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Suggested Citation:"Pre-Conference Program." National Research Council. 2005. Designing Nanostructures at the Interface between Biomedical and Physical Systems: Conference Focus Group Summaries. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11317.
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The National Academies Keck Futures Initiative Designing Nanostructures Pre-Conference

Videoconference between the Keck Center of the National Academies (Washington, DC) and the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Center of the National Academies (Irvine, CA)

September 18 - 19, 2004

Final Agenda

Keck Center Auditorium (Washington, DC)

Beckman Center (Irvine, CA)

Friday, September 17 (EDT)

Friday, September 17 (PDT)

 

 

7:30-10:30pm

Hospitality Suite/Jazz

Hyatt Newporter, rooms 319 & 321

Saturday, September 18 (EDT)

Saturday, September 18 (PDT)

 

 

7:45am

Bus pick-up from the Hyatt

Newporter to the Beckman Center

11:00 - 12:30

Lunch w/Speaker

8 - 30

Breakfast w/Speaker

Welcome

Cherry Murray ( DC )

Chair, National Academies Keck Futures Initiative Nano Steering and Planning Committees

Physical Sciences Research Senior Vice President

Bell Labs, Lucent Technologies

Nanotechnology Ethics

Peter A. Singer, MD, MPH, FRCPC ( DC )

Sun Life Financial Chair in Bioethics, Director of the Joint Centre for Bioethics

University of Toronto

12:30 - 2:30pm

Sessions 1 & 2*

9:30 - 11:30

Session 1 & 2*

Future of Medicine – Session 1

Judith L. Swain, M.D. ( Irvine )

Chair, Department of Medicine

Arthur L. Bloomfield Professor of Medicine

Stanford University School of Medicine

Nanoscale Materials: Some Progress, Some Problems, and Some Promise – Session 2

Mark A. Ratner( DC )

Morrison Professor of Chemistry

Northwestern University

2:30 - 3:00

Break

11:30 - 12:00

Break

*  

Each session is 1 hour – 40 minutes for the presentation, 20 minutes for Q&A. Speakers will be distributed between Keck and Beckman Centers. The location the speaker will be live is given in parentheses after each name. All sessions and speakers, except the Funding & Administration of Interdisciplinary Research panels, will be videoconferenced to the other location.

Suggested Citation:"Pre-Conference Program." National Research Council. 2005. Designing Nanostructures at the Interface between Biomedical and Physical Systems: Conference Focus Group Summaries. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11317.
×

Keck Center Auditorium (Washington, DC)

Beckman Center (Irvine, CA)

Saturday, September 18 (EDT)

Saturday, September 18 (PDT)

3:00 - 5:00pm

Sessions 3 & 4*

12:00 - 2:00pm

Sessions 3 & 4*

Overview of Biological Machines – Session 3

David S. Goodsell ( Irvine )

Associate Professor, Department of Molecular Biology

The Scripps Research Institute

Optical Nano-Imaging – Session 4

Shuming Nie ( DC )

Director of Cancer Nanotechnology, Winship Cancer Institute

Associate Professor of Biomedical Engineering, Chemistry, Hematology, and Oncology

Emory University and Georgia Institute of Technology

5:00 - 7:00

Dinner w/Speaker

2:00 - 4:00

Lunch w/Speaker

Communicating Science

Joe Palca ( DC )

Correspondent

National Public Radio

7:30 - 11:00

Hospitality Suite at Hotel Monaco – Room 443 (Informal discussions, snacks)

4:00 - 6:00

Panel: Funding and Administration of Interdisciplinary Research

Moderator:

Andy McCammon, J.E. Professor of Theoretical Chemistry, University of California, San Diego

Panelists:

Dave Eaglesham, Chemistry and Materials Science Chief Technologist, Lawrence Livermore National Lab

Samuel I. Stupp, Board of Trustees Professor of Materials Science, Chemistry and Medicine, and Director, Institute for Bioengineering and Nanoscience in Advanced Medicine, Northwestern University

Mercedes Talley, Program Director, W.M. Keck Foundation

6:00

Bus pick-up from Beckman Center to the Hyatt Newporter

7:00 - 11:00

Hospitality Suite at Hyatt Newporter – Garden 2 & 3 (Informal discussions, buffet)

*  

Each session is 1 hour – 40 minutes for the presentation, 20 minutes for Q&A. Speakers will be distributed between Keck and Beckman Centers. The location the speaker will be live is given in parentheses after each name. All sessions and speakers, except the Funding & Administration of Interdisciplinary Research panels, will be videoconferenced to the other location.

Suggested Citation:"Pre-Conference Program." National Research Council. 2005. Designing Nanostructures at the Interface between Biomedical and Physical Systems: Conference Focus Group Summaries. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11317.
×

Keck Center Auditorium (Washington, DC)

Beckman Center (Irvine, CA)

Sunday, September 19 (EDT)

Sunday, September 19 (PD T)

8:00 - 9:00am

Breakfast

 

 

9:00 - 10:30

Panel: Funding and Administration of Interdisciplinary Research

 

 

Moderator:

Cherry Murray, Physical Sciences Research Senior Vice President, Bell Labs, Lucent Technologies

 

 

Panelists:

Eric Jakobsson, Director, Center for Bioinformatics and Computational Biology, NIH/NIGMS

Aravinda Kini, Program Manager, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Department of Energy

Conrad Masterson, Jr., Nanotech Foundation of Texas

Celia Merzbacher, National Science and Technology Council, Office of Science and Technology Policy, Executive Office of the President

Fraser Stoddart, Director, California NanoSystems Inst.

 

 

 

 

6:45am

Bus pickup from the Hyatt Newporter to Beckman Center

10:30 - 11:00

Break

7:00 - 8:00

Breakfast

11:00 - 2:00

Sessions 5 & 6 & 7*

8:00 - 11:00

Sessions 5 & 6 & 7*

Future of Tissue Engineering – Session 5

Samuel I. Stupp ( Irvine )

Board of Trustees Professor of Materials Science, Chemistry and Medicine

Director, Institute for Bioengineering and Nanoscience in Advanced Medicine

Northwestern University

Clinical Nano-Imaging – Session 6

Samuel A. Wickline, M.D. ( DC )

Professor of Medicine, Biomedical Engineering, Physics, Cell Biology and Physiology

Washington University School of Medicine

Future of Nano-Devices – Session 7

Evelyn L. Hu ( Irvine )

Professor, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

Director, California NanoSystems Institute

University of California – Santa Barbara

2:00pm

Lunch / Leave for airports

11:00

Lunch

 

 

11:00 & 12:15

Buses depart for Hyatt Newporter and John Wayne Airport

*  

Each session is 1 hour – 40 minutes for the presentation, 20 minutes for Q&A. Speakers will be distributed between Keck and Beckman Centers. The location the speaker will be live is given in parentheses after each name. All sessions and speakers, except the Funding & Administration of Interdisciplinary Research panels, will be videoconferenced to the other location.

Suggested Citation:"Pre-Conference Program." National Research Council. 2005. Designing Nanostructures at the Interface between Biomedical and Physical Systems: Conference Focus Group Summaries. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11317.
×

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Suggested Citation:"Pre-Conference Program." National Research Council. 2005. Designing Nanostructures at the Interface between Biomedical and Physical Systems: Conference Focus Group Summaries. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11317.
×
Page 81
Suggested Citation:"Pre-Conference Program." National Research Council. 2005. Designing Nanostructures at the Interface between Biomedical and Physical Systems: Conference Focus Group Summaries. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11317.
×
Page 82
Suggested Citation:"Pre-Conference Program." National Research Council. 2005. Designing Nanostructures at the Interface between Biomedical and Physical Systems: Conference Focus Group Summaries. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11317.
×
Page 83
Suggested Citation:"Pre-Conference Program." National Research Council. 2005. Designing Nanostructures at the Interface between Biomedical and Physical Systems: Conference Focus Group Summaries. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11317.
×
Page 84
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Last November, the National Academies Keck Futures Initiative held the Designing Nanostructures at the Interface Between Biomedical and Physical Systems conference at which researchers from science, engineering and medicine discussed recent developments in nanotechnology, directions for future research, and possible biomedical applications. The centerpiece of the conference was breakout sessions in which ten focus groups of researchers from different fields spent eight hours developing research plans to solve various problems in the field of nanotechnology. Among the challenges were:

  • Building a nanosystem that can isolate, sequence and identify RNA or DNA
  • Developing a system to detect disease in vivo
  • Sequencing a single molecule of protein
  • Creating a biological system that will create a local hydrogen fuel source, and
  • Growing a biological in vivo power source.

Representatives from public and private funding organizations, government, industry, and the science media also participated in the focus groups. This book provides a summary of the conference focus groups. For more information about the conference, visit Keck Futures Initiative.

The National Academies Keck Futures Initiative was launched in 2003 to stimulate new modes of scientific inquiry and break down the conceptual and institutional barriers to interdisciplinary research. The National Academies and the W.M. Keck Foundation believe considerable scientific progress and social benefit will be achieved by providing a counterbalance to the tendency to isolate research within academic fields. The Futures Initiative is designed to enable researchers from different disciplines to focus on new questions upon which they can base entirely new research, and to encourage better communication between scientists as well as between the scientific community and the public.

Funded by a $40 million grant from the W.M. Keck Foundation, the National Academies Keck Futures Initiative is a 15-year effort to catalyze interdisciplinary inquiry and to enhance communication among researchers, funding agencies, universities, and the general public–with the object of stimulating interdisciplinary research at the most exciting frontiers. The Futures Initiative builds on three pillars of vital and sustained research: interdisciplinary encounters that counterbalance specialization and isolation; the identification and exploration of new research topics; and communication that bridges languages, cultures, habits of thought, and institutions. Toward these goals, the National Academies Keck Futures Initiative incorporates three core activities each year: Futures conferences, Futures grants, and National Academies Communication Awards.

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