Komori Is at Epilepsy Pipeline Today
Dovy Paukstys
Founder, Komori Care

Important: Komori does not detect seizures, and Komori is not for epilepsy patients. The consumer product is a contactless wellness monitor. It is not a medical device, is not FDA-cleared, and is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any condition. The epilepsy and SUDEP-related work referenced here is investigational research conducted separately with clinical and research partners under appropriate protocols. Households living with epilepsy should work with their neurologist and rely on clinically validated seizure-detection devices.
I'm writing this from the Epilepsy Pipeline Conference in Leesburg, Virginia. Coffee is out, the poster boards are up, and the room has that early-conference hum where everyone is half-looking for someone they know and half-looking for the thing they didn't expect to learn.
Komori is here today, Thursday, June 18, 2026. I'm presenting today, and the poster is up today and tomorrow, June 18-19.
If you're here, come say hi.

What I'm presenting
The poster is about a contactless radar system for personalized nighttime movement-pattern monitoring. That's the formal title.
The plain version: we're trying to understand the night without asking people to wear something and without putting a camera in the bedroom.
Komori uses contactless sensing, including 60 GHz radar, with a user-defined alerting model. The user-defined part matters. A lot of systems assume the device knows what matters. I don't buy that. Families, clinicians, and researchers often know exactly what pattern they care about. The hard part is giving them a way to mark it, measure it, and study it without turning the bedroom into a surveillance room.
That is the problem I'm here to talk about.
Why this conference
Pipeline is the right room for this conversation because it sits between science, families, foundations, and industry. That mix is rare.
The clinical world knows how serious nighttime epilepsy risk is. Families know the feeling of listening all night. Foundations know how hard it is to move from a good idea to something that can actually be validated. Industry knows the ugly middle, hardware, studies, data quality, privacy, cost, regulatory posture, all the stuff that makes an idea either survive or die.
That's the middle I'm trying to build through.
I'm not here to say we solved it. We haven't. I'm here because the right next step is partnership. Better sites. Better protocols. Better validation. Better criticism from people who live in this problem every day.

What we're looking for
We're looking for partners.
Clinical and research partners who can help evaluate contactless sensing under real protocols. EMUs, pediatric sleep labs, epilepsy centers, and teams with vEEG or PSG experience are the obvious fit.
Foundation and advocacy partners who understand the gap between what families need at night and what the current toolset gives them.
Pilot partners who can help us test the boring but critical parts too: setup, adherence, data review, false alarms, privacy expectations, and what people actually do with a nightly report after the novelty wears off.
That last part matters. A device that looks good in a demo and annoys people at 2 AM is not a solution. It's just another thing on the nightstand.
Come find me
If you're at Epilepsy Pipeline today or tomorrow, I'll be around the poster and in sessions. The poster has the Komori logo at the top left and a QR code at the top right. Hard to miss, thankfully.
The conference landing page has the slide deck, poster context, and research brief: komoricare.com/conferences/pipeline-2026.
Or just email me: hello@komoricare.com.
I'm looking forward to meeting everyone. Truly. This is one of those rooms where the hallway conversations may matter as much as the scheduled ones.
Let's see who wants to build the next part with us.
-- Dovy
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