Can Technology Make Sports Safer?
We’re a nation of sports nuts. We rally around our favorite teams, deify athletes, and sustain a multi-billion-dollar industry built to celebrate athleticism and human endurance. As a result, the stakes are high for athletes to consistently outperform each other and their own prior outings, often at their own expense. Despite how effortless athletes make their performances look on the field, their bodies are constantly under duress, constantly on the verge of the next injury, often maximizing short-term glory at the expense of longer-term health and well-being.
Technologies ranging from high-tech helmets, mobile virtual players, training robots, and biometric data services are being deployed with an eye towards sidelining most sports injuries. Join us on Thursday, March 23, in Washington, D.C., to consider the effectiveness of these efforts to make sports safer, and our relationship as fans to the bravado sports culture that can at times romanticize injuries and view them as an integral part of the game.
The reception will begin at 5:30 pm; followed by the main program at 6:00 pm.
Future Tense is a partnership of Slate, New America, and Arizona State University.
Speakers:
Ellen Arruda, professor of mechanical engineering, biomedical engineering, and macromolecular science and engineering, University of Michigan
George Atallah, assistant executive director for external affairs, NFL Player's Association @GeorgeAtallah
Derek Belch, co-founder and CEO, STRIVR Labs @STRIVRlabs
Victoria Jackson, sports historian, Arizona State University @HistoryRunner
Josh Levin, executive editor, Slate @josh_levin
Roderick Moore Jr., vice president of sports performance, Catapult Sports @CoachRMooreJr
Nicholas Schmidle, staff writer, The New Yorker @nickschmidle
Kenneth Shropshire, director, Wharton Sports Business Initiative, University of Pennsylvania @kenshropshire
Buddy Teevens, head coach, Dartmouth Football @BTeevens