Mary Lou Jepsen
Mary Lou Jepsen | |
|---|---|
Jepsen in 2025 | |
| Alma mater | Brown University and MIT |
| Occupations | technologist, entrepreneur |
| Website | MaryLouJepsen.com |
Mary Lou Jepsen is an American technologist and entrepreneur in the field of medical technology and computational imaging. She is the founder and Executive Chairman of Openwater,[1] a medical technology company. Openwater’s devices[2] are used in clinical research programs across various medical fields.
Jepsen is known for her work in the design and commercialization of display, projection and imaging systems. Her contributions include laptops, projection displays, televisions, screens, touch-enabled systems, holographic and light-field displays, and other immersive visual technologies.[3]
She has held faculty, research, and executive engineering roles at the MIT Media Lab, Google, Meta (Facebook), Intel. She was also the co-founder, chief technology officer and Chief Architect of the former nonprofit initiative One Laptop per Child.
Early life & education
Jepsen earned undergraduate degrees from Brown University, receiving a Sc.B. in Electrical Engineering (with Honors) and an A.B. in Studio Art.[4] In 1989, she earned a M.S. from the MIT Media Lab, where she conducted research in holographic imaging and displays systems, and co-created one of the first fully computed and digital holographic video systems, demonstrating dynamic three-dimensional holographic synthesis and reconstruction.[5] This system inspired a new subfield of holographic video and received numerous awards.[6]
Jepsen later earned a Ph.D. from Brown University in Optical Sciences where her graduate work focused applied optics, materials and imaging systems. She created large-area electronically tunable meta materials - liquid crystal filled sub-wavelength diffractive structures and a new theory of mathematically defining their design and performance[7][8] She also demonstrated that it was technically feasible – but agreed it was culturally unacceptable – to project TV images on the Moon's surface.[9]
Career
Academic & research appointments
Prior to completing her doctorate, Jepsen held international academic and research appointments. She served as a computer science professor at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT) in Australia, where she taught and conducted research in three-dimensional computer graphics.[10]
She was a Senior Fellow at the Academy of Media Arts Cologne in Germany, where she worked on display holography and experimental visual systems. She has created some of the largest ambient displays ever. In Cologne, she built a holographic replica of pre-existing buildings in the city's historic district and created a holographic display encompassing a city block.[11][12]
Jepsen was also a San Diego Fellow at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD), where she conducted research in early quantum and optical computing, using holographic techniques for computation and information processing.[13]
MicroDisplay Corp. & Intel
Jepsen co-founded MicroDisplay Corporation and served as its Chief Technology Officer, leading the development of the world’s first low-cost, single-panel microdisplay technology. Under her technical leadership, the company designed and built a manufacturing facility in Richmond, California, enabling volume production of compact, high-resolution microdisplay devices.[14][15]
Jepsen later joined Intel, where she served as Chief Technology Officer of Intel’s Display Division, leading technology strategy and development across display and imaging systems spanning microdisplays, projection architectures, flat-panel displays, and semiconductor integration.[16]
MIT Media Lab & One Laptop per Child
Jepsen co-founded the nonprofit initiative One Laptop per Child and served as its chief architect and chief technology officer and its first employee. The organization had the goal of ttransforming education for children around the world by creating and distributing educational devices for the developing world, and by creating software and content for those devices.She led the design and system architecture of the $100 laptop, integrating display technology, power management, networking, and manufacturing into a deployable platform an order of magnitude cheaper than laptops of the day.[17][18]
The OLPC laptop achieved the lowest power consumption of any laptop, outdoor usability including innovative sunlight readable screen invention, incorporated mesh networking, and supported alternative charging methods, enabling large-scale global deployment. OLPC generated over a billion dollars in cumulative revenue, reflecting the scale at which the system was manufactured and deployed, and influenced the emergence of low-cost, mobile computing platforms. Devices remain in use in multiple countries more than two decades later.[19][20][21]
Many of the architectural approaches pioneered at OLPC later appeared, in adapted form, across mainstream mobile computing platforms.[22] Google CEO Sundar Pichai credits the $100 laptop as the progenitor of Chromebooks.[23]
Pixel Qi & Google
Building on her work at OLPC and the Media Lab, Jepsen founded Pixel Qi, a display technology company focused on hybrid and transflective display systems for laptops, tablets, and mobile devices. She was also the company's CEO.[24][25] Pixel Qi was later absorbed by Google.[26][27]
At Google, Jepsen worked closely with the company’s founders, including Sergey Brin, and served in executive engineering roles. She founded, invented, and led multiple internal hardware initiatives spanning advanced display and imaging systems integrated with Android. Among these was “Lego TV,” a modular display system consisting of seamless, snap-together high-resolution screens designed to form scalable video walls.[28][29]
Meta (Facebook) & Oculus
Jepsen later joined Facebook (now Meta), where she served as Executive Director of Engineering at Facebook and Oculus.[30] She made foundational contributions to the development of the Oculus Quest 2, a standalone virtual-reality headset that has sold more than 20 million units worldwide.[31] She also led research and prototype development for next-generation AR and VR systems, including sunglass-form-factor devices featuring wide field of view, foveated rendering, and novel tileable projection architectures designed to project imagery onto the retina.[32]
Experimental & large scale visual systems
Alongside commercial development, Jepsen has pursued experimental projects exploring perception, communication, and scale in visual systems, including Moon-TV and research into city-block-scale holographic and light-field displays.[33][34]
Openwater
In 2016, Jepsen founded Openwater, a medical technology company developing noninvasive diagnostic, therapeutic and brain computer interface platforms that integrate focused ultrasound, infrared optics, and computational imaging.
The company’s technology enables selective, cell-level interactions within biological tissue without surgical intervention, combining phase-controlled ultrasound with optical sensing and computation. Devices are entering clinical research programs regarding the treatment of cancer, neurological and psychiatric disorders, neuro-degenerative diseases, covid and long covid, cardiovascular disease. They are also used in research into brain–computer interfaces and veterinary medicine.[35][36][37] The aspiration of the firm's work is to use the same technology set for many cancers, mental diseases and cardiovascular disease. Its progress in 2024 shrank initial, cart-sized units to a small wearable with a console, and lowering price 100-fold, and in 2025 moved to volume production in Taiwan.[38]
In a 2020 online call, Dr. Jepsen stated that Openwater devices were in the prototyping phase with alpha kits then expected August 2020. The Openwater website stated in 2020: "We are starting hospital studies on humans for use as a stroke detector at the end of 2020."[39][40] The devices first went into human studies at Hartford Hospital in 2020, and were then refined for the next few years with a multi-center study at Brown University and the University of Pennsylvania.[41][42][43]
In addition, the company developed a low-intensity focused ultrasound platform that they tested at UCLA in pre-clinical work showing the ability to treat glioblastoma in both organoids and then mice using a resonant frequency yet diagnostic dose of ultrasound that melted away the glioblastoma tumors in mice.[44]
In parallel, Openwater developed and then performed clinical trials at the University of Arizona using a set of therapeutic units it developed. Using these units nearly half of the participants in the trial went into remission of severe depression. These devices were tuned via software to different harmonic frequencies of low-intensity focused ultrasound that had the effect of quelling the over-firing neurons.[45][46]
As of 2020, the devices were slated to come out sometime in 2021, which they did for clinical trials and human testing at a variety of medical institutes as cited above, but the new and improved low-cost wearable systems were first made for the end of 2024 and scheduled for volume production in 2025.[38]
In an open "Founder's Letter" in January 2024,[47] Dr. Mary Lou Jepsen announced having raised "$54 million in the past several months bringing the total to $100M raised" to create an AGPL licensed open source platform that can slash the cost of disease treatment.
Board Service
- Chairman of the Board of Openwater.health since 2016
- Board director Lear Corporation since 2016. Largest US-based automotive suppler.[48]
- Board director UC Berkeley College of Computing, Data Science, and Society since inception.[49]
- Member of Council of the Focused Ultrasound Foundation.[50]
- Previous she has served on many boards and task forces. She also has broad foreign and domestic advisory experience in Peru, China, Uruguay, Taiwan, Brazil and the United States.[51]
Awards and recognitions
- 100 Most Influential People in the World (Time magazine's "Time 100").[52]
- Technology Pioneer 2019 (World Economic Forum)[53]
- 2018 Forbes America's Top 50 Women In Tech[54]
- 2018 Forbes 50 over 50[55]
- One of 2013's top 10 thinkers (as named by CNN),[56] for her work in rethinking functional brain imaging with compact systems that could lead to direct communication via human thought.
- One of the top 50 female computer scientists of all time (as determined by the Anita Borg Institute).[57]
- In 2014 she received an honorary Doctorate of Science from Brown University.[58]
- Edwin H. Land Medal from the Optical Society (OSA).[59]
- Canada's Athabasca University awarded Jepsen an honorary doctorate in 2008.[60]
- Fellow of the Optical Society (OSA).[61]
- Brown University's top alumni awards: Horace Mann Medal (awarded by Brown Graduate School) and BEAM award (awarded by Brown University School of Engineering).[62][63]
- 2011 Award for Innovation[64] from the Anita Borg Institute.[65]
- 2010 World Technology Award: for individual contributions to hardware[66]
- 2010 Display of the year award - Society for Information Display (SID)[67]
- 2010 IEEE ACE Award Grand Prize for best emerging technology (awarded to Pixel Qi)[68]
- 2008 Design of the year award - London Design Museum[69]
- 2007 INDEX Design Award - €100,000 for OLPC $100 laptop[70]
She has also received numerous awards for the work she did at One Laptop per Child and has been named to many other "top" lists in computing by Fast Company, New York Times, IEEE Spectrum and others.
Personal life
Jepsen is married to John Patrick Conor Ryan, formerly a partner at Monitor Group. In 1995, she suffered from a pituitary gland tumor and had it removed and thus suffers from panhypopituitarism, requiring a twice-daily regimen of hormone replacement;[71] her personal description of this and the ongoing challenges she faces was published in the New York Times.[72]
References
- ^ "Mary Lou Jepsen on Life Post-Facebook and New Startup, "Open Water"". Edge.org. May 6, 2016. Retrieved April 13, 2017.
- ^ "Device Diva: Openwater Uses Cell Phone Chips to Open-Source Medical Devices, "Open Water"". Inside Precision Medicine. August 27, 2024. Retrieved August 27, 2024.
- ^ "The CNN 10: Thinkers". CNN. Retrieved October 5, 2014.
- ^ "Mary Lou Jepsen to Receive Honorary Degree". Brown University.
- ^ DSpace@MIT: Holographic video: design and implementation of a display system (Thesis). Dspace.mit.edu. 1989. hdl:1721.1/14173.
- ^ "Holography Pioneer Stephen A. Benton". MIT Video. MIT. Retrieved October 5, 2014.
- ^ "Historical Facts about Women in Computing: Mary Lou Jepsen". cssu-bg.org. Archived from the original on December 13, 2012.
- ^ Jepsen, Mary Lou (1997). Liquid crystal filled diffraction gratings (PhD thesis). Brown University. Bibcode:1997PhDT........11J.
- ^ "Full transcript: Mary Lou Jepsen on Too Embarrassed to Ask, live at SXSW". Vox Media. March 30, 2017.
- ^ "Mary Lou Jepsen On Building $100 Laptops And Now Raising $100 Million To Develop Wearable Imaging Devices And Therapeutic Tools". Alejandro Cremades.
- ^ "Fellows an der KHM: aktuell". www.KHM.de.
- ^ "OPTICAL TRANSFER OF MASTER HOLOGRAM WITH 20 METER DEPTH" (PDF). www.holonet.khm.de. SPIE. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 18, 2011.
- ^ "Mary Lou Jepsen - Keynote speaker at SPIE Annual Meeting 2006 San Diego" (PDF). SPIE.
- ^ "The MicroDisplay Corporation: A Study of a Growing Company" (PDF). Universita Degli Studi di Padova.
- ^ Aratani, Lauren. "How This Former MIT Professor And Google Engineer Used Holograms To Build A 28 Million dollar Startup". Forbes.
- ^ "Mary Lou Jepsen: Laptops for All". IEEE. February 2007. Retrieved October 5, 2014.
- ^ "Groklaw interview with Mary Lou Jepsen". Groklaw.net. Archived from the original on May 5, 2010. Retrieved October 5, 2014.
- ^ "Newsweek story on Jepsen". Newsweek.com. March 2008. Retrieved October 5, 2014.
- ^ "6 minute video with Jepsen describing green features of the XO Laptop, 1 February 2008". Link.brightcove.com. Archived from the original on October 14, 2008. Retrieved October 5, 2014.
- ^ "IEEE-USA InSight - Career & Policy Articles for Engineers and Tech Pros". www.todaysengineer.org. Archived from the original on October 2, 2006.
- ^ Markoff, John (November 30, 2006). "Article on OLPC laptop featuring Jepsen's contributions". The New York Times. Retrieved October 5, 2014.
- ^ "The Grill: Pixel Qi's Mary Lou Jepsen on OLPC and the future of display technology". Computer World. January 19, 2009. Archived from the original on February 27, 2009. Retrieved April 13, 2017.
- ^ "Sundar Pichai: "Reward Effort, Not Outcomes". Stanford. February 7, 2022.
- ^ "OLPC CTO Mary Lou Jepsen quits nonprofit effort". Computer World. December 31, 2007. Archived from the original on January 4, 2008. Retrieved April 13, 2017.
- ^ "Pixel Qi eyes Taiwan". Digitimes.com. July 10, 2008. Retrieved October 5, 2014. (subscription required)
- ^ Nasir, Farhat. "Google X? Google Launches "Solve for X" For Discussing Radical Ideas to Solve World Problems". Hitechanalogy. Archived from the original on November 19, 2013. Retrieved December 16, 2014.
- ^ "Pixle Qi Has Seemingly Vanished Without a Trace". SlashGear. January 13, 2015.
- ^ Winkler, Rolfe; Barr, Alistair (October 3, 2014). "Google Working on Large-Scale Video Displays". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved August 22, 2018.
- ^ "Google Is Inventing Screens That Snap Together Like Lego". Co.Design. Fast Design. October 6, 2014.
- ^ "Dr Mary Lou Jepsen".
- ^ "TMeta Has Sold Nearly 20 Million Quest Headsets". UploadVR. March 2023. Retrieved March 1, 2023.
- ^ "Patents by Inventor Mary Lou Jepsen". Justia. Retrieved January 15, 2026.
- ^ "OPTICAL TRANSFER OF MASTER HOLOGRAM WITH 20 METER DEPTH" (PDF). www.holonet.khm.de. SPIE. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 18, 2011.
- ^ "Mary Lou Jepsen Ars Electronica Transcript" (PDF). Ars Technica.
- ^ "TED 2018: Thought-Reading Machines and the Death of Love". WIRED. Retrieved July 29, 2018.
- ^ Jepsen, Mary Lou (August 24, 2018). "TED2018 talk". TED.com. TED. Retrieved August 25, 2018.
- ^ "Former Facebook exec Mary Lou Jepsen said her new company will make telepathy possible. But first, it's going to upend the medical-imaging industry". BusinessInsider.com. Retrieved February 7, 2019.
- ^ a b Red Light & Ultrasound Revolution in Healthcare: Dr Mary Lou Jepsen Interview. Modern Healthspan. January 1, 2025 – via YouTube.
- ^ "Technology OPENWATER San Francisco".
- ^ Mary Lou Jepsen + Early Disease Detection and BCI. Archived from the original on December 11, 2021.
- ^ Favilla, C. G.; Carter, S.; Hartl, B.; Gitlevich, R.; Mullen, M. T.; Yodh, A. G.; Baker, W. B.; Konecky, S. (March 8, 2024). "Validation of the Openwater wearable optical system: cerebral hemodynamic monitoring during a breath-hold maneuver, "Open Water"". Neurophotonics. 11 (1) 015008. doi:10.1117/1.NPh.11.1.015008. PMC 10923543. PMID 38464864.
- ^ Favilla, C. G.; Baird, G. L.; Grama, K.; Konecky, S.; Carter, S.; Smith, W.; Gitlevich, R.; Lebron-Cruz, A.; Yodh, A. G.; McTaggart, R. A. (March 21, 2024). "Portable cerebral blood flow monitor to detect large vessel occlusion in patients with suspected stroke, "Open Water"". Journal of NeuroInterventional Surgery. 17 (4): 388–393. doi:10.1136/jnis-2024-021536. PMC 11415534. PMID 38514189.
- ^ "Portable Optical Blood Flow Monitor for the Detection of Large Vessel Occlusion, "Open Water"". February 7, 2024.
- ^ "Preclinical Oncolysis Results using Low Intensity Ultrasound, "Open Water"" (PDF). GitHub. December 20, 2023.
- ^ Bawiec, C. R.; Hollender, P. J.; Ornellas, S. B.; Schachtner, J. N.; Dahill-Fuchel, J. F.; Konecky, S. D.; Allen JJB (October 24, 2024). "A wearable, steerable, transcranial low-intensity focused ultrasound system, "Open Water"". Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine. 44 (2): 239–261. doi:10.1002/jum.16600. PMC 11719763. PMID 39449176.
- ^ Schachtner, Jessica N.; Dahill-Fuchel, Jacob F.; Allen, Katja E.; Bawiec, Christopher R.; Hollender, Peter J.; Ornellas, Sarah B.; Konecky, Soren D.; Achrol, Achal S.; Allen, John J.B. (2025). "Transcranial focused ultrasound targeting the default mode network for the treatment of depression". Frontiers in Psychiatry. 16 1451828. doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2025.1451828. medRxiv 10.1101/2024.05.16.24307494. PMC 12006932. PMID 40256163.
- ^ "OpenWater Founder's Letter". Archived from the original on January 29, 2024. Retrieved January 29, 2024.
- ^ "Dr. Mary Lou Jepsen". Lear.
- ^ "College of Computing, Data Science, and Society (CDSS) Advisory Board". UC Berkeley.
- ^ "Mary Lou Jepsen, PhD, Joins Foundation's Council". Focused Ultrasound Foundation. August 26, 2021.
- ^ "Dr. Mary Lou Jepsen". Lear.
- ^ Kahle, Brewster (May 12, 2008). "Scientists and Thinkers". Time. Time Magazine.
- ^ "Openwater — Technology Pioneers 2019". World Economic Forum.
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- ^ "Mary Lou Jepsen". Forbes.
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- ^ "Profiles of Technical Women: Famous Women in Computer Science". Anita Borg Institute. Archived from the original on March 8, 2013. Retrieved April 13, 2017.
- ^ "Brown confers nine honorary degrees". Brown University. May 25, 2014. Retrieved May 27, 2014.
- ^ "Edwin H. Land Medal". Osa.org. Retrieved October 5, 2014.
- ^ "Open Magazine, Fall / Winter 2008, Athabasca University". Athabasca University. November 13, 2008. Archived from the original on December 2, 2024. Retrieved August 25, 2018.
- ^ "2012 Fellows – Awards & Grants – The Optical Society". Osa.org. Retrieved October 5, 2014.
- ^ "BEAM Award Winners". Brown University. Retrieved October 5, 2014.
- ^ "Horace Mann Medal". Brown University. Retrieved October 5, 2014.
- ^ "ABIE award". Anita Borg Institute. February 2, 2017. Archived from the original on August 22, 2018. Retrieved September 5, 2018.
- ^ "Mary Lou Jepsen - AnitaB.org". Anita Borg Institute. February 2, 2017. Archived from the original on August 7, 2017. Retrieved August 7, 2017.
- ^ "World Technology Awards Current and Previous Awards". World Technology Awards.
- ^ "Display Industry Awards". sid.org.
- ^ "Pixel Qi: The Screen Tech Behind CES' Most Buzzworthy Gadgets". Fast Company. Fast Company. January 6, 2010.
- ^ "Category winners of the designs of the year award 2008". Dezeen. March 13, 2008.
- ^ "Index award 2008 winners announced". Dezeen. August 25, 2007.
- ^ "Mary Lou Jepsen - Inspiring". February 12, 2007. Retrieved July 2, 2023.
- ^ Jepsen, Mary Lou (November 23, 2013). "Bringing Back My Real Self With Hormones". The New York Times. Retrieved October 5, 2014.
External links
- Official website
- Mary Lou Jepsen at TED
- Mary Lou Jepsen Archived September 24, 2016, at the Wayback Machine on Google Scholar
- Oculus Has Hired Mary Lou Jepsen Away From Google X