audience Choice Award.

The relationship between tech and health was a common theme at this year鈥檚 Finals, with five of the seven teams pitching working on a topic related to medicine or health. In Pragmatica鈥檚 case, they are seeking to provide a VR-enabled speech therapy program featuring social situation and interactions, in order to help children with communication difficulties. With wait times for traditional speech therapy of six months to a year, and individual sessions costing $150 or more, Pragmatica hopes they can provide an alternative or supplementary service that will make speech therapy more accessible.

Pragmatica began as an engineering capstone project but was developed in consultation with therapists and other experts as well. 鈥淲e have to remain cognisant of the fact that we don鈥檛 know everything, and always seek help whenever needed,鈥 Prasad says.

The Pragmatica team will use their winnings to fund pilot testing of their VR program. 鈥淲e are absolutely delighted about winning the event and we are happy to see our hard work pay off!鈥

鈥淲e enjoyed getting to hear the pitches of all our brilliant, entrepreneurial students who were part of the Velocity $5K finals,鈥 says Stephanie Whitney, director for Research & Innovation Partnerships in the Math Innovation Office. 鈥淲e are excited about Pragmatica鈥檚 VR speech therapy solution that is aiming to improve access and affordability in healthcare, and we congratulate them on their win!鈥

You can learn more about Velocity on their . 聽