 I'm in the booth of a company called Special Needs Wear and I'm talking to Ankit Agrawal and he's going to tell us about a pretty cool looking product. Great. Thank you, Allison. We're the creators behind Autismate, which is an integrated communication and behavior learning platform for individuals with autism. Okay. I'm going to start zooming down on the app because you're pretty face, but let's look at the app here. Great. Let's take a look at the app here. The way the app works is you can create these interactive visual tools that help develop both communication and behavioral skills. So, for example, the idea here, we're in the home location, you create interactive scenes of your own house. So, that's supposed to be your own kitchen? Your own kitchen, your own bathroom, your own bedroom. My house is not that clean. And you can tap on the kitchen, for example, and then make requests or use these hotspots to make the scene interactive. So, let's go open up the fridge and you can request some things to eat. For example, a banana. May I have a banana? Oh, I don't know if you guys could hear that, but it just said, may I have a banana? So, this is for the person with autism to go in and say, I know foods in the kitchen, foods in the fridge, I know where the bananas are. Yep, exactly. A non-verbal individual who's an early communicator can use these visual scenes very early on to begin communicating. Where they might not be able to say banana or say kitchen or refrigerator. Exactly. Without really having some of those language capabilities, right off the bat you're able to communicate. Then we progress you to more advanced forms of communication. Here you're starting to see a choice board of different options that you might have in your kitchen. And then ultimately to a sentence building approach where you can create these interactive sentences to put some things on. So, those who are only listening, we started with a picture of the kitchen where we tapped on the fridge and then tapped on bananas. Now we've gone up to where we've got a grid of like, what is it? Five by four different options here of what to request to eat. They're little drawings now. Correct, correct. And this is more advanced but requires kind of an understanding of language and the idea is we progress you through the system. Additionally, we have a number of behavioral learning tools like videos for video modeling. So now we're looking at a video of someone washing their hands. That's correct. Additionally, we provide additional schedules. So here we're doing a visual schedule of brushing your teeth. No, no, hang on. If I'm the kid that's walking around with this thing requesting a banana, I'm never going to push that brush my teeth button, right? That's correct. That'd be something that, you know, you'd want to use together with the parent or caregiver and kind of use these visual prompts and what are the steps to properly brush your teeth. So first you're going to get the toothpaste. Then you're going to get your toothbrush. Then you're going to put the toothpaste on the toothbrush. And like this, you can kind of sequence through the different steps. Interactive features like a visual timer. So now we're going to brush our teeth for one minute. Oh, minute? And the child has the ability to kind of give the visual cue when that minute is over. Oh, nice. Nice. So what we're seeing is a picture of the kid brushing the teeth and a kind of a timer thing in green going around the clock as a clock. Exactly. And then at the end I get the toys? Exactly. And then you can work towards an incentive of all this and send the toys. So I'm going to show now. This is very interesting. I've never seen anything quite like this for autism before. Usually it's more static storyboard looking kind of things to see pictures of your own house. Yeah. Like you said earlier, much more contextual, right? Yeah, it's much more contextual. You're bringing in the environmental cues that an individual with autism can relate to. There's research behind this and it's just much easier to understand especially for really communicators. Very cool. Well, thank you very much, Akron. How would someone find out more about Autismate? You can check out our website at www.autismate.com and learn more about this great new app. All right. Very good. Thank you very much. Thank you very much.