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Concussion study: UBC's Thunderbirds use their heads to advance science

UBC football players are helping advance the science around concussions using their own heads.

Researchers use sensor stickers to probe how athletes' brains function during hits

UBC Thunderbirds running back Brandon "Banger" Deschamps wears a head impact sensor. (Bob Frid/UBC Thunderbirds)

UBC football players are helping advance the science around concussions using their own heads.

When the Thunderbirds take to the field for the national semi-finals today a number of them will be wearing head sensors that take measurements to help researchers unravel the impact of concussions on athletes.

"What we're trying to do isget a little more info on what's occurring in head trauma and football," said Harrison Brown, a PhD candidate at UBC in Kinesiology.

The study is also uncovering patterns or trends, such as, "thedifferences between positions, practices and games, for example," Brown said.

More than a dozen players, including the starting quarterback and starting runningback,volunteered for the study, fundedby the Canadian ChiropracticResearch Foundation.

Brown said sensors called "xPatches" an impact sensing patchare put behind the players' ears and wornduring practices and games.

Researchers study the number, and the intensity, of hits players take, as well as the effects.

So, while the UBC Thunderbirds take on St. Francis Xavier's X-men in the hopes of advancing to the Vanier Cup, they will advance science no matter what the final score of the game.

The results of the 2-year study are expected next spring.