This article may lend undue weight to a specific company (the article is like a plug for that company). (July 2024) |
MIPS (Multi-directional Impact Protection System) is a head-protection system designed to enhance the safety of various helmets. Rotational motion results in shearing and/or stretching of brain tissue and increases the risk of brain injuries.[1] The technology was developed by specialists at the KTH Royal Institute of Technology and a brain surgeon at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden, in 1996.[2]
Rotational motion
editRotational motion is the result of the brain continuing to move or stretch after the head has come to a quick and sudden stop following an angled impact.[3]
In a helmet equipped with the MIPS safety system, a low-friction layer allows the helmet to slide relative to the head, resulting in a reduction of the rotational motion that may otherwise be transmitted to the brain. In this way, the MIPS approach mimics the natural safety system of the human head.[4]
History
editTogether with Royal Institute of Technology researcher Peter Halldin, Hans von Holst developed a technology that was designed to provide more effective protection against brain trauma.[2] To evaluate the risk of different types of head injuries and to simulate impacts where a person is wearing a helmet, they used the Finite Element Model, developed by Svein Klein, Professor at Sweden’s Royal Institute of Technology (KTH).[5] After thoroughly evaluating the brain anatomy, physiology, and combining their years of testing and expertise, von Holst and Halldin produced what is now known as the MIPS Brain Protection System, a technology that mimics the brain’s own protective structure.[2]
The company MIPS AB was founded in 2001 by five specialists in the biomechanics of the KTH Royal Institute of Technology. Following its inception in 2001, MIPS AB evolved from concept to product, introducing the technology in an equestrian helmet 2007. At that time MIPS had their own helmet model but they changed their business model to be an ingredient brand, offering their product to existing helmet brands. As MIPS grew internationally, it debuted the ‘Yellow Dot’ branding in 2009.
In 2010, MIPS AB expanded into the bike and snow helmet industries, gaining widespread acceptance as both the technology, and awareness of head trauma became increasingly recognized in similarly risky sports.
In early 2014, one of the world’s largest helmet manufacturers, BRG Sports, Inc. and MIPS AB entered into a formal partnership after several years of sharing their technology, offering MIPS’ technology to a much wider global audience. Since then, MIPS AB has added several new brands to its catalog and has expanded to the American, European and Chinese markets.
In 2019, the founders Peter Halldin, Hans von Holst and Svein Kleiven received the Polhem Prize, the oldest and most prestigious technical Swedish award.[6]
References
edit- ^ "Road.cc/all you need to know about MIPS". Road.cc. Retrieved 2020-04-21.
- ^ a b c "Innovation — MIPS History". mipsprotection.com. Retrieved 2020-03-02.
- ^ "MIPS". sweetprotection.com. Retrieved 2020-03-02.
- ^ Mark Sutton (2019-12-19). "The scientific case for helmet safety: data, accuracy, and what we can measure". cyclingindustry.news. Retrieved 2020-04-23.
- ^ "Innovation — FE Model". mipsprotection.com. Retrieved 2020-03-02.
- ^ "MIPS Protection/How MIPS works". mipsprotection.com. Retrieved 2020-03-01.