Dr. Richard R Fletcher

Research Scientist
Assistant Professor, University of Massachusetts Medical School (Department of Psychiatry)

Primary DLC

Development Through Dialogue, Design and Dissemination

MIT Room: N51-323

Areas of Interest and Expertise

Sensors and Instrumentation
Electromagnetic Design (Tags and Sensors)
Radio-Frequency Identification (RFID) Systems and Sensors
Synthesis of Natural Physical/Biological Mechanisms with Electronic Systems

Research Summary

Research ecompasses the design of sensor elements, RFID tags, antennas, and sensing electronics. In many instances, these elements may be integrated or embedded as part of other design elements such as the mechanical structure, display, or packaging materials. Early work on wireless sensing and RFID has been a traditional part of the Media Lab research consortium called Things That Think.

A significant percentage of MIT students -- and especially Media Lab students -- go on to start their own company. This ecosystem of high-tech small-businesses and design firms play an important role in early stage technology developments as well as long-term technology transfer to our large sponsor companies. Despite the Dot-Com bust at the turn of the century, the entrepreneurial climate at MIT remains vibrant with ventures in many new areas. The Media Lab -- and MIT as a whole -- was one of the first engineering schools in the US to emphasize the needs of developing countries and also view this as an entrepreneurial intiative (social ventures).

Since 2000,Fletcher has founded 5 business ventures:
(*) Ashametrics, Inc. - A company providing sensors and software tools for researchers working in Mobile Health.
(*) TagSense, Inc. - A boutique engineering development firm specializing in RFID and wireless sensor technology.
(*) AgileTag, Inc. - A product company that sells RFID systems designed for item-level tracking.
(*) First Mile Solutions, LLC -- A provider of wireless infrastructure and communications hardware for developing countries.
(*) United Villages, LLC -- A provider of data, voice, and video services for developing countries.

Recent Work

  • Video

    Richard Fletcher - 2016-Digital-Health_Conf-videos

    September 14, 2016Conference Video Duration: 18:29

    IoT and Behavior Change: Can We Build a “GPS” for Our Brains?

    As our understanding of health has improved, we now realize that our long-term health is rooted in our human behavior. The largest burden of diseases, including diabetes, cardiometabolic syndrome, obesity, and substance abuse, are often the accumulated result of many small decisions that we make throughout our daily lives, such as what we eat, what time we sleep or wake, what route we take to work, and what social habits we follow.
    From this perspective, it is important to create technology that can not only diagnose disease, but rather prevent disease by helping to promote healthy behaviors. Just as we use a GPS guidance system when we travel on a journey, our group at MIT develops technologies and systems that can be used by people as personal navigation aids for their behavior, which we informally call “GPS for the brain”. Such systems will comprise a wide range of technologies that already exist in the so-called “Internet of Things (IoT),” such as phones, TV’s, lights, refrigerators and other home appliances.
    Wearable sensors have a valuable role to play in these future health systems; however, since most of the world’s population may never use wearable sensors (for many reasons), there is also a practical need to deploy non-contact methods of monitoring our physiology and behavior (such as smart cameras, microwave radars, and even olfactory sensors) embedded into our everyday environment. While much of this sensor technology has already been developed in recent decades, there remains a great deal of work over the next decade in creating computer models and algorithms that can better understand, predict, and motivate human behavior.

    2016 MIT Digital Health Conference