nose device
a personal olfactory device designed specifically for someone with impaired or degraded smell — in this case for dad. the motivation is personal: someone who has lost or reduced their ability to smell food and environments is cut off from a major dimension of experience and safety (can't smell smoke, gas leaks, spoiled food). existing solutions are medical and expensive; consumer options barely exist.
the device would do one or more of the following: amplify weak olfactory signals, classify smells and present them in an alternate modality (audio or haptic feedback describing what's present), or compensate for missing sensory input through a kind of olfactory prosthetic. the electronic nose direction (enose) is the most technically tractable — existing sensor arrays can classify a range of common smells, and paired with a lightweight haptic or audio output, could give someone back meaningful information about their environment even if they can't perceive the raw smell.
related: smell resetter, sensor capturer, acoustic drone detection