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Catalin Voss

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Occupation
  
Entrepreneur

Name
  
Catalin Voss


Education
  
Stanford University

Catalin Voss static4businessinsidercomimage5425c5286bb3f751

Born
  
1995 (age 19–20)
Heidelberg, Germany

Website
  
wall-lab.stanford.edu/people/catalin/

Known for
  
Invention, Entrepreneurship

Residence
  
United States of America

Interview with serial entrepreneur Catalin Voss


Catalin Voss is a German inventor, entrepreneur and founder of startup company Sension and the Autism Glass Project at Stanford University.

Contents

Catalin Voss static4businessinsidercomimage5425c9816da811b6

Sension is a computer vision company that developed face tracking and expression recognition software used in education. It was acquired by GAIA Systems, a company owned by Toyota, in 2015. The Autism Glass Project is an application for use with the wearable technology product Google Glass that acts as a behavioral aid for children with autism. Voss invented Sension and the Autism Glass application while studying at Stanford University, in California, and ran his company from the Silicon Valley. Prior to coming to Stanford, Voss worked as a mobile engineer with Macintosh-designer Steve Capps at payments company PayNearMe while still a high school student at Leonardo da Vinci Gymnasium. Capps reportedly hired Voss, then 15 years old, after looking at several apps Voss had published on the App store and watching his podcast on iOS app development which Voss produced at age 14.

Voss's technology inventions have been seen as a potential tool for widening the bottleneck for Autism treatment by helping those on the Autism Spectrum to better identify emotions. In 2015, Voss's research work has received grant support from Google and the Packard Foundation to evaluate whether this could be done in a 100-person clinical trial.

Voss was born in Heidelberg, Germany to a German father and Romanian mother.

Awards and accolades

Voss has received some recognition in the press and awards for his work. In 2013, the German magazine Der Spiegel published a 5-page profile on Voss at 18 years old. At age 19, Voss was named one of the 15 most impressive students at Stanford and listed as the youngest member of Business Insider's 40 Under 40: People To Watch In 2015.

In 2014, Voss' Autism Glass invention was featured in the novel Trueman Bradley - The Next Great Detective, which is the second installment of the Trueman Bradley series, by Alexei Maxim Russell. In the book, Trueman Bradley, an Autistic private detective, uses Voss' invention to "see" emotions and so improve his detective skills.

In 2016, Voss received the Lemelson-MIT Graduate Student prize.

References

Catalin Voss Wikipedia