Tag Archives: innovation

How ‘digital twins’ will revolutionise health – Newsroom

The concept of digital twins for engineering systems has been around for years, and the same principles can be applied to human health

Opinion: When an aircraft takes off on an international flight, its jet engines are under maximum stress the perfect time to be measuring as much as possible about how it is performing to predict any impending failure. In fact, that is exactly what happens, and those measurements are used to schedule any required maintenance when the plane lands at its destination.

The measurements are used with a mathematical model of the engine that includes all aspects of the mechanical, electrical and chemical processes needed to describe the function of the engine. The model is called a digital twin of the engine because it mimics every aspect of the engine. Moreover, the parameters of the model are specific to that particular engine and kept up to date by the diagnostic measurements on the engine during take-off.

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New engines are also designed and tested on a computer before construction starts because the laws of physics, embedded in the model, can accurately predict how the engine will behave. Similarly, for the whole aircraft, which can be flown in the computer long before it is built. All complex engineering systems, including cars and cell phones, are designed and tested with computer models before they are built.

So what about a human digital twin? Could we not have a model of our own bodies, updated by regular diagnostic testing (under stressed conditions, such as exercise) and, given our particular genetic makeup and environment influences, used to prevent adverse consequences of inherited or acquired traits? Perhaps it could also be used if needed to help design optimal therapeutic interventions for an individual.

Biology is clearly extremely complex but it too has to obey the laws of physics and chemistry, so there is no fundamental reason why we could not build a predictive model of the anatomy and physiology of a human body capable of being personalised and used for disease prevention or treatment. That is exactly the goal of the Virtual Physiological Humanor Physiome project, which when applied to an individual person in a medical context becomes the human digital twin.

There are two key differences between engineering systems (such as aircraft engines) and human physiology;one that makes the challenge easier and one that makes it a lot harder.

Diseases and drugs operate at the molecular scale, but with effects felt at the scale of tissues, organs and organ systems. At the bottom of this hierarchy is the genome the code from which proteins and their regulatory systems are built. The good news is we know this code and can measure the small coding variations that give rise to the differences between people.

Thanks to the AI projectAlphaFold we also know the structure of most proteins. This provides an extraordinary advantage over engineering systems, which are not able to benefit from such a clear understanding of the structure and properties of their component parts at the atomic scale.

A key aspect of a human digital twinis that it is personalised as much as possible to an individual and continually updated with new data as new measurements are performed on that individual

The other key difference, and the one that makes modelling biological systems so much harder than modelling engineering systems, is that cells and tissues are continually growing and adapting to their environment. Our bodies are full of sensors generating signals that regulate the expression of new proteins and hence the tissue properties and therefore whole-body function. So, unlike most engineering systems, the material properties of the component parts of our bodies are dynamic.

Disease and degeneration (including ageing) happen at the molecular scale, but those changes are felt in the cells, tissues, organs, and whole-body organ systems that provide the physiological function of the body. When clinicians diagnose a chronic condition, they are often trying to make sense of data from all of these scales. Magnetic resonance imaging and computerised tomography scans, for example, provide insights into organ function, such as how the lungs are breathing or the heart is contracting.

Physiological tests, such as lung or heart function tests, provide data on gas exchange or cardiac output, often under exercise conditions. Blood tests are hugely important for monitoring biomarkers characteristic of tissue function or dysfunction. Genetic tests indicate familial predisposition to certain conditions, especially for rare diseases.

Because these multi-scale systems are so complex, mathematical models of the anatomy and physiology of the body, based on biophysical mechanisms and bridging spatial scales from genes and proteins to cells, tissues, organs and the whole body, can be enormously useful in making sense of the disparate clinical data in exactly the same way multi-scale, physics-based models of engineering systems are essential to the understanding (and monitoring) of everything from aircraft and their engines down to cars and cell phones.

It is, however, important to acknowledge that while 50 years of research by molecular and cell biologists have given us a phenomenal picture of how cells and tissues work, the physiology of the body is hugely complex and there are many gaps in our knowledge. We now know a great deal about the DNA code for the approximately 20,000 mammalian genes and the structure of their proteins, but this represents only 2 percent of the genome. A good fraction of the other 98 percent encodes RNAs that regulate the expression of these proteins via transcriptional control mechanisms that we are only beginning to understand.

On the other hand, a great deal is known about physiological processes and how the body maintains the all-important homeostasis needed for life: control of body temperature, blood pressure, fluid volumes, cellular concentrations of ions such as sodium, potassium, calcium, iron, etc, and metabolic substrates such as glucose. We also have a very good understanding of the physical conservation laws these physiological processes must obey: the conservation of mass, charge and energy, respectively. And these physical laws are just as important as the genetic code in explaining how our bodies work. Fortunately, the computing power needed to solve the equations arising from these physical laws is also now available.

So, where is the bioengineering community up to with creating human digital twins, and what in particular are we at the Auckland Bioengineering Institute (ABI) doing to facilitate their development and application to healthcare?

Given the fact that nearly all drugs only work on 50 percent of the population, there is an opportunity to use a diverse population of personalised digital twins for testing drug efficacy with virtual clinical trials

Just as experimental results must be repeatable and use documented experimental protocols to be of value to science, mathematical models must be reproducible and validated against experimental data. These models must also be well documented and annotated for reusability. The ABI has led the international Physiome Project for over 20 years, creating modelling standards, a model repository, software tools and an open access journal for physiological modelling.

Together with colleagues around the world, the ABI has also established a mathematical framework for modelling the anatomy of the body and for assembling the vast array of biophysical mechanisms underpinning physiology. The success of the human digital twin will depend on a coordinated international effort to encapsulate as much physiological detail as possible within this modelling framework over the next few years.

Today, the predictions of the complex physics-based models can also be used with machine learning or AIto train less computationally expensive surrogate digital twin models for clinical applications. To assist with these efforts, the NZ Governments Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment has funded a Catalyst project at the ABI, 12 Labours(after the 12 organ systems of the body).

Although a comprehensive model of the entire human body that can be personalised and used for diagnosis and treatment planning is many years away, there are many shorter-term clinical outcomes that can benefit from the digital twin approach.

Heart models, for example, are currently routinely fitted to patient MRI and ultrasound data for assessing regional cardiac muscle function and the dependence of diseases such as cardiac hypertrophy on the function of particular proteins is being elucidated with these models. The Food and Drug Administration in the US has recently accepted the use of mathematical modelling as part of the approval process for a drug.

Researchers in the ABI are developing biophysically based models of tissues and organs for most of the bodys organ systems. The models usually target specific clinical goals but as these are brought into the common mathematical infrastructure for the digital twin, the models contribute to our larger scale understanding of integrated whole-body physiological systems.

Given the fact that nearly all drugs only work on 50 percent of the population, there is an opportunity to use a diverse population of personalised digital twins for testing drug efficacy with virtual clinical trials and of course using their digital twin to find the appropriate combination of drugs that work for that person. We are a long way from reaching this aspiration, but it is a feasible goal.

A key aspect of a human digital twinis that, like the aircraft engine mentioned above, it is personalised as much as possible to an individual and continually updated with new data as new measurements are performed on that individual. Often the initial creation of the personalised model requires the use of expensive hospital imaging equipmentbut once the personal digital twin has been created, the parameters of the model can be updated based on data from wearable, or in some cases implantable, devices that can provide continuous data with minimal need for clinician time and hospital appointments.

The concept of digital twins for engineering systems has been around for many years, keeping us safe as we fly around the globe, and the same principles can be applied to maintaining, understanding and supporting the health of the human body.

The Auckland Bioengineering Institute is hosting Bioengineering the Future, a week-long free public event showcasing research that aims to enhance diagnosis and treatment of a range of medical conditions. Find out more at Eventbrite.

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How 'digital twins' will revolutionise health - Newsroom

Conference on role of livestock in food security begins at SKUAST-K – Brighter Kashmir

A three-day national conference and symposium on Technology Driven Physiological Capacity Building in Livestock for Food Security and Sustainability commenced Tuesday at Sher-e-Kashmir University of Agricultural Sciences and Technology of Kashmir, Shalimar campus here.The 31st Annual Conference and Symposium of the Society of Animal Physiologists of India (SAPICON-2023) is organised by SKUAST-Ks Division of Veterinary Physiology, FVSc&AH Shuhama and SAPI. About 250 delegates from various agricultural universities, veterinary colleges and universities, ICAR institutions, and IITs from across the country are participating in the conference.Chief Secretary, J&K UT, Dr AK Mehta, virtually inaugurated the SAPICON-2023 and addressed the gathering as the chief guest. While congratulating SKUAST-K for hosting this important national conference, Dr Mehta said that J&K needs to be future-ready to provide solutions to all the food-related upcoming challenges. He said technology is the way forward for agriculture 4.0 and SKUAST-K has to play a pivotal role in providing the new tech-based solutions. Talking about the conference theme, he said, that 40% of the total income of the agriculture sector is going to come from livestock, therefore this cannot be ignored. He said to become self-sufficient in mutton, poultry, and milk production, there is a need for technology and knowledge-driven smart livestock farming. Vice Chancellor, SKUAST-K, Prof Nazir A Ganai, in his inaugural address said that SKUAST-K has not only emerged as a premier institute of agricultural education and research accredited as the 6th best State Agriculture University. But it has already set foot to become the first innovation-led farm university in the country. Last year, SKUAST-K was categorised as the Band Excellent under the Atal Innovation ranking. He said the university has created an ecosystem for innovation and startup culture, visible as the university has been granted over a dozen patents and has registered 12 student and faculty startups in the past three years. He said there is a need to use available advanced technologies like IoT, AI & ML, and next-gen biotechnological tools in livestock farming to make it smarter, more efficient, resilient, eco-friendly and sustainable. Padamshree awardee and eminent veterinary physiologist, Prof ML Madan, who has been previously DDG Animal Sciences ICAR, lauded the efforts of the present dispensation and the scientific fraternity for the transformation of the university and the veterinary faculty at Shuhama. Later he delivered a talk in a technical session on, "Evolution of Sexuality and Designer Technology in Reproduction-the lost Gametes".

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Conference on role of livestock in food security begins at SKUAST-K - Brighter Kashmir

Class of 2023 President’s Engagement and Innovation Prize Winners – University of Pennsylvania

Class of 2023 Presidents Engagement and Innovation Prize Winners

On April 21, Penn President Liz Magill announced the recipients of the 2023 Presidents Engagement and Innovation Prizes. Awarded annually, the prizes empower Penn students to design and undertake post-graduation projects that make a positive, lasting difference in the world. Each prize-winning project will receive $100,000, as well as a $50,000 living stipend per team member. The prizes are the largest of their kind in higher education. All prize recipients collaborate with a Penn faculty mentor.

Two seniors and one December 2022 graduate were named recipients of the 2023 Presidents Engagement Prize. They are Seungwon (Lucy) Lee for Communities for Childbirth, and Kenneth Pham and Catherine Chang for Act First. Gabriella Daltoso, Sophie Ishiwari, Gabriela Cano, Caroline Amanda Magro, and Tifara Eliana Boyce have received the Presidents Innovation Prize for their project, Sonura.

This years Presidents Engagement and Innovation Prize recipients are fueled by a desire to make a differencein their community, across the country, and around the world, said PresidentMagill. Communities for Childbirth, Act First, and Sonura embody an inspiring blend of passion and purpose. They are addressing consequential challenges with compelling solutions, and their dedication and smarts areexemplary. I congratulate them and wish them success as they launch and grow their ventures.

The 2023 prize recipientsselected from an applicant pool of 76will spend the next year implementing the following projects:

Seungwon (Lucy) Lee for Communities for Childbirth:Ms. Lee, a neuroscience major in the College of Arts and Sciences, is CEO and co-founder of Communities for Childbirth, an international organization that empowers maternal and child health in Jinja, Uganda. With the support of the Presidents Engagement Prize, Ms. Lee will create a community-based referral system that provides efficient transportation to health facilities and patient-hospital communication during obstetric emergencies. Ms. Lee is mentored by Lisa D. Levine, the Michael T. Mennuti Associate Professor in Reproductive Health in the Perelman School of Medicine.

Kenneth Pham and Catherine Chang for Act First:Mr. Pham, a chemistry major in the College of Arts and Sciences, and Ms. Chang, a December 2022 CAS graduate, willexpand on an idea started through Penns Medical Emergency Response Team (MERT) to provide critical first-aid training to high school students in Philadelphia, including opioid reversal, CPR, and bleeding prevention. Mr. Pham is a former MERT administrative director and Ms. Chang is a former MERT general board member. They are mentored by Joshua Glick, an assistant professor of emergency medicine in the Perelman School of Medicine.

Gabriella Daltoso, Sophie Ishiwari, Gabriela Cano, Caroline Amanda Magro, and Tifara Eliana Boyce for Sonura:Ms. Daltoso, Ms. Ishiwari, Ms. Cano, Ms. Magro, and Ms. Boyce are bioengineering majors in the School of Engineering and Applied Science. Their startup, Sonura, is developing a beanie that promotes the cognitive and socioemotional development of newborns in the NICU by protecting them from the auditory hazards of their environments while fostering parental connection. The Sonura beanie is composed of a frequency-dependent filter and a mobile application. The Sonura team is mentored by Brian Halak, a lecturer in the engineering entrepreneurship program.

We are very proud of the wide-ranging curiosity and passionate commitment to improving the world that characterize our great Penn students said Interim Provost Beth A. Winkelstein. These three exciting projects provide creative, innovative solutions that will shape the future of areas from cognitive development of newborns to childbirth in Africa to first-aid training here in Philadelphia. We are deeply grateful to the committees that worked tirelessly to review this years exceptional applicants, as well as to the Center for Undergraduate Research and Fellowships and the outstanding faculty advisors who worked closely with these students to develop their visionary ideas.

The prizes are supported by Trustee Emerita Judith Bollinger and William G. Bollinger, in honor of Ed Resovsky; Trustee Emerita Lee Spelman Doty and George E. Doty, Jr.; Trustee Emeritus James S. Riepe and Gail Petty Riepe; Trustee David Ertel and Beth Seidenberg Ertel; Trustee Ramanan Raghavendran; Wallis Annenberg and the Annenberg Foundation; and an anonymous donor.

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Class of 2023 President's Engagement and Innovation Prize Winners - University of Pennsylvania

Top 5 Advanced Humanoid Robots in the World in 2023 – Analytics Insight

The top advanced humanoid robots in the world features the human brains underlying mechanism to deal with real world

Intro: The era of innovation and technology saw an increase in the number of companies developing human-like robots that work like actual humans in the hospitality and customer service sectors. These Advanced Humanoid Robots or Android are machines designed to perform human tasks like interacting, talking, walking, and more.

Humanoid Robots have the greatest potential to become a future industrial tool by playing an important role in robotics research and many other 21st-century applications. With AI advancements in Robotics, these humanoid robots are subjected to improvement in various aspects to completely resemble humans. Designed to resemble the human body, they could be also for functional purposes. The various applications of humanoid robots are in Education and entertainment, personal assistance, manufacturing and maintenance, search and rescue, healthcare, and more. In recent news, Asimo by Honda was dubbed the worlds most advanced robot, and Sophia by Hanson Robotics was the most intelligent robot.

Sophia, developed by Hanson Robotics is the most advanced humanoid robot who made her debut in 2016 and captivates audiences all over the world. Sophia is the worlds first robot citizen and the United Nations Development Programmes first robot Innovation Ambassador. She appeared in Tonight Show and Good Morning Britain as well as delivered speeches at hundreds of conferences worldwide. In understanding human-robot interactions and their services and entertainment applications, Sophia is a framework for cutting-edge robotics and AI research. Hanson Robotics, the Hong-Kong based company created Sophia to look like the famous Hollywood actress Audrey Hepburn to fit her as an old age companion in nursing homes or a crowd manager in events. She has neural networks and AI embedded in her to recognize human faces and understand their gestures and emotions. Sophia becomes the audiences favorite by her appearance in high-profile interviews events and other discussions around the world.

Atlas was developed by Boston Dynamics in 2013 with a prime focus on locomotion, first walking in the lab, then walking on every type of unstable terrain, and performing some sick Parkour tricks. The company launched Atlas with funding from the United States Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). Other than identifying obstacles in the path, avoiding, bouncing, and performing somersaults, Atlas can perform additional body movements similar to gymnasts. Atlas uses depth sensors for real-time perception and model predictive control technology to improve motion. Atlas sees two sensors which are a color camera and a Lidar module producing a colored point cloud.

Ameca is the worlds most advanced, most realistic humanoid robot created by Engineered Arts in 2021. Amecas first video was released publicly on Dec 1, 2021, and received a lot of attention on Twitter and TikTok. It is primarily intended to serve as a platform for the advancement of robotics technologies involving human-robot interaction. AMECA employs embedded microphones, binocular eye-mounted cameras, a chest camera, and facial recognition software to interact with the public. GPT-3 or human telepresence can also control interactions. Its artificial limbs, ligaments, and sensor arrays are all made with cutting-edge technology.

Nadine, an empathetic robot developed by the Japanese company, Kokoro in 2013 responds to greetings, makes eye contact, and remembers all comments and conversations with her. She has a human-like personality, mood, and emotions. She was created by simulating human behavior with cutting-edge technology. Nadine has 3D depth cameras, a microphone, and a webcam to collect visual and audio inputs. Various perception layers process these inputs to recognize various faces, gestures, emotions, and behavior to analyze and respond appropriately. She has built, chatbots to handle various queries and also a memory model to remember different users and conversations with them. In addition, Nadine is fluent in six languages: English, Hindi, French, Japanese, Chinese, and German.

ASIMO or Advanced Step in Innovative Mobility is a humanoid robot created for search and rescue missions. It can recognize moving objects, postures, gestures, and the surrounding environment as well as sounds and faces, allowing it to interact with humans. Asimo has two camera eyes in the head which capture visual information that detect the movement of multiple objects and determines distance and direction. ASIMO can differentiate between voices and other sounds that enable it to recognize its companions. It responds to various questions by nodding and speaking in different languages and can recognize almost ten different faces and address them by name.

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Top 5 Advanced Humanoid Robots in the World in 2023 - Analytics Insight

Synthetic biology could disrupt some of the worlds biggest industries. Here are four steps to building a syn-bio strategy – Fortune

Three years ago, Frances Lesaffre, one of the worlds largest and oldest yeast manufacturers,entered into an alliancewith the Silicon Valley-based syn-bio startup Recombia Biosciences. While Lesaffre had usedyeast and yeast extracts to produce a range of products, from baking ingredients to flavors and biofuels, over the last decade, new syn-bio firms had begun modifying yeast, expanding the number of molecules obtainable through yeast fermentation. To stay at the forefront of innovation, Lesaffre decided to partner with Recombia in 2020and that partnership helped accelerate the development of yeasts to produce fermented ingredients.

With the startups proprietary technologies proving to be critical for its future,Lesaffreacquired Recombiain March 2022. Since then, it has incorporated Recombias genome editing technologies into itsbio-foundryto gain a head start in the biggest business opportunity of the century, namely synthetic biology. Thats no exaggeration; syn-bio applications are likely to disrupt industries that accounted for as much as a third of global output in 2022, according toBCGs recent studies.

Like Lesaffre, incumbents in many industries are experimenting with syn-bio strategies, but it isnt easy. The science continues to develop and the industry dynamics keep changing, so its tough for incumbents to figure out whether theyre making the right strategic choices, as we pointed out in arecent article. Theycant rely solely on traditional buying and selling relationships in the nascent syn-bio ecosystem; companies have to embark on co-development strategies, which help them make the right technology choices; choose the right partners; and use the right collaboration models.

Incumbents can use differenttypes of collaborations to enter the syn-bio industry: They can form or join focused consortiums; enter into joint ventures; or acquire, and merge with, syn-bio firms. As the Lesaffre case demonstrates, these strategies will evolve over time. In order to design successful collaborations, companies must take four steps.

The best starting points for formulating a syn-bio strategy are the most important challenges any incumbent faces today. Business is looking to make its processes less dependent on carbon-based energy sources; overcome the trade-offs between raw material costs and sustainability; create products with superior performance; and build resilient supply chainsall of which syn-bio can help with.

Consider, for instance, theLOral for the future program, which puts syn-bio at the heart of LOrals efforts to reach its 2030 sustainability targets. Committing itself to developing sustainable processes and producing green ingredients, LOral has turned tosyn-bio as one of theprograms three pillarsalong with green chemistry and green extraction. LOrealsOpen Innovation platform, which is catalyzing joint R&D projects, and its alliancessuch as the one with the French microalgae startup, Microphyttestify to its belief that syn-bio will resolve the tradeoffs between sustainability and profitability.

Onceincumbents have identified their most critical challenges, they must locate the assets and capabilities they will need to tackle them. Some they may already possess, as we have shownin a previousFortunearticle;others they will need to procure from the outside.

To do that, incumbentsshould consider forming, or becoming part of, focused consortiums or ecosystems that possess specific capabilities, or can provide access to specialized assets. CEOs can use achecklist to assess the capabilities they need and identify the firms with which they can form consortiums. They must ask:

* Do we need research, design, development, and intellectual property partners, such as startups that have capable R&D teams?

* Do we need sourcing partners, such as companies familiar with creating supply chains for novel feedstocks?

* Do we need manufacturing partners, such as syn-bio contract manufacturers familiar with precision fermentation and engineering?

Consider, for example, Germanys BASF, the worlds largest chemicals manufacturer, which hasinvested in LanzaTech, a Chicago-based syn-bio startup, to complement its technologies. In most industrial processes, exhaust gases are either flared or recovered to produce electricity and steam; LanzaTech has developed a microbe-based technology that uses those residual gases, which contain carbon monoxide and hydrogen, as feedstock to produce bioethanol.The partnership allows BASF and LanzaTechto help reduce the carbon emissions of many manufacturers, such as steel producers.

Most syn-bio consortiums are limited in scope, drawing on existing industry stacks, but joint ventures between incumbents and syn-bio firms offer more opportunities. They allow an incumbent the freedom to design a range of applications that fit its product portfolio; license the co-developed intellectual property; and exercise control over its strategies as syn-bio technologies mature. Thats critical, especially if theres a possibility that the technology could turn into the incumbents main driver of innovation tomorrow.

Winning with joint ventures is a challenge, though, and requires capabilities, capital, time, and talent. Last June, for instance, Unilever, which has created deep global capabilities in managing joint ventures, announced that it would strike a$120 million partnership with Geno(the erstwhile Genomatica). The incumbent and the startup are working to scale plant-based alternatives to palm oil as well as all the fossil fuel-based ingredients in Unilevers cleaning and personal care products. Not only is the joint venture targeting a large and diverse market, but the syn-bio substitutescould become Unilevers unique selling proposition in a range of product categories. Thatswhy the two companies decided that a joint venture would be the best mechanism to gain an edge over rivals.

A strategy of acquiring and integrating syn-bio startups is an effective way to augment incumbents capabilities, as the examples weve discussed show. It speeds up learning and capability development, enabling the organization to become more syn-bio-centric. By engaging with startups, incumbents are forced to become more agile and generate novel synergies among their teams and leaders.

For instance, Sanofi, theFrench pharmaceuticals giant, has been pursuing an M&A strategy in recent times, acquiring a number of cell and gene therapy startups in its focus areas such ashemophilia, immunology, oncology, rare diseases, and vaccines.In 2021 alone, Sanofimade key acquisitions of firms includingAmunix,Kadmon,Kladis,Kymab,Origimm,Tidal Therapeutics, andTranslate Biotakingits M&A investments since 2018 to over $30 billion.

At the same time, incumbents would do well to come to grips with scale of their ambitions. Those looking to lead in the industry may prefer to create syn-bio stacks and build a variety of applications. That strategy can be time- and investment-intensive, though: Building a bio-foundry alone will cost over $150 million, according to recent estimates, and maintenance expenses will add around 15% of that every year.Moreover, it will require incumbents to engage with a number of academic and research institutions, accelerators, and incubators in order to stay at the cutting edge. So, the ability to scale and diversify must be builtab initiointo any decision to build a syn-bio stack.

Industrial incumbents must keep in mind their experience with digital technologies. They thought they would never be affected by the resulting changes and, even if they were, that they could build out the IT capabilities they possessed. Soon, many realized that they lacked the talent and the technologies to take on digital upstarts, which forced them to acquire startups and work with digital giants. In the same way, if incumbents dont want to be disrupted for the second time in two decades, they would do well to come to grips with syn-bio by teaming up with syn-bio startupsright away.

ReadotherFortunecolumns by Franois Candelon.

Franois Candelon is a managing director and senior partner at BCG, and the global director of the BCG Henderson Institute.

Nicolas Goeldel is a project leader at BCG X Deep Tech and one of the firms synthetic biology experts.

Max Mnnig is a project leader at BCG and an ambassador at the BCG Henderson Institute.

Some of the companies featured in this column are current or past clients of BCG.

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Synthetic biology could disrupt some of the worlds biggest industries. Here are four steps to building a syn-bio strategy - Fortune

Scientists Hit Their Creative Peak Early in Their Careers – Neuroscience News

Summary: Overall, scientists and researchers are most innovative and creative early in their careers, a new study reports.

Source: Ohio State University

A new study provides the best evidence to date that scientists overall are most innovative and creative early in their careers.

Findings showed that, on one important measure, the impact of biomedical scientists published work drops by between one-half to two-thirds over the course of their careers.

Thats a huge decline in impact, saidBruce Weinberg, co-author of the study and professor ofeconomics at The Ohio State University.

We found that as they get older, the work of biomedical scientists was just not as innovative and impactful.

But the reasons behind this trend of declining innovativeness make the findings more nuanced and show why it is still important to support scientists later in their careers, Weinberg said.

The study was published online Oct. 7, 2022 in theJournal of Human Resources.

Researchers have been studying the relationship between age or experience with innovativeness for nearly 150 years, but no consensus has emerged. Findings, in fact, have been all over the map, Weinberg said.

For a topic that so many people with so many approaches have studied for so long, it is pretty remarkable that we still dont have a conclusive answer.

One advantage of this study is that the authors had a huge dataset to work with 5.6 million biomedical science articles published over a 30-year period, from 1980 to 2009, and compiled by MEDLINE. These data include detailed information on the authors.

This new study measured the innovativeness of the articles by biomedical scientists using a standard method the number of times other scientists mention (or cite) a study in their own work. The more times a study is cited, the more important it is thought to be.

With detailed information on the authors of each paper, the researchers in this study were able to compare how often scientists work was cited early in their careers compared to later in their careers.

As they analyzed the data, Weinberg and his colleagues made a discovery that was a key to understanding how innovation changes over a career.

They found that scientists who were the least innovative early in their careers tended to drop out of the field and quit publishing new research. It was the most productive, the most important young scholars who were continuing to produce research 20 or 30 years later.

Early in their careers, scientists show a wide range of innovativeness. But over time, we see selective attrition of the people who are less innovative, Weinberg said.

So when you look at all biomedical scientists as a group, it doesnt look like innovation is declining over time. But the fact that the least innovative researchers are dropping out when they are relatively young disguises the fact that, for any one person, innovativeness tends to decline over their career.

Results showed that for the average researcher, a scientific article they published late in their career was cited one-half to two-thirds less often than an article published early in their careers.

But it wasnt just citation counts that suggest researchers were less innovative later in their career.

We constructed additional metrics that captured the breadth of an articles impact based on the range of fields that cite it, whether the article is employing the best and latest ideas, citing the best and latest research, and whether the article is drawing from multiple disciplines, said Huifeng Yu, a co-author, who worked on the study as a PhD student at the University at Albany, SUNY.

These other metrics also lead to the same conclusion about declining innovativeness.

The findings showing selective attrition among less-innovative scientists can help explain why previous studies have had such conflicting results, Weinberg said.

Studies using Nobel Laureates and other eminent researchers, for whom attrition is relatively small, tend to find earlier peak ages for innovation. In contrast, studies using broader cross-sections of scientists dont normally find an early peak in creativity, because they dont account for the attrition.

Weinberg noted that attrition in the scientific community may not relate only to innovativeness. Scientists who are women or from underrepresented minorities may not have had the opportunities they needed to succeed, although this study cant quantify that effect.

Those scientists who succeeded probably did so through a combination of talent, luck, personal background and prior training, he said.

The findings suggest that organizations that fund scientists have to maintain a delicate balance between supporting youth and experience.

Young scientists tend to be at their peak of creativity, but there is also a big mix with some being much more innovative than others. You may not be supporting the very best researchers, said Gerald Marschke, a co-author of the study and associate professor of economics at the University at Albany,

With older, more experienced scientists, you are getting the ones who have stood the test of time, but who on average are not at their best anymore.

Other co-authors on the study were Matthew Ross of New York University and Joseph Staudt of the U.S. Census Bureau.

Funding: The research was supported by theNational Institute on Aging, theOffice of Behavioral and Social Science Research, theNational Science Foundation, theEwing Marion KauffmanandAlfred P. Sloanfoundations, and theNational Bureau of Economic Research.

Author: Jeff GrabmeierSource: Ohio State UniversityContact: Jeff Grabmeier Ohio State UniversityImage: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Closed access.Publish or Perish: Selective Attrition as a Unifying Explanation for Patterns in Innovation over the Career by Bruce Weinberg et al. Journal of Human Resources

Abstract

Publish or Perish: Selective Attrition as a Unifying Explanation for Patterns in Innovation over the Career

Studying 5.6 million biomedical science articles published over three decades, we reconcile conflicts in a longstanding interdisciplinary literature on scientists life-cycle productivity by controlling for selective attrition and distinguishing between research quantity and quality.

While research quality declines monotonically over the career, this decline is easily overlooked because higher ability authors have longer publishing careers.

Our results have implications for broader questions of human capital accumulation over the career and federal research policies that shift funding to early-career researchers while funding researchers at their most creative, these policies must be undertaken carefully because young researchers are less able on average.

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Scientists Hit Their Creative Peak Early in Their Careers - Neuroscience News

How much protein should I eat to gain muscle? – Fit and Well

If youve been hitting the gym more recently, you may be wondering: how much protein should I eat to gain muscle? Weve broken down common myths around protein, including the recommended daily amount vs. how much protein you should be consuming if you put your muscles under frequent stress (like when weight lifting).

While most of us know that protein is important for growth and repair, you may not be aware that it is one of the most important components of muscle building, and your results may be dependent on the amount of protein you consume on a daily basis. While we get some protein from our diet, for those with higher protein requirements, a good protein powder may help boost your intake.

If youre looking for an easy way to increase your protein intake, our guide to the best protein powders for weight loss lists the top protein powders to support your efforts to sustainably gain muscle.

Dr. Elena Maria Liaka leads the National Medical Weight Loss Programme available at Vie Aesthetics through her role as an Aesthetic Doctor in both the Essex and Harley Street clinics. Alongside this, Dr. Elena works part-time in the NHS as a Psychiatrist.

Dr. Brian Carson graduated with a first-class honors BSc. in Sports Science and Health from the School of Health and Human Performance at Dublin City University in 2005. Brian subsequently undertook a PhD funded by a scholarship from the Irish Research Council for Science, Engineering and Technology (IRCSET) entitled The regulation of metabolic gene expression in human skeletal muscle by exercise: the influence of exercise intensity and contraction frequency which was awarded in 2010. He then was appointed as a postdoctoral researcher funded by Diabetes UK at the Department of Cellular and Molecular Physiology at the University of Liverpool where he spent 18 months investigating the intracellular trafficking and release of the adipokine adipokines. From there, Brian joined the team in the Physical Education and Sport Sciences department at the University of Limerick as a lecturer in Exercise Physiology in January 2011 where he is pursuing research into the role of exercise and nutrition in the regulation of metabolism for performance and health.

The International Journal of Sport Nutrition and Exercise Metabolism (opens in new tab) found we must have a positive protein balance in order to successfully increase muscle mass. In short, if you are looking to gain muscle, you need to ensure that you are consuming enough protein to support muscle protein synthesis.

We spoke to Dr. Elena Maria Liaka, an NHS psychiatrist and aesthetic doctor at Vie Aesthetics (opens in new tab), a doctor-run Harley Street cosmetic clinic. The amount of protein you should take to gain muscle varies between individuals. Increasing protein intake has been repeatedly and consistently shown to improve muscle mass and retention, she explains. For several years, the bodybuilding conventional wisdom has recommended around 2g of protein per kg of body weight in order to build muscle. The recommended daily allowance of protein, however, is much lower than this, cited as 0.8g per kg of Bodyweight. In reality, the answer is more complicated than a simple, one-size-fits-all number. Those who are active and challenging their muscles on a regular basis will require higher amounts in order to build or maintain their frame; whereas those who are inactive will require fewer calories and less protein to maintain their body weight. Bear in mind, without adequate stimulus to the muscles, in the form of progressive resistance training, the protein we consume will not translate into increased, or even maintained muscle mass.

While consuming enough dietary protein is vital, you can also use protein powder to lose weight and gain muscle mass. If you dont like the taste, you can always add it to a smoothie or oatmeal rather than eating it as a plain shake.

(Image credit: Getty)

Dr. Liaka gave Fit&Well her best advice for accurate protein intake calculation. In order to estimate protein intake, you need to track what youre eating; this can be done in several ways, and to varying degrees of accuracy, she says. For example, for bodybuilders who are in competition season, every gram of food is weighed for months on end. For the average fitness enthusiast looking to up their protein intake, however, estimating meals and foods on an app, or even just adding a serving of protein throughout the day, may be adequate. My main message would be the more specific the goal, the more specific the method of achieving it needs to be.

We spoke to Dr. Brian Carson, Head of Science and Innovation at Whole Supp (opens in new tab), who explained that weighing your food can be helpful if you want a more accurate idea of how much protein you are consuming. The most effective way to calculate your protein intake is to weigh all your foods and establish the amount of protein per gram (or per 100 grams) as per the nutritional information, he says. With lots of ingredients and the inconvenience of weighing at each meal, this can obviously be quite challenging. One potential solution is to use an app like MyFitnessPal which has the nutritional and protein content for many common food products to track an estimate of your intake.

(Image credit: Getty)

While a lot of us are often worried does protein powder make you gain weight, you should remember that weight gain isnt an inherently bad thing, and that muscle is a denser substance than fat. So while the scales might be trending upwards, this could be as a result of muscle gain, not an increase in body fat, as many of us might suspect when we see a higher number.

Dr. Liaka explains that protein, like all macronutrients, contains calories, and those calories need to be used. What is often forgotten is that protein contains calories; one gram of protein contains four calories. This means that overeating protein (I.e., many grams over the amounts mentioned above) produces diminishing returns in terms of performance and physique, whilst providing more energy in the form of calories, she says. Remember: eating too many calories, whether they come from fat, carbohydrates, or protein, will lead to weight (and likely fat) gain. There are also other individual variances to take into account, for example, health conditions that require limitation of protein, such as renal problems, or vegan diets which may require aiming for higher protein, in order to ensure intake of a complete amino acid profile.

A study in Obesity (opens in new tab) journal found that there is a correlation between protein consumption and the over/underconsumption of other macronutrients, called protein leverage. This is of particular concern in populations with less access to high-quality protein, who will often over consume fat or carbohydrates to make up the calories. The reverse is also true; those who eat high amounts of protein often skimp on other macronutrients.

Dr. Carson tells us that the RDA for protein is increasingly thought to be too low. The current RDA for protein is 0.8 grams of protein for every kilogram of body mass. However, there is a consensus building that this target is too low and a move towards a recommendation of 1.2 grams of protein for every kilogram of body mass is required, he says. The current research suggests there is likely to be no additional benefit for building muscle beyond 2.0 gram of protein per kilogram of your body mass.

An article by Harvard Health (opens in new tab) also indicates that high protein consumption can lead to health problems such as kidney stones. Additionally, if your main source of protein is red or processed meat, you are risking colon cancer, heart disease, and obesity. With this in mind, it is worth swapping out red meat for leaner meats or plant-based protein sources. With various brands of protein powder available, you may be wondering: plant protein vs whey protein: which is better for building muscle?

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How spilled coffee inspired a Boston sperm-testing startup – The Boston Globe

Khaled Kteily might never have founded his Boston home health care startup, Legacy, if not for spilling a hot beverage in his lap.

The accident left him with second-degree burns around some sensitive areas. And when a friend mentioned he was having his sperm tested and saved before chemotherapy, Kteily decided he should also get tested in case the burns affected his future fertility.

A student at Harvards John F. Kennedy School, Kteily went to a Cambridge sperm bank, where he was quizzed about intimate details of his sexual history in the waiting room, then sent to the specimen collection room. As he sat in the dark, he tried not to think of how many people had sat in the same spot to perform the same task.

Everything about that experience was so dehumanizing for someone who just wanted to be proactive about their fertility, Kteily recalled.

But the experience also gave him the idea for Legacy, an at-home sperm testing and collection service. He set up the company at Harvards Innovation Labs in May 2018 and went through the startup accelerator Y Combinator in 2019. So far, Legacy has raised more than $45 million, including a $25 million round this year led by Bain Capital Ventures that also included celebrities DJ Khalid, Orlando Bloom, and Justin Bieber. (Including the celebs was part of our effort to de-stigmatize and normalize the conversation around infertility, Kteily said.)

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More chemicals in the environment, higher stress levels, and other illnesses are contributing to a decrease in male fertility, Kteily noted. Sperm concentration declined by 50 percent or more from 1973 to 2011, according to a widely cited study by the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology though a Harvard study last year challenged those findings.

Legacy offers sperm testing and storage at much lower prices than typical sperm banks. Charging about $300 upfront for testing plus about $100 per year for storage, Legacy is undercutting the industry by hundreds of dollars per year.

Its sometimes a challenge to conduct marketing like a typical health startup. Legacy wanted to run advertisements in Texas and New York using the word sperm, but the term was prohibited by the billboard companies.

Its the medical term, Kteily said. So thats one of the challenges you face working in a stigmatized industry like ours.

The latest effort at Legacy is a joint research project with the Veterans Health Administration and the agencys New England Center for Innovation Excellence, located in Bedford. Legacy will take sperm samples from veterans of recent conflicts and measure their fertility over time. Soldiers can be exposed to chemical toxins on the battlefield and also suffer other injuries that affect fertility.

We know based upon existing evidence that male veterans are at high risk of infertility, but we dont really know why, we dont have a good scientific reason, said Dr. Ryan Vega, chief officer for health care innovation and learning at the VA. The research project with Legacy is really aimed at trying to begin to put the puzzle together.

While both male and female veterans suffer from infertility problems, males are less likely to seek treatment, according to surveys conducted by the VA. The agency hopes Legacys project will also help it encourage more veterans to get help.

We want to make sure that we can present an opportunity for our veterans to have that space to have the conversations with their providers to seek care for infertility issues, Leandro DaSilva, acting director of the innovation excellence center, said.

In addition to its fertility services, Legacy is also expanding its services to include home testing for sexually transmitted diseases.

We believe that on the path to parenthood, there are a number of products and services that were going to be able to offer as part of our vision, which is to unlock sperm as a biomarker of health, Kteily said.

Aaron Pressman can be reached at aaron.pressman@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @ampressman.

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How spilled coffee inspired a Boston sperm-testing startup - The Boston Globe

WIMI Hologram Academy: The Application of 3D modeling Technology in Digital Anatomical Models – The Bakersfield Californian

HONG KONG, Aug. 23, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- WIMI Hologram Academy, working in partnership with the Holographic Science Innovation Center, has written a new technical article describing their research on the application of 3D modeling technology in digital anatomical models. This article follows below:

Backward anatomy teaching methods, insufficient sources of teaching cadavers and lack of original 3D anatomical models have been the main problems in anatomy teaching.Scientistsfrom WIMI Hologram Academy of WIMIHologram CloudInc.(NASDAQ: WIMI)appliedadvanced 3D animation technology to create a 3D anatomical data model for medical purposes. It is possible to obtain comprehensive 3D data of the human body and preserve the body shape and structure information.

1. Statusquoof digital anatomical models

1.1 International research on digital anatomy technology

Digital virtual human research in the United States began in the 1980s.In 1989, the United States began to conceive a medical image library to provide a biomedical literature image retrieval system, which was later acquired by a well-known university work known as the "VisibleHuman Project".

In October 1999, the U.S. launched the Oak Ridge Project, and by 2001 the U.S. had established the Digital Human Body, which contains VHP datasets and ancillary datasets, anatomical levels of the virtual human body, medical knowledge related to the clinical information base of diseases and syndromes, and an expanding set of tools and products.

Later, Korea started the Visible Korean Human (VKH) project and completed the first male specimen cut in 2000 with a slice spacing of 0.12 mm and a total of 8,590 sections of 15,317 GB of data. The anthropometric national database construction program was also initiated in Japan in 2001. Currently, Japan has constructed the "Japanese VisibleHuman" using CT and MRI imaging technology.

1.2 Chinasresearch on digital anatomy technology

In November 2001, the 174th Xiangshan Science Conference was held to discuss the topic of "China's digital visiblehuman body", and in June 2002, with the support of the 863 program, Chinesescientists proposed that the state formally establish the "digital virtual human body" research project. In June 2002, with the funding of 863 program, Chinesescientists proposed to the state to formally establish the "Digital Virtual Human Body" research project "Virtual Chinese Project".

2.The application of 3Danatomical model on the analysis of modeling techniques

The technical means used to make the virtualhuman are basically the same at home and abroad, which are summarized into the following three kinds:

2.1 Two-dimensional image based three-dimensional model construction technology

This technique originated around 1970 and took a big leap forward in 1980 with the development of computer technology. In2000or so, this modeling approach can be further subdivided into:1) Contour method, which later scholars continued to refine. 2) Motion method, also known as motion-based modeling. 3) Light and dark method, also known as motion-based modeling. In terms of efficiency,this 3D modeling technique based on 2D graphics is the most convenient and cost effective way. It is now open to commercial applications.

2.2 Digital 3D scanning technology

3D scanning technology can be divided into large scenes for buildings, desktop scanners for heritage restoration and CT imaging for medical applications. Digital three-dimensional scanning in the protection and restoration of cultural relics, film and television production, virtual reality is more common. In the restoration of cultural relics, in 2000, the National Palace Museum in Taipei scannedthe"Jade Cabbage" processto get the point cloud data'.

2.3 Interactive manual modeling

Interactive manual modeling refers to the application of automatic computer imaging technology with manual modification of the model. This technique can effectively correct the distribution of point clouds on the model, making it controllable under human intervention and saving computer resources. The historical large-scale use of manual modeling is the combination of computer technology and film and television art in 1980. As the model applied in film and television animation is different from the 3D model used for museum relic restoration and cultural heritage protection. It needs the model with animation, close viewing.

3.Conclusion

As a "scientific", "intuitive" and "easy to use" software, it is not necessary to be medically accurate. Of course, it is necessary to be medically accurate, but the cost is a lot of human and financial resources in the pre-production, and the data package is very large in the post-production. In order to recover the production cost, we can only raise the price, which will create a vicious circle. If a different way of thinking, from a technical point of view to reduce production costs, taking into account the degree of public demand for digital anatomy software, with a more labor-saving method to build digital anatomical models, first shed part of the accuracy to enhance the production efficiency of the case, the current digital anatomical products will have better development prospects.

Founded in August 2020, WIMI Hologram Academy is dedicated to holographic AI vision exploration and researches basic science and innovative technologies, driven by human vision. The Holographic Science Innovation Center, in partnership with WIMI Hologram Academy, is committed to exploring the unknown technology of holographic AI vision, attracting, gathering, and integrating relevant global resources and superior forces, promoting comprehensive innovation with scientific and technological innovation as the core, and carrying out basic science and innovative technology research.

Contacts

Holographic Science Innovation Center

Email: pr@holo-science. com

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WIMI Hologram Academy: The Application of 3D modeling Technology in Digital Anatomical Models - The Bakersfield Californian

Meet the Winners of the 2022 DST Launch Seed Grants – Duke Today

The Office for Research & Innovation has awarded funding to eight, interdisciplinary projects as part of the inaugural Duke Science and Technology (DST) Launch Seed Grant Program. This years winners include faculty from multiple disciplines across campus and the School of Medicine who were selected out of 61 proposal finalists for initiating high-impact projects that could lead to additional external funding.

The quality of innovative ideas our faculty have for advancing collaborative research projects continues to set Duke apart, said Jenny Lodge, Dukes vice president for Research & Innovation. This years DST Launch Seed Grants winners represent the strength of our different schools and distinct disciplines scientific research Each with the potential of making significant contributions to the region and nation.

MEDICINE + ENGINEERING

PIs: Yun Wang, Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences; Hai Helen Li, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering

This team aims to develop a user-friendly, cloud-based tool for analyzing MRI scans of developing infant brains. It will be based on artificial intelligence, but users will not be required to have any advanced computational skills to take advantage of the platform, named FINNEAS, the Federated Infant Neuroimaging Analysis Platform. The system will also accommodate patient privacy and differences in data from one scanning center to the next.

ENGINEERING + MEDICINE

PIs: Aaron Franklin, Addy Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering; Jonathan Campbell, Associate Professor of Medicine; Fan Yuan, Professor of Biomedical Engineering

This team will be studying an electronic tattoo device for continuously delivering drugs to treat type two diabetes through the skin. The printed device will be tested on skin samples to demonstrate its functionality.

GLOBAL HEALTH + MEDICINE + PUBLIC POLICY + SOCIAL SCIENCES

PIs: Sara LeGrand, Associate Research Professor of Global Health; Carly E. Kelley, M.D., M.P.H., Assistant Professor of Medicine; Kathryn Whetten, Professor of Public Policy; Gabriel Rosenberg, Associate Professor of Gender, Sexuality and Feminist Studies

Expanding on an initial infrastructure built under previous funding, this multidisciplinary team is going to assess structural inequities faced by transgender and non-binary people as they seek health care, including gender-affirming care. A patient population built from Duke Health and the Mayo Clinic will be regularly assessed to answer long-term mental and physical health questions about this population and the hope is that this resource can attract further funding and expand, once it has been built.

NATURAL SCIENCES + ENGINEERING

PIs: Lucia Strader, Associate Professor of Biology; Ashutosh Chilkoti, Alan L. Kaganov Distinguished Professor of Biomedical Engineering

This team, led by a plant biologist and a biomedical engineer, is pursuing a method to engineer a key transcription factor that drives plant growth to be optimized for higher temperatures. Building on a discovery about how plants stockpile this protein to respond to environmental change, and the ability to engineer temperature-sensitive synthetic gene transcription factors, the team hopes to tune plant growth at different temperatures.

NATURAL SCIENCES + ENVIRONMENT + ENGINEERING

PIs: Emily Bernhardt, James B. Duke Distinguished Professor of Biology; Nishad Jayasundara, Assistant Professor of Environmental Toxicology and Health; Heileen Hsu-Kim, Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering; Jonathan Behrens, University Program in Ecology Ph.D. Student

Building on preliminary work by a Bass Connections team, this project will be sampling ten different areas of the Ellerbe Creek Watershed, which drains most of Durham into Falls Lake. Rather than measuring every compound in the stream, they are looking for contaminant signals that indicate various types of human activity: Sucralose sweetener from human waste, a chemical additive found in automobile tires from road runoff, and the herbicide RoundUp and its breakdown products from landscaping. These will be used as indicators to model the mix of sources reaching the stream. Laboratory fish will be used to assess the biological effects of different mixtures.

NATURAL SCIENCES + SOCIAL SCIENCES

PIs: Hau-Tieng Wu, Associate Professor of Mathematics; Jana Schaich Borg, Associate Research Professor in the Social Science Research Institute

Using hundreds of hours of recorded video conversations, this team will use artificial intelligence to measure the growing trust and synchrony between two interacting people, as depicted by their body poses and facial expressions. They are looking for motifs of social interaction that are stereotypical and re-used in many interactions in the hope that they can begin to uncover what they call the behavioral grammar of social interactions. These tools might eventually be used to measure social interaction disorders.

ENGINEERING + MEDICINE

PIs: Jessilyn Dunn, Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering; Shelley Hwang, M.D., M.P.H., Mary and Deryl Hart Distinguished Professor of Surgery

This team will be using wearable devices to monitor up to 50 patients before and after surgery as a way to track surgical recovery. Inexpensive, unobtrusive monitoring of post-operative physiology may help to identify early complications after surgery and reduce costly hospital readmissions.

NATURAL SCIENCES + ENGINEERING

PIs: Jie Liu, George Barth Geller Distinguished Professor of Chemistry; Natalia Litchinitser, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering

The team is designing a 3D catalyst system that can use solar energy to enhance chemical reactions. Their seed grant is aimed at a proof-of-concept called 3-D solid fog, a lattice of boron nitride microtubes which can be used as catalyst support for plasmonic nanoparticle to enable more efficient use of solar light in chemical synthesis. They will be using artificial intelligence to optimize the design of the microstructured fog and then testing it in solar light powered synthesis of ammonia, which is both a valuable fertilizer and a highly efficient carrier of hydrogen, storage of which will be critical to hydrogen-fueled, carbon-neutral technologies.

To learn more about the Duke Science and Technology (DST) Launch Seed Grant winners, visit research.duke.edu/dst-launch-seed-grant-opportunity.

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Meet the Winners of the 2022 DST Launch Seed Grants - Duke Today