 There is no way I could have imagined graduating college that I would be doing work for olfactory virtual reality, let alone having even known that virtual reality was really something that would be in the consumer hands at this stage. I'm Sarah Socia, I'm the VP of Centware at OVR Technology. So as VP of Centware, I do the formulations, I also help out with the research efforts and kind of lend a scientific lens for just various things that the company is doing. OVR stands for Olfactory Virtual Reality. There are three components of our platform, which is called the Architecture of Cent. There is the hardware, the software and the Centware, which is the part that I work on. There's a level of excitement when I tell people what I do, but it's also a bit of confusion because it's really hard to kind of like conceptualize what OVR does. But when people end up experiencing it for the first time and really being able to have that experience of olfactory virtual reality, a lot of buttons start clicking in their mind where they end up coming out of the experience with so many different ideas of how it can be applied. It's a mix of art and science for creating sense of being able to kind of have that like sensory analysis and maybe going out in the field and smelling like various flowers or trees. And then also then there's like also the chemistry side of things and then coming back and using that mix of art and science to test out what works and then making those adjustments. Olfaction is connected to your limbic system. It is your only sense directly connected to your limbic system, which is involved in like memory and emotion. And so by being able to tap into those things in the virtual world, it is very powerful. Because it is a tool and as a tool by increasing the fidelity of it, a VR experience is not just like something that you saw but something that you were in and that level of olfaction really helps drive that home. I graduated in 2017. I studied neuroscience and double-minored in chemistry and psychology. My sophomore year I joined a lab Dr. Eugene Delay doing work on the taste system and chemotherapy. And so like having that experience at UVM of undergraduate research really translates to understanding how kind of a lab functions and works which is directly applicable to what I'm doing now. So it was very invaluable experience there. Aside from just the lab experience of also just creating a scientific lens to view work just in general and the world at large.