 Both posters go upstairs, there's posters up there, and give a ticket to the poster that you like. So go around. If you take an engineering brain that has compassion or just a human-centered kind of a way, like we can fix everything. Feel like we can make everything better. My journey to becoming a professor, it's interesting. So I remember watching a show called MacGyver and thought it was fascinating how he would always find solutions to get out of trouble with the most obscure random items. And I just was fascinated. So I would say that definitely was a spark. When I was a sophomore at RPI, I took a class called Introduction to Engineering Design, and it was in that class that I remembered an idea that I had in third grade to build a double-dutch jump rope device that can replace people to turn the ropes. And the double-dutch machine was definitely the first time I saw something from an idea to a working prototype. But I started to realize that I wanted to think a little bit more beyond just traditional mechanical engineering. Engineering is usually focused on making a physical product or system of some kind. And if there's not a clear pathway towards that, then it's not an engineering problem. I like the challenge of stepping into uncomfortable places and asking questions that most people won't. For example, hair, just how can engineering impact hair care? Just because as a woman of color, black woman, hair, it's a big deal to a lot of us. When I became a professor, I collaborated with another faculty member, and so we worked together and did some things that garnered a lot of media attention because it was just different. Like, when do you see mechanical engineers working on hair? At the PhD level, I brought psychology into my work. Because I got outside of the traditional engineering box, I was allowed to tap into human problems, human things that resonated with me that caught my attention. Like, my compassionate design work, that was inspired by a conversation with a woman that counsels breast cancer survivors. She shared the story of one person that when she would go in to get a mammogram, she would say, it's me against the machine. And I just heard those words and I said, like, why are we creating things that people feel like is an enemy to them and it's so scary for them? So compassionate design, the framework was created to help engineers know how to think about end users in a certain way. And we call it compassionate design. So a person in the category of like the mammogram and radiation therapy, how do we design so that they have a sense of security? They're not feeling fearful. My motivation is some of the literal things engineering can do, yes, products, systems, but the analytical thinking that we can bring to social problems, like those things motivate me a lot.