
-
18-year-old Alex Yang founded an AI startup with students around the world he met online.
-
The team of high schoolers aims to improve Alzheimer's diagnostics through AI intervention.
-
Their startup launched an AI therapy product to help Alzheimer's patients with memory recall.
My typical morning starts around 3 a.m. I'm instantly met with Messenger notifications from web developers in California, GitHub pings from Florida, and a running document of research papers to read sent from Michigan. By 7:50 a.m. I'm off to class to live my life as an 18-year-old high school senior in Seoul.
This solitary ritual has become my strange normal after I founded an AI research and development startup with people all around the world, whom I've never met in person. My ambition was to improve Alzheimer's diagnostics, but I had no network, so I built one online.
I've always viewed Alzheimer's as a terrifying disease
Growing up, I heard stories about various family members battling Alzheimer's. I viewed the disease as something truly terrifying, which leaves behind only the shell of who someone once was.
I'd grown up knowing that someday, someone I love might disappear while still standing in front of me. In high school, this fear crystallized into something beyond passive acceptance.
I came across this competition, looking to fund ideas that can make health more accessible, and decided to apply.
BI's Young Geniuses series spotlights the next generation of founders, innovators, and thinkers who are trying to reshape industries and solve global challenges. See more stories from the series here, or reach out to editor Jess Orwig to share your story.
I knew I couldn't do the work alone. I had to find people beyond my network with diverse perspectives and skills capable of building something real together.
I started searching for partners by spending my time on internet forums and pitching my vision. I posted detailed research proposals on Discord servers and created GitHub repositories with preliminary code.
After a month of "nos," I got one "yes" from California. Then Florida. Then Michigan. Until there were six of us. We named ourselves Reteena (pronounced like "retina"), a deliberate wordplay symbolizing our mission to bring new vision to Alzheimer's diagnostics.
We became something none of us expected: a team of high schoolers from around the world who genuinely believed we could fix Alzheimer's.
My team and I decided to make Alzheimer's diagnostics more accessible and affordable
I didn't set out to target only high schoolers, but I was on servers mainly for students, and those were the people who responded.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Supreme Court case about ‘crisis pregnancy centers’ highlights debate over truthful advertising standards - 2
'The Boys' Season 5 premiere: How to watch for less, what to know about the final series and more - 3
A24's 'Backrooms' trailer shows endless fluorescent-lit spaces and terrifying mannequins melting into the floor - 4
Aluminum salts emerge as likely target as health officials scrutinize childhood vaccines - 5
'Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man' teaser trailer reveals Cillian Murphy's Tommy Shelby back in action
How to watch Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve with Ryan Seacrest: Start time, TV channel, performers and more
Ancient eggshells shed new light on crocodiles that hunted prey from trees
Mexico says a third of 130,000 missing people might be alive, fueling criticisms by families
75% of US adults may meet criteria for obesity under new definition, study finds
‘And then we saw the little head.’ Scientists witness rare sperm whale birth
Germany and trade unions kick off tough public-sector wage talks
the 6 Shrewd Beds for seniors: A Complete Survey
Figure out How to Get the Best Open Record Rewards
The most effective method to Examine a Cellular breakdown in the lungs Finding with Family












