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Zomato CEO's Brain Device: Science or Sci-Fi?
6 Jan
Summary
- Temple device measures cerebral blood flow using a temple-placed sensor.
- Medical experts criticize the device as a 'fancy toy' lacking scientific validation.
- The device's effectiveness and scientific standing are yet to be proven.

Zomato CEO Deepinder Goyal has unveiled the Temple device, an experimental wearable aimed at continuously monitoring cerebral blood flow. This open-source innovation, backed by a personal investment of approximately $25 million, is positioned near the temple to capture real-time circulation data. Goyal proposes that gravitational forces contribute to cognitive decline by impairing brain circulation, a concept he terms the 'Gravity Aging Hypothesis.'
Medical professionals, however, express significant skepticism. Dr. Suvrankar Datta, a radiologist at AIIMS Delhi, has publicly labeled the Temple device a "fancy toy for billionaires" with "zero scientific standing." He cautions consumers against investing in unproven technology, emphasizing that measurements from temporal arteries do not align with established medical diagnostics like carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity, which reliably predicts cardiovascular mortality.



