He built the "Gradual Recovery Mutual Aid Home" big data platform, connected top global scientific research teams, promoted the implementation of nearly a hundred research projects, and helped more than a dozen drug pipelines achieve clinical breakthroughs. Even in the terminal stage of his illness, he continues to work every day with an eye-tracking device, uses AI technology to accelerate research progress, and builds a large-scale ALS patient cohort. This persistence beyond personal life and death not only injects momentum into ALS treatment but also interprets the most touching power of life.