Monday, October 16, 2017

WOMEN / INNOVATION SPECIAL .................India's Innovation Divas

India's Innovation Divas


The MIT Technology Review announced its annual list of top 35 innovators under the age of 35. Called TR35, it had inventors, entrepreneurs, visionaries, humanitarians and pioneers. For over a decade, MIT Technology Review has recognised exceptionally talented technologists whose work has the potential to transform the world. Past honorees include Larry Page and Sergey Brin of Google, Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook, and Jonathan Ive, chief designer of Apple. This year's list has three Indians, all women. In interviews with Vanita Srivastava, the women innovators talks about their research and more.

Edited excerpts:

“Go Against the Flow“
Neha Narkhede, 32, is cofounder and CTO of Confluent, a company backing the Apache Kafka messaging system that she has co-created. Before founding Confluent, she led streams infrastructure at LinkedIn. After completing her bachelor's in computer science from Pune University, she went to the Georgia Institute of Technology for her master's.
On the work for which she was selected
I helped co-create Apache Kafka, an open source technology that acts as a central nervous system to connect all of a company's data and make it available for use within a few milliseconds. At Confluent, the company behind the Apache Kafka project, I oversee the technology direction, product strategy and engineering, ensuring we build the right product for our customers. Kafka has seen widespread adoption across thousands of companies like LinkedIn, Netflix, Pinterest, AirBnb, Verizon, Salesforce. We are solving a key problem that companies face, which is collecting data about everything happening inside the company and allowing applications and systems to react to events in real-time.
On the broader objective behind this research
Our mission is to build a central nervous system for every company in the world. There is a tectonic shift happening in data processing needs as companies become more digital. The old world of batch processing needs to be replaced by a modern world of real-time data and stream processing. Building the technology that helps companies make the shift from batch to real-time is the objective of Confluent and Apache Kafka. Data used to locked up in silos. Traditional solutions could not keep up with the newer high throughput data sources. Kafka provides an elegant solution to this problem.
On India's research ecosystem
India is at the forefront of technology and the startup ecosystem ripe for disruption. It is exciting to see the change in business ecosystem with the rise of venture capital. The availability of capital is the key to enable India's bright minds and budding entrepreneurs.
On message to India's young researchers
Go against the flow, find opportunities that solve a real problem and develop persistence to turn your vision into reality.
“Focus on Quality of Research, Not Quantity“
Radha Boya, 32, is a Leverhulme early career fellow at the University of Manchester where she is exploring the fundamentals and applications of atomic scale nanocapillaries.She completed her PhD from Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research (JNCASR), Bengaluru, in 2012.
On the work for which she was selected
I make atomically thin and ultra-smooth pipes -capillaries. Individual atomic planes, which are removed from a bulk crystal, leave behind flat voids of a chosen height. When one-atom-thick layer of graphite -graphene --was isolated in 2001, it led to a scientific revolution, bringing in new types of 2-D materials. What I have made is an antipode of graphene by focusing on what is left behind after extracting one-atomic layer out of a crystal -an ultrathin cavity. This is a completely new type of nanoscale system, which can be made as a cavity (to confine various substances) or an open-ended tunnel (for transporting matter).
Tiny pipes which can allow flow of fluids through them have interesting mass transport properties when the size of the pipe itself approaches the molecular size. The art of making such tiny pipes till now relied on removing material in a structured way from conventional materials such as silicon, glass, quartz, etc. This is the first time that an unprecedented control in making such ultra-fine capillaries has been achieved, thanks to the atomically flat 2-D material, graphene.
On the research ecosystem of India
The place from where I did my PhD, JNCASR, is at par with the research institutes that I have worked in the US and UK. Awareness needs to be spread about the quality of research that needs to be done rather than the quantity. Importantly, fundamental research that has implications for societal benefits in the long term needs to be encouraged, apart from science for immediate commercial applications. We need to think ahead, for the long term.
“Try Figuring Out Big, Open Problems“
Suchi Saria, 32, assistant professor at Johns Hopkins University, has built algorithms from medical data for early identification of sepsis. Hailing from Darjeeling in West Bengal, she did her PhD at Stanford.
On the work for which she was selected
My research is in the field of statistical machine learning and computational healthcare. I develop computer algorithms that make use of large-scale data routinely collected during doctor visits to figure out new ways to improve treatment. TR35 points to my work on early identification of sepsis.Sepsis kills more patients than breast and prostate cancer combined. It also evolves very quickly so timely treatment is important. Now, sepsis often goes undetected until patients are suffering from organ dysfunction because of sepsis. My work shows that we can devise new computer algorithms that can recognise sepsis early and precisely.
On the broader objective of this research
Our health data is now stored electronically. I want to leverage this data to find new algorithmic protocols for personalising the delivery of medicine.
On her message for researchers in India
Middle school education in India is very rigor ous. This means we are taught the necessary fundamentals for tackling interesting techni cal problems. But, at some point, the system relies too heavily on tests to incentivise stu dents to learn. Here is what I say to my little siblings: focus on identifying the big, inter esting, open problems that deserve your time and attention and then figure out what you can do to fix them.
The writer is a Delhi-based journalist


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