 Derek Rackley here at the Emory Sports Performance and Research Center just steps away from the Atlanta Falcons Training Center and today we're gonna look at how proximity and technology help the Falcons training staff diagnose injuries in record time. That we are literally about 75 yards away from the Atlanta Falcons training facility that's literally right across the street. They can go have an injury or the coach wants to take a look, the doc wants to take a look, they can walk over have it done and be back to practice in 10 minutes. So the difference in this MRI and every other one is they can actually move around. Why that's important? Sometimes we have like a concussion, we can have a disruption in our brain and our motor control. We want to measure that at a very precise level so we know when to return athletes back safely. So Derek now we're getting a picture of the athlete actually performing his test. If you look at this, this is his real-time biomechanics. So as I told you, you're normally supposed to lay still but we're measuring the brain. We're holding his brain still. Here you can see if you look over here, you can see some of his brain measurements being done in real time. But what we're also doing is looking at the structure of the muscle and the muscle morphology. So looking at how that muscle looks, how the structural quality of it, and importantly asymmetries, are there any residual deficits from that prior injury? We think we're going to be able to identify athletes at high risk of injury, but most importantly what we care about is preventing that injury. That wraps up our series on the intersection of medical technology and football. Be sure to check out our videos on VR recovery and skeletal tracking on the Atlanta Falcons YouTube channel. Thanks so much for watching.