Skoltech is an international graduate research-focused university that was founded by the group of world-renowned scientists in 2011. Skoltech's curriculum focuses on technology and innovation, offering Master's programs in 11 technological disciplines. Students receive rigorous theoretical and practical training, design their own research projects, participate in internships and gain entrepreneurial skills in English. The faculty is comprised of current researchers with international accreditation and achievements.
Participants from Russia, The United States, Holland and Japan will take part in the inaugural “Towards Therapies of the Future” conference and kick-off the Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology’s (Skoltech) Centers for Research, Education and Innovation (CREIs) for Stem Cell Research and Innovative Biomedical Therapies (RNAi Therapeutics & Infectious Diseases). World-class leaders in these fields will report on recent and future developments and discuss their impact on future healthcare.
Nobel laureate (2012, medicine) Shinya Yamanaka. Image courtesy ucsf.edu
The keynote speakers for the conference are Nobel Laureates Phillip Sharp (1993) and Shinya Yamanaka (2012), along with presentations from world leading scientists in Stem Cells, RNAi and Infectious Diseases. The conference will provide an opportunity to explore the scope and the science of Skoltech’s biomedical centers, led by professors Anton Berns and Victor Kotelianski.
Expert participants will discuss opportunities for relevant and high-potential research in the Russian and international context and to provide an occasion for participants to share their scientific insights. They will address groundbreaking science which, for example, transforms simple skin cells into all-purpose “magic” stem cells. Such stem cells could help treat head and spine injuries, various types of cancer, cardiovascular disease and immune system malfunctions – and ultimately save millions of lives. Also on the agenda: RNA therapy’s potential for revolutionizing the treatment of complex diseases by “silencing” harmful genes.
Nobel Laureate Phillip A Sharp (1993, medicine). Image courtesy purdue.edu
The Nobel laureates are also slated to evaluate dozens of Skoltech students’ tech projects. Using poster presentations, the young Russian researchers will have a rare chance to receive recognition from the brightest minds on the planet.
Professor Yamanaka has recently pointed out the pressing need for international cooperation: “I hope that many Russian researchers would contribute to the research of Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells (iPS), help develop the technology, and bring iPS cell-based therapies to the bedside as quickly as possible.”
For more information on schedule and transportation to Skolkovo Innovation Center’s Hypercube please visit this page:
* The Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology (Skoltech) is a private graduate research university in Skolkovo, Russia, a suburb of Moscow. Established in 2011 in collaboration with MIT, Skoltech educates global leaders in innovation, advance scientific knowledge, and foster new technologies to address critical issues facing Russia and the world. Applying international research and educational models, the university integrates the best Russian scientific traditions with twenty-first century entrepreneurship and innovation.
What’s the first thing that comes to mind when you hear the word ‘surf’? Monster waves off the coast of Hawaii? The Beach Boys and that bushy bushy blonde hair do? Or these weird neon shorts your aunt just loves to wear to family reunions? For most people, surfing would not usually be associated with a group of Russian and American students strategizing together. Then again, SURF stands for the Stanford US-Russia Forum, a bi-annual conference where young, bright minds discuss policy and economy. Four Skoltech students ventured forthto Silicon Valley (Googleplex included) last month, presented their startups and tech projects, and took a million selfies. Then they returned to Moscow. Here are their stories – and photos.
Anna Dubovik is a student with Skoltech’s IT track and the entrepreneur behind “SKILL-TREE “, which she presented to the Stanford faculty and students. Her aim is to create a web service for future professionals. It uses young professionals’ social network profiles to determine their set of skills and provide informed advice on their career’s future course. Skill tree’s ultimate goal is to scale the service and help professionals worldwide realize what’s missing from their careers.
Googled: Anna Dubovik (left) bonding with American students in front of the Googlplex
Another young entrepreneur who presented a career decision making tool is Tatiana Smirnova. She studies Bio Medicine – not IT – which goes to show the interdisciplinary nature our MSc tracks. She told her audience in Palo Alto about brainselecta.com, a web service which focuses on removing some of the ambivalence from the process of soul searching and job hunting.
“People were very open and asked lots of great questions”, says Tatiana. “Ambivalence is an ever growing issue in society and that is true for both young Russians and Americans. With our service, a person chooses topics of interest and then listens to multiple audio tracks. We simulate a busy street scene where you need to employ selective attention. The interesting part is what people pay attention to. Based on this, the system creates a recommendation. It’s an intuitive approach based on cognitive science. But we also developed mathematical algorithms for criteria analysis and evaluation.”
Sergei Kasatkin studies IT. His project aims to detect children at risk of drowning – and save them. He told his audience in Silicon Valley statistics show that two out of ten people who die from drowning every day are children (14 or younger).
Sergei Kasatkin (right): inspired at Stanford
Sergei’s project is based on a smart bracelet containing a gyroscope and a sensor, worn by a baby or toddler while taking a bath. An alarm goes off if a child’s heart beat and position in the water indicate that something is wrong – and the baby might be drowning. The prototype’s estimated cost is $60 US. “In return I provide a tech solution that could take parents’ anxiety away,” he tells us. Sounds like a smart business plan: ask any American or Russian and they would probably say that this is a fair price for saving a child’s life (Martian moms and dads are likely to agree.)
Alexander Vidiborskiy is a Master’s student of Energy. “At the beginning of SURF, I was a little confused. How can I present complicated experimental physics to people interested in politics? But adapting a presentation for a new audience turned out to be an extremely useful experience.”
His project envisions the creation of highly-tunable active filters for satellites and large observatories. These filters could make life easier –and quieter – for communications and astronomy professionals because they allow higher noise tolerance. “I was surprised that Stanford students deal with the same research questions we explore at Skoltech. We had lots to talk about in terms of RU-US collaboration.”
Anna Dubovik (left) and Sergei Kasatkin at SURF (Stanford US Russia Forum)
* The Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology (Skoltech) is a private graduate research university in Skolkovo, Russia, a suburb of Moscow. Established in 2011 in collaboration with MIT, Skoltech educates global leaders in innovation, advance scientific knowledge, and foster new technologies to address critical issues facing Russia and the world. Applying international research and educational models, the university integrates the best Russian scientific traditions with twenty-first century entrepreneurship and innovation.
Postdocs – get ready to Vroom. Science Drive is here.
The new program is aimed at supporting the professional development and research initiatives of talented young Russian scientists. For the program’s first year, an expert panel will choose a shortlist of seven researchers specialized in experimental condensed matter physics. Two winners will travel to Manchester where they will work for two years under the leadership of renowned physicist sir Andre Geim – then return to Moscow to work at Skoltech.
The university’s Center for #Quantum Materials along with Skolkovo Open University (OpUS) will manage the application and selection process, which began yesterday.
Key dates and timeline:
May 26, 2014 ( 11:00 Moscow time ) – Candidates’ application deadline.
May 28, 2014 – Announcement of seven finalists .
June 1, 2014 ( 11:00 Moscow time ) – Deadline for submission of presentations by finalists.
1-3 June 2014 – Personal interview (or Skype interviews) with members of the Expert Council.
June 3, 2014 – Announcement of two winners.
June – August 2014 – Paperwork and UK visas.
September 1, 2014 – Beginning of work on research project at the University of Manchester.
Professor Andre Geim is the first ever scientist to have won both the Nobel prize – for his groundbreaking work on Graphene – and Ig Nobel, for using magnets to levitate a frog. That’s right: he actually made a frog float midair.
Think you’re a high flyer too? Start by reading here about the possibilities – and requirements.
Professor Andre Geim. Photo credit: Scientific Russia
* The Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology (Skoltech) is a private graduate research university in Skolkovo, Russia, a suburb of Moscow. Established in 2011 in collaboration with MIT, Skoltech educates global leaders in innovation, advance scientific knowledge, and foster new technologies to address critical issues facing Russia and the world. Applying international research and educational models, the university integrates the best Russian scientific traditions with twenty-first century entrepreneurship and innovation.
Easy, right? If it was, millions of entrepreneurs would make millions from day one of their business. But they need support.
On June 02, we will be hosting a panel discussion titled “How to Turn Your Idea into Money”. The session will feature a broad range of panelists with international experience and expertise in innovation entrepreneurship and technology transfer.
Seasoned panelists will be addressing questions such as:
– How do you develop a project from a promising idea towards a real product ready for international markets?
– What role do university and research institutes play in creating innovative technological ideas?
– The difference between Russian and international approaches to support and stimulate innovation and technology commercialization.
If only life was a flowchart: image courtesy ualr
Panel starts at 6:15 pm in the Hypercube Building, Skolkovo Innovation Center
For participation, please register on the Startup Village site
http://startupvillage.ru/
This event will take place during the Startup Village Conference and is organized by Skoltech in collaboration with the Intellectual Property Center “Skolkovo”.
* The Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology (Skoltech) is a private graduate research university in Skolkovo, Russia, a suburb of Moscow. Established in 2011 in collaboration with MIT, Skoltech educates global leaders in innovation, advance scientific knowledge, and foster new technologies to address critical issues facing Russia and the world. Applying international research and educational models, the university integrates the best Russian scientific traditions with twenty-first century entrepreneurship and innovation.
The feeling is all-too familiar: Sitting in a stuffy lecture hall, audience members feel like time stretches beyond infinity. They daydream. Giant waves collapse. Turbulences swirl. Singularity takes over. But what if one could experience – and comprehend – all that by paying attention to the lecturer? Here’s an opportunity to do just that.
Come fathom the rogue waves and strong collapse turbulences at the Skoltech Colloquium.
Speaker: Professor Pavel M. Lushnikov, University of New Mexico (USA)
What: Finite time singularities, rogue waves and strong collapse turbulence.
When: May 22, 16:00pm
Where: Institute of Gene Biology RAS, Vavilova street 34/5, Conference room, 1st floor.
Abstract:
Many nonlinear systems of partial differential equations have a striking phenomenon of spontaneous formation of singularities in a finite time (blow up). Blow up is often accompanied by a dramatic contraction of the spatial extent of solution, which is called by collapse. Near singularity point there is a qualitative change in underlying nonlinear phenomena, reduced models lose their applicability and other mechanisms become important such as inelastic collisions in the Bose-Einstein condensate, optical breakdown and dissipation in nonlinear optical media and plasma, wave breaking in hydrodynamics. Collapses occur in numerous reduced physical and biological systems including a nonlinear Schrodinger equation (NLSE) and a Keller-Segel equation (KSE). We will focus on the collapse in the critical spatial dimension two (2D) which has numerous applications. For instance, 2D NLSE describes the propagation of the intense laser beam in nonlinear Kerr media (like usual glass) which results in the catastrophic self-focusing (collapse) eventually causing optical damage as was routinely observe in experiment since 1960-es. Recently such events have been also often referred as optical rogue waves.
Vortexes, turbulences, singularity and rogue waves converge at the Skoltech Colloquium. Image courtesy: askamathematician.com
Another dramatic NLSE application is the formation of rogue waves in ocean. 2D KSE collapse describes the bacterial aggregation in Petri dish as well as the gravitational collapse of Brownian particles. We study the universal self-similar scaling near collapse, i.e. the spatial and temporal structures near blow up point. In the critical 2D case all these collapses share a strikingly common feature that the collapsing solutions have a form of either rescaled soliton (for NLSE) or rescaled stationary solution (for KSE). The time dependence of that scale determines the time-dependent collapse width L(t) and amplitude ~1/L(t). At leading order L(t)~ (t_c-t)^{1/2} for all mentioned equations, where t_c is the collapse time.
Collapse however requires the modification of that scaling which in NLSE has the well-known loglog type ~ (\ln|\ln(t_c-t)|)^{-1/2} as well as KSE has another well-known type of logarithmic scaling modification. Loglog scaling for NLSE was first obtained asymptotically in 1980-es and later proven in 2006. However, it remained a puzzle that this scaling was never clearly observed in simulations or experiment. Similar situation existed for KSE. Here solved that puzzle by developing a perturbation theory beyond the leading order logarithmic corrections for both NLSE and KSE. We found that the classical loglog modification NLSE requires double-exponentially large amplitudes of the solution ~10^10^100, which is unrealistic to achieve in either physical experiments or numerical simulations. In contrast, we found that our new theory is valid starting from quite moderate (about 3 fold) increase of the solution amplitude compare with the initial conditions. We obtained similar results for KSE. In both cases new scalings are in excellent agreement with simulations.
This efficiency of analytical results also allowed to study 2D NLSE-type dissipative system in the conditions of multiple random spontaneous formation of collapses in space and time.
Dissipation ensures collapse regularization while collapses are responsible for non-Gaussian tails in the probability density function of amplitude fluctuations which makes turbulence strong. Power law of non-Gaussian tails is obtained for strong NLSE turbulence which is a characteristic feature of rogue waves. We suggest the spontaneous formation optical rogue from turbulent as a perspective route to the combing of multiple laser beams, generated by a number of fiber lasers, into a single coherent powerful laser beam.
If you like to participate and for further information or questions, please e-mail Natalia Kondrashova: kondrashova@skolkovotech.ru
Please confirm your attendance. We look forward to seeing you.
Our guest lecturer at Skoltech Colloquium: Professor Pavel M. Lushnikov, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, USA
Pavel’s research interest includes a wide range of topics in applied mathematics, nonlinear waves and theoretical physics. Among them are laser fusion and laser-plasma interaction; dynamics of fluids with free surface, Kelvin-Helmholtz instability and nonlinear interactions of surface waves; theory of the wave collapse, singularity formation and its application to plasma physics, hydrodynamics, biology and nonlinear optics; bacterial aggregation, chemotaxis, cell-cell interactions; collapse of bacterial colonies, stochastic Potts model of biological cell; pattern formation in photorefractive crystals and other nonlinear optical media; high-bit-rate optical communication; dispersion-managed optical fiber systems; soliton propagation in optical systems; high performance parallel simulations of optical fiber systems; Bose-Einstein condensation of ultra-cold dipolar gases.
* The Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology (Skoltech) is a private graduate research university in Skolkovo, Russia, a suburb of Moscow. Established in 2011 in collaboration with MIT, Skoltech educates global leaders in innovation, advance scientific knowledge, and foster new technologies to address critical issues facing Russia and the world. Applying international research and educational models, the university integrates the best Russian scientific traditions with twenty-first century entrepreneurship and innovation.
If you like to participate and for further information or questions, please Liliya Abaimova We look forward to seeing you.
Here are 3 questions every entrepreneur wants to know the answers to: How to start your company from scratch, How to make enough noise to get noticed and How to create a sustainable business development strategy and continue to grow.
Three Skoltech students that were selected for the Startup Access event in Boston could start hearing some fresh answers as of today.
The three tech projects – Image Air, ImeetU and Easy Wallet – will participate in the on-site incubator taking place in Boston from May 19 to 30.
The SA gathers entrepreneurs twice a year to support their innovative projects at the early stage of development. The Russian Venture Company (RVC) sponsors the incubator as the general partner.
Participants will have a unique opportunity to become familiar with the innovation ecosystem f Big Boston Area, take a series of lectures by world renowned experts in technological entrepreneurship, get advice from mentors on how to develop the projects, and finally present their ideas to potential investors.
This time 17 startup teams from different regions of Russian were selected to the SA.
* Wearing a robot that makes you feel as happy – or sad – as your friend while you’re instant messaging.
* Nurses train in life saving techniques by carrying external skeletons that weigh exactly like a real patient.
* Putting on a technology that makes your body sensitive to faraway objects.
It all does sound a bit like sci-fi. But wearable haptic technology, or haptics, is very real.
Originally it meant ‘to touch’ in Greek. Nowadays it is described as “doing for the sense of touch what computer graphics did for vision”. And what’s revolutionary about this hot research topic is that is has serious real world applications.
In this week’s Skoltech Seminar, Dr. Dzmitry Tsetserukou explores, explains and demonstrates some of the most amazing – and very real – applications of wearable tech.
May 21, 2014
13.30 – 15.00
Beijing-1 Auditorium, China cluster (Skolkovo School of Management)
Title: «Nanoscale simulations for clean renewable wearable haptic technologies for telexistence, telecommunication, and medical applications»
SEMINAR ABSTRACT:
Wearable haptic technology is a category of devices incorporating electronic technology and haptic actuators for presentation of tactile stimuli (force, vibration, pressure, temperature) to the wearer. The talk will focus on four mainstream projects employing wearable interfaces with haptic feedback: NAVIgoid, NurseSim, LinkTouch, and iFeel_IM!.
NAVIgoid consists of a master wearable robot and intelligent mobile robot. The developed interface allows the operator to use their body posture and gestures for controlling the mobile robot and at the same time to feel remote objects through sense of touch.
NurseSim is a novel VR simulator for nurses who become better at carrying an unconscious persons and maintain their posture correctly by wearing a haptic exoskeleton. Nurses lift the ‘body’ of care-receiver in simulated 3D environment. The haptic display generates a sensation of the patient’s weight.
LinkTouch is an innovative wearable haptic device with a five-bar linkage mechanism for presentation of 2-DoF force feedback at the finger pad. The application of Link-Touch for a wrist-worn device capable of online blood pressure measurement will be demonstrated.
iFeel_IM! is an intelligent system for feeling enhancement. It is powered by affect sensitive Instant Messenger which intensifies feelings and reproduces the emotions felt by a partner during online communication. The system elicits emotions by rich haptic and visual stimuli.
SPEAKER INTRODUCTION:
Dzmitry Tsetserukou received the Ph.D. degree in Information Science and Technology from the University of Tokyo, Japan, in 2007. From 2007 to 2009, he was a JSPS Post-Doctoral Fellow at the University of Tokyo. He is currently an Assistant Professor at the Electronics-Inspired Interdisciplinary Research Institute, Toyohashi University of Technology. He is a member of the IEEE since 2005, VRSJ and the author of over 70 technical publications, 3 patents and a book .
He received Best Paper Award at Augmented Human 2010, and Best Student Presentation Award at I RAGO 2013 as coauthor. Dzmitry was an organizer of the first Workshop on Affective Haptics at IEEE Haptics Symposium 2012.
* The Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology (Skoltech) is a private graduate research university in Skolkovo, Russia, a suburb of Moscow. Established in 2011 in collaboration with MIT, Skoltech educates global leaders in innovation, advance scientific knowledge, and foster new technologies to address critical issues facing Russia and the world. Applying international research and educational models, the university integrates the best Russian scientific traditions with twenty-first century entrepreneurship and innovation.
If you like to participate and for further information or questions, please Liliya Abaimova We look forward to seeing you.
When Sidney Altman walks into the gilded lobby of Hotel Ukraine in central Moscow, the question seems inevitable: Could current political tensions destroy scientific relations that took years to build? The American scientist visiting the Russian capital for the first time does not take long to answer.
“They might, but they should not. Politics cannot be allowed to intrude on science and research. We must not let that happen”, says the Yale professor when we meet for a short chat ahead of his seminar at Skoltech. “I see myself part of this project and my commitment has not changed because of international tensions.” In fact, he adds, he currently contemplates deepening his relationships with Russian researchers working an institute in Novosibirsk.
Perhaps at the age of 75 Altman, one of America’s most eminent molecular biologists, can pursue unorthodox ideas without worrying too much about repercussions. Perhaps that is exactly the attitude which won him a Nobel Prize in chemistry for the discovery of catalytic properties of RNA. And perhaps that is what happens when a veteran researcher who won the Nobel prize decides to give humanity a gift of unmeasured value: eradicating malaria.
To make good on a vision of saving millions of lives he needs to convince the world that the blockbuster drugs currently marketed by pharmaceutical companies will pale in comparison to his unique solution. Altman and his team suggest that large nucleic acid molecules can easily bind to the RNA of the parasite that causes malaria and debilitate it. “It might be quite easy, easier than what most people think”, the science man coolly describes his quest to destroy a disease that claims the lives of more than half a million people a year.
The prestige he enjoys as a Nobel laureate buys him respect worldwide. People listen. Researchers, students, journalists, even the representatives of drug companies, are attentive when he speaks. And he does, whenever and wherever he can.
“It is working in the lab. We can stop the growth and development of various strains of malaria that are resistant to all the drugs we have today.” He enthuses when he speaks of a new age of antibiotics.
So what stands between him and becoming a 21st century Louis Pasteur? Funding, or rather, lack thereof. Funding is the other crucial part of the equation.
“The problem is the big pharmaceutical companies, relying on small molecules and their derivatives for treatment. They were not very successful so far. But they would not develop a new big-molecule solution, because it costs them too much money to try out. It is inexcusable. But perhaps if I could find a million dollars to repeat the initial results my team found with mice, then we would stand a chance of persuading pharmaceutical companies to invest.”
Enter the Russian government. It granted an estimated 90 million rubles (2.5 million dollars) to the researchers Altman is associated with at the Institute of Chemical Biology and Fundamental Medicine in Novosibirsk.
“I think it’d be ideal to start my effort in Russia. Russian pharmaceutical companies have never been on par with Europe and America in terms of developing drugs. But because of that, there is a potential and an opportunity here. New antibiotics can be tested and developed in Russia and the process would even be less expensive. I am sure it can be done here. And that is what matters: find a solution.”
Sidney Altman in Moscow, 11.05.2104. Photo: Ilan Goren
3 things you want to know about Sidney Altman
Growing up in Montreal, Canada, he used to be a hockey player and a fan of the game. Not anymore. “Professional hockey now is a much rougher game. The finesse and beauty have disappeared from the upper levels. It’s not the same game as it was in the 1960’s and 1970’s when big Russian players like Vladislav Tretiak and Valeri Kharlamov ruled the rinks”.
He studied Russian for two years so he could read the great masters of prose and poetry: “Pushkin, Turgenev, Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky. I read them all, in Russian.”
His only word of advice to students boils down to two words: “Hard work. You cannot work with any concept of public recognition, fame, money and all that. That’s a terrible curse. You have to focus on the science and the problems you’re trying to solve.”
* The Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology (Skoltech) is a private graduate research university in Skolkovo, Russia, a suburb of Moscow. Established in 2011 in collaboration with MIT, Skoltech educates global leaders in innovation, advance scientific knowledge, and foster new technologies to address critical issues facing Russia and the world. Applying international research and educational models, the university integrates the best Russian scientific traditions with twenty-first century entrepreneurship and innovation.
If you like to participate and for further information or questions, please Liliya Abaimova We look forward to seeing you.