Marita Cheng is on a mission to help engineer a better world

Marita Cheng has started two companies and a global non-profit organisation, is on boards and regularly gives talks. But she’s not taking her foot off the pedal yet.

You have probably seen the TV advertisement where Marita Cheng high-fives a robot arm and says, “The world is a beautiful piece of engineering”. The mechatronics graduate designed the robot arm herself to help people with disabilities restricting their movement complete tasks by themselves.

Or maybe you remember her as the 2012 Young Australian of the Year who founded Robogals while at university to encourage more girls and women to see the potential in studying subjects like engineering and science.

“She has an enthusiasm that grabs the attention of those around her.”

For someone still in her 20s, she has already packed a lot into her life, but she’s not taking her foot off the pedal yet. Cheng has started two companies, 2Mar Robotics and Aipoly, in recent years and says they’re both doing really exciting stuff.

Marita Cheng and her Teleport device.

“With 2Mar, we’re making a robot called Teleport and it enables someone to be in Sydney but have a robot in Melbourne, and another robot in Brisbane,” she said.

“So, for example, someone with a spinal cord injury could be bedridden and still go to school, or go to work, or have meetings all over the world. It could be used by kids who are in hospital with cancer and they could have these robots at school running around.

“Or people who have been in a car accident and are in rehabilitation could have one of these robots at work and so even while they’re recovering, they can still be at work and contribute to society and have one of these robots at home and be able to participate in family life.”

The robot looks a little like a tablet computer on a pole, and Cheng said the advantage of a product like this over something like using Skype on a laptop is the user can control the robot themselves and doesn’t have to rely on someone else carrying the laptop around.

Boundless enthusiasm

Marita Cheng describes Dianne Boddy as her mentor. Boddy is a rare creature in that she is a self-taught engineer who was granted chartered engineer status without ever completing a degree. After getting a job as a tracer in an engineering firm, she became interested in engineering and setting about learning as much as she could over the course of her 55-year-career, which involved more than 2000 designs and 40 international patents.

“I learnt all the nuts and bolts of engineering design first, in an environment where I could react to it on an hourly or daily basis as I chose,” Boddy said.

“When I needed theoretical knowledge I sought that theoretical knowledge in order to do the projects I took on.”

Boddy heard about Robogals and decided that, with her own career in robotics, she should meet up with Cheng and see if she could help out.

“She was working on her first robot at that stage, so I agreed to help them with the mechanical side of it,” Boddy said.

“In the end of it, much of Teleroo, the original one, was actually built in my garage workshop out in Ashburton [near Melbourne]. They did the final assembly out there. There’s been a lot of improvement to it since then … an incredible improvement in software control.”

Boddy described Cheng as a charming, engaging person with an enthusiasm that is just boundless.

“I think she’s going to mature into quite something,” Boddy said.

“She has an enthusiasm that grabs the attention of those around her.”

The coolest and hottest technologies

The second company Marita Cheng is working on, Aipoly, is building a smartphone app that enables blind people to identify objects.

“All you have to do is hold your phone, pass it over the various objects, and in real-time it recognises chairs, the floor, tables, different colours,” Cheng said.

“A blind person would be able to have a much richer experience of the world through this kind of technology.”

She said the unique thing about the app is that all the computation happens on the phone, and so it’s able to detect objects in real-time rather than having someone take a photo and then send that object over the internet to a cloud server.

“Recognising something in real-time means that the person who is blind is able to identify more objects in a shorter space of time and they can get on with their life a lot quicker,” she said.

The Aipoly app can recognise 1000 objects and colours at a rate of three per second. The team is working to expand its vocabulary and allow it to describe more complex scenes.

The Aipoly app and the company developing it are less than a year old. It grew out of the Global Solutions Program at Singularity University in California, where entrepreneurs and technologists are brought together to work on team-based technology solutions for widespread global challenges. Cheng was teamed with Italian Alberto Rizzoli and Swede Simon Edwardsson.

“We discussed what are the technologies that you think are the coolest and the hottest ones,” Rizzoli said.

“Artificial intelligence was definitely at the top for us. AI and robotics, they go hand-in-hand.”

Cheng said she met a woman at Google with a PhD in computer vision and asked her if she knew of any problems in the space.

“One of the things she mentioned is that she had a blind friend who wasn’t able to recognise objects in surroundings that were unfamiliar to them,” said Cheng.

“We thought back to machine learning lectures at Singularity University and thought, ‘Why don’t we put this technology on a phone so that people will be able to use their phone to instantly recognise objects?’ So we did!”

They called organisations for the blind to find out what they wanted, and four days later they had a first version of the product to show a range of people to get feedback.

“The first version was what we call a minimum viable product, or MVP, in tech prototyping, which means that you use the least amount of resources to make it look as realistic as possible to what you actually want to do,” said Rizzoli.

“We used a vision API that was available to the public, to scan through items to create a better search experience, and applied it to a camera so that it can actually speak out.”

Working through issues with potential users led to a second product, which they demonstrated at Singularity University where it won Class Favourite and Judges Favourite. Buoyed by this success, the trio decided to pursue the project.

The Aipoly team has been working at the Engineers Australia office in Melbourne to improve the app’s artificial intelligence and the number of objects it can identify. When they first started it could tell about 200 objects apart.

“It currently can recognise about 1000 objects and we’re sorting through the next version of the algorithm, which is able to recognise 5000 objects,” Cheng said.

Marita Cheng and the Aipoly team in Melbourne.

The importance of diversity

While both her companies are involved in helping people with disabilities, Cheng said she has no personal motivation to work in that area.

“Helping people with disabilities in their everyday lives is part of our vision, because if you can be useful to someone who has no use of their legs, then you can be useful to someone who has use of their legs and arms,” she said.

“I guess we were looking for problems that impact a lot of people and they seemed like good places to start, but we’ve got other projects in the pipeline. With Aipoly we’re working on smart cameras and we’re working on language translation apps that use our image recognition software.”

Cheng was born in Cairns, Queensland, and grew up in housing commission with her brother and single mother, who worked as a hotel room cleaner. Armed with a high QCE mark and a love of maths and science, she decided to study mechatronics and computer science at the University of Melbourne.

Her first shock was the low number of women studying engineering. At school, she was conscious that few girls shared her interest in maths, science and solving problems in general, but expected there would be more girls like herself from around Australia once she reached university.

“Engineering is all around us, so it’s important that the engineers who create our world are as diverse as the people who are in it.”

The idea for Robogals was born, and in just her second year at university it became a reality as Cheng and other students started running robotics workshops in schools to encourage more girls interested in engineering and technology careers. Since then, the organisation has conducted thousands of workshops in schools and established chapters around the world. She still talks to students at school when she can.

Marita Cheng and her Teleport device at the Engineers Australia office in Melbourne.

“I tell them about cool technology projects around the world and I show them projects that I’ve been working on, so I tell them about the robot arm and I tell them about Teleport,” she said.

“I share my story of how I started it all up and they can see that if I can do it then they can do it.”

She said girls are drawn to helping people and that is what they focus on in the workshops.

“That’s something we really try to emphasise, real-world problems, problems that help people,” Cheng said.

“I tell them that it’s about just doing a small thing over and over again, and then once you’ve figured out how to do that small thing, scaling it up and repeating it on a larger scale.”

In fact, scale was one of her motivations for studying engineering in the first place.

“I liked the idea of helping millions of people using great technologies, rather than just helping one person at a time. We can scale the impact of how you help people with engineering,” she said.

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