Sterling Heights’ Spotlight Labs Introduces Helmet Insert to Help Military Pilots

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Sterling Heights’ Spotlight Labs’ SPYDR hypoxia sensor, a helmet insert that gathers human biometric and aircraft condition data and tells it to the pilot, is now available. // Photograph Courtesy of Spotlight Labs

Spotlight Labs in Sterling Heights today announced the immediate availability of its SPYDR hypoxia sensor, a fully developed helmet insert that gathers human biometric and aircraft condition data, detects and warns pilots of their imminent incapacitation, and records high-fidelity flight data for post-flight analysis and improved flight outcomes.

The SPYDR is U.S. Air Force flight proven and can be used immediately to prevent loss of life and improve pilot performance and training, according to the veteran-owned company.

“Everything in tactical aviation is instrumented — except the pilot,” says Brian Bradke, a biomedical engineer, F-16 pilot, and lead engineer for biometrics at Spotlight Labs. “The SPYDR instruments the operator — giving individual pilots tools for safety and performance in flight, while collecting valuable data that will fuel improved performance and increased risk mitigation for the pilot community as a whole. This device is an immediately available, fairly priced solution to an extremely expensive problem that has long plagued our military.”

The SPYDR was developed by a team of former fighter pilots and engineers at Spotlight Labs in response to increasing concern among pilots after several hypoxia-related crashes and fatalities. Initially intended for a commercial application, the device was developed, tested, and manufactured with private, non-government research and development funds. After the grounding of the T-6 training fleet by the U.S. Air Force, Spotlight Labs executed destructive testing, electromagnetic interference testing, and acoustic testing on the SPYDR.

Spotlight Labs executed physical demonstrations in an altitude chamber, a centrifuge, and a ground-based restricted oxygen breathing device. After meeting or exceeding military specification in all cases and gaining approval for flight in Air Force aircraft, the SPYDR was incorporated into more than 100 training flights in T-6 aircraft at two Air Force bases to demonstrate its efficacy.

SPYDR replaces the existing earcups in an aviation helmet, which makes its impact and presence transparent to the pilot. There also is no impact to the physical aircraft to deploy the device, nor does it contain any transmitters or receivers. The device includes three sensors and a bone-conducting transducer that collects data at relevant physiological points on the neck and head. The device quantifies pilot degradation as it happens and provides a definitive warning to pilots of their condition.

It continuously records data multiple times per second. Individual data is protected and distributed confidentially to pilots, who can assess their performance and degradation during specific phases of flight and correlated to in-flight events. Because the SPYDR also measures aircraft parameters, the pilot and the maintenance crew can draw correlations between times of degradation and improvement, as well as between physiological events to specific aircraft parameters.

Aggregate data is provided to the military command structure for use in reducing risk and improving performance for future tactical flight. Device data is analyzed using machine learning and artificial intelligence techniques that demonstrate increases or decreases in individual performance, workload and stress factors. This data can be incorporated to quantify spikes in risk for specific aircraft, units, mission types, geography, or other flight elements.