She moved to
California around the 2000s, and began the development of
TeachAids at
Stanford University, where it was the focus of her doctoral research. In 2009, she founded it as a
nonprofit partnered with the university, working with a team of interdisciplinary experts for five years. Her research efforts developed a new approach to large-scale public HIV education which overcame taboos to vastly improve learning and usage rates. in 2015 The approach Sorcar created included combining 2D cartoon images (balancing clarity with comfort), a research-based translation and back-translation process, mnemonic devices, and voices of regionally-specific cultural icons, among other inventions. She has led TeachAids to produce many versions of its interactive HIV prevention software, which are now used in more than 80 countries. Her work has included directing
Bollywood actors
Amitabh Bachchan,
Shabana Azmi,
Shruti Haasan, and
Nagarjuna. ,
Festus Mogae launching TeachAids in Botswana in 2010 In 2018, she led the creation of a second TeachAids initiative for concussion education called CrashCourse, using a new pedagogical approach based on
virtual reality, and supported by
Steve Young,
Dick Gould,
Jim Plunkett,
Katie Ledecky, and other prominent sports figures. The initiative partnered with 23
United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee Sports Governing Bodies. Demonstrating high efficacy levels through research conducted at
Harvard University and Stanford, CrashCourse was used globally, particularly in Canada, Great Britain, and the United States. In 2011,
MIT Technology Review named Sorcar to their
TR35 list of the top 35 most innovative people in the world under 35. In 2022, she received the Public Service Award from the Association of Academic Physiatrists, joining past winners such as
Christopher Reeve. ==References==