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Watch: Highlights from CWRU鈥檚 inaugural Innovation Week

FEATURED | September 19, 2022
STORY BY: EDITORIAL STAFF

As the opening session of 杏吧视频鈥檚 inaugural Innovation Week kicked off last Monday, President Eric W. Kaler took to the microphone to welcome the more than 220 people filling Thwing Center ballroom and the many others tuning in via livestream.

"Innovation is an absolute key part of what we do," he said in his opening remarks. "We teach, we research and we innovate. That is what we鈥檙e all about."

As the week went on and hundreds more members of the campus community came together to hear from experts, share their ideas and experiences, and celebrate outstanding faculty, President Kaler鈥檚 words proved true.

鈥淔rom the impressive research and entrepreneurship of faculty and students to the hard work of staff who built this event from the ground up, what we鈥檝e seen these past few days has truly been the epitome of innovation,鈥 said Michael Oakes, senior vice president of research and technology management. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 wait to see how we build Innovation Week in years to come, as we grow 杏吧视频鈥檚 research enterprise and become a leading problem-solving institution with tremendous tech transfer.鈥

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lIWLz0AGJ3g

Throughout the week, faculty, staff, students, alumni and more took part in a variety of events: panels on venture capitalists鈥 decision-making, industry funding for research, the National Academy of Inventors chapter at CWRU and innovation resources on and off campus.

Then, during Friday鈥檚 poster pitch contest for students and postdocs, 10 winners each took home $1,000:

  • Jacqueline Shaia, PhD student in the Department of Population and Quantitative Health Sciences: 鈥淲ill your world fade to black?鈥
  • Chris Acquah, PhD student in the Department of Chemistry: 鈥淒eveloping bio-compatible organic compounds as photodynamic therapy agents for cancer cells鈥
  • Palak Gupta, PhD student in the Department of Biomedical Engineering: 鈥淪eeing into your eye with virtual reality鈥
  • Zoe Sekyonda, PhD student in the Department of Biomedical Engineering: 鈥淎dvancing the health care of sickle cell disease patients鈥
  • Yvette Zhu, MD student in the School of Medicine: 鈥淭he future of Cell and Gene Therapy Manufacturing鈥 
  • Mikaela Elliott, third-year undergraduate student in the Department of Psychological Sciences: 鈥淕roup Engagement and Parenting Outcomes in a Community-Based Parent Support Program鈥
  • Rachel Wyetzner, fourth-year undergraduate student in the Department of Biology: 鈥淪yntaxin-binding protein 5 (STXBP5) plays a role in germ layer specification, left-right patterning, and heterotaxy鈥
  • Carson Smith, PhD student in the Department of Pathology: 鈥淎djuvant AS01 induces monocyte activation that increases costimulatory function to T cells鈥
  • Aidan Friederich, PhD student in the Department of Biomedical Engineering: 鈥淎chieving Leaning Postures after SCI through Feedback Controlled Neural Stimulation鈥
  • Pamela Robinson, PhD student at Weatherhead School of Management: 鈥淎n Inescapable Pathway Towards Agribusiness Management 2050鈥

Faculty innovators also were celebrated: Four earned the university鈥檚 , while 30 more took home Innovation Week awards during a ceremony Thursday.

In his remarks upon earning the Innovator of the Year award鈥攐ne of two medals he received that evening鈥擠istinguished University Professor Sanford Markowitz, discussed the feelings one may have when launching something truly innovative.

"To do something that has never been done before,鈥 he said, 鈥渋s fraught with peril and adversity.鈥

The next afternoon, College of Arts and Sciences Dean Joy K. Ward quoted Markowitz鈥檚 insights. But, she continued to tell the students and postdocs gathered to pitch their bright ideas: 鈥淚 ask you to be courageous and hard working and believe in yourselves鈥攁nd go, really do something to make this world a better place."