The Consciousness Conundrum

The wetware that gives rise to consciousness is far too complex to be replicated in a computer anytime soon

14 min read
Image: Courtesy Pablo de Heras Ciechomski, Ph.D. Copyright all rights reserved 2006–2008, Visualbiotech Sarl (www.visualbiotech.ch), Switzerland
Image: Courtesy Pablo de Heras Ciechomski, Ph.D. Copyright all rights reserved 2006–2008, Visualbiotech Sarl (www.visualbiotech.ch), Switzerland

This is part of IEEE Spectrum's Special Report: The Singularity

I'm 54, with all that entails. Gray hair, trick knee, trickier memory. I still play a mean game of hockey, and my love life requires no pharmaceutical enhancement. But entropy looms ever larger. Suffice it to say, I would love to believe that we are rapidly approaching “the singularity." Like paradise, technological singularity comes in many versions, but most involve bionic brain boosting. At first, we'll become cyborgs, as stupendously powerful brain chips soup up our perception, memory, and intelligence and maybe even eliminate the need for annoying TV remotes. Eventually, we will abandon our flesh-and-blood selves entirely and upload our digitized psyches into computers. We will then dwell happily forever in cyberspace where, to paraphrase Woody Allen, we'll never need to look for a parking space. Sounds good to me!

Notably, singularity enthusiasts tend to be computer specialists, such as the author and retired computer scientist Vernor Vinge, the roboticist Hans Moravec, and the entrepreneur Ray Kurzweil. Intoxicated by the explosive progress of information technologies captured by Moore's Law, such singularitarians foresee a “merger of biological and nonbiological intelligence," as Kurzweil puts it, that will culminate in “immortal software-based humans." It will happen not within a millennium, or a century, but no later than 2030, according to Vinge. These guys—and, yes, they're all men—are serious. Kurzweil says he has adopted an antiaging regimen so that he'll “live long enough to live forever."

Specialists in real rather than artificial brains find such bionic convergence scenarios naive, often laughably so. Gerald Edelman, a Nobel laureate and director of the Neurosciences Institute, in San Diego, says singularitarians vastly underestimate the brain's complexity. Not only is each brain unique, but each also constantly changes in response to new experiences. Stimulate a brain with exactly the same input, Edelman notes, and you'll never see the same signal set twice in response.

“This is a wonderful project—that we're going to have a spiritual bar mitzvah in some galaxy," Edelman says of the singularity. “But it's a very unlikely idea."

Neuroscience is indeed thriving. Membership in the Society for Neuroscience has surged from 500, when it was founded in Washington, D.C., in 1970, to almost 40 000 today. New brain journals seem to spring up daily, crammed with data from ever-more-powerful brain probes such as magnetic-resonance imaging and transcranial magnetic stimulation. In addition to such noninvasive methods, scientists can stick electrodes in brains to monitor and stimulate individual neurons. Researchers are also devising electrode-based “neural prostheses" to help people with nervous-system disorders such as deafness, blindness, paralysis, and memory loss.

In spite of all those advances, neuroscientists still do not understand at all how a brain (the squishy agglomeration of tissue and neurons) makes a conscious mind (the intangible entity that enables you to fall in love, find irony in a novel, and appreciate the elegance of a circuit design). “No one has the foggiest notion," says the neuroscientist Eric Kandel of Columbia University Medical Center, in New York City. “At the moment all you can get are informed, intelligent opinions." Neuroscientists lack an overarching, unifying theory to make sense of their sprawling and disjointed findings, such as Kandel's Nobel Prize–winning discovery of the chemical and genetic processes that underpin memory formation in sea slugs.

The brain, it seems, is complex enough to conjure fantasies of technotranscendence and also to foil their fulfillment.

A healthy adult brain contains about 100 billion nerve cells, or neurons. A single neuron can be linked via axons (output wires) and dendrites (input wires) across synapses (gaps between axons and dendrites) to as many as 100 000 other neurons. Crank the numbers and you find that a typical human brain has quadrillions of connections among its neurons. A quadrillion is a one followed by 15 zeroes; a stack of a quadrillion U.S. pennies would go from the sun out past the orbit of Jupiter.

Adding to the complexity, synaptic connections constantly form, strengthen, weaken, and dissolve. Old neurons die and—evidence now indicates, overturning decades of dogma—new ones are born.

Far from being stamped from a common mold, neurons display an astounding variety of forms and functions. Researchers have discovered scores of distinct types just in the optical system. Neurotransmitters, which carry signals across the synapse between two neurons, also come in many different varieties. In addition to neurotransmitters, neural-growth factors, hormones, and other chemicals ebb and flow through the brain, modulating cognition in ways both profound and subtle.

Indeed, the more you learn about brains, the more you may wonder how the damn things work. And in fact, sometimes they don't. They succumb to schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, depression, Alzheimer's disease, and many other disorders that resist explanation and treatment.

Nevertheless, the brain is a computer, singularitarians insist. It just has an extremely messy wiring diagram. According to this perspective, neurons resemble transistors, absorbing, processing, and reemitting the electrochemical pulses known as action potentials. With an amplitude of one-tenth of a volt and a duration of one millisecond, action potentials are remarkably uniform, and they do not dissipate even when zipping down axons a meter long (yes, a full meter). Also called spikes, to reflect their appearance on oscilloscopes, action potentials supposedly serve as the brain's basic units of information.

Nothing New About Singularity Fantasies

“The singularity" is just the latest manifestation of our hopes, and fears, of techno-transcendence. The industrial revolution inspired dark sci-fi novels such as Mary Shelley's Frankenstein , in 1818, and Samuel Butler's Erewhon, in 1872; 20th-century thinkers offered more upbeat visions. Some notable examples:

In his 1929 essay "The World, the Flesh, and the Devil," the Irish scientist and Marxist J.D. Bernal predicts that we will soon start improving our minds and bodies by tinkering with our genes. Eventually, we will abandon our fleshy substrates entirely and evolve into "masses of atoms in space communicating by radiation, and ultimately perhaps resolving [ourselves] entirely into light."

In The Future of Man , a collection of essays published posthumously in 1959, the Jesuit philosopher Pierre Teilhard de Chardin speculates that our minds are becoming increasingly interconnected and will eventually fuse into a collective consciousness. This process will culminate in an "omega point," when we shed our physical selves and converge with the divine consciousness. Teilhard de Chardin is a bit vague on how exactly that will happen.

In a 1978 lecture, the physicist Freeman Dyson sought to allay concerns that in an eternally expanding, "open" universe, human consciousness will eventually succumb to the "heat death" implicit within the second law of thermodynamics. Dyson calculates that through shrewd conservation of energy, intelligence can persist forever, perhaps in the form of a cloud of "dust grains carrying positive and negative charges, organizing itself and communicating with itself by means of electromagnetic forces."

In their 1986 book, The Anthropic Cosmological Principle , the physicists Frank Tipler and John Barrow offer a rosier picture of our prospects in a closed universe. By the time the universe begins collapsing, they predict, we will have evolved into superintelligent machines that transform the cosmos into one big computer. As the cosmic computer shrinks toward an infinitely compressed omega point, its information-processing capacity spikes toward infinity, and the computer becomes omniscient and omnipotent. In Tipler's 1994 book, The Physics of Immortality , he proposes that this God-like computer will resurrect all of us within a virtual paradise, in which all our desires, including sexual ones, are fulfilled. Count me in!

Within a decade or so, computers will surpass the computational power of brains, many singularitarians say. They base this claim on the assumption that those spikes represent the brain's total computational capacity. If the brain contains one quadrillion synapses processing on average 10 action potentials per second, then the brain performs 10 quadrillion operations per second. At some point in the near future, some singularitarians say, computers will surpass that processing rate and leave us in their cognitive dust unless we embrace them through bionic convergence or uploading.

We've heard such prophesies before. A half century ago, artificial-intelligence pioneers such as Marvin Minsky of MIT and Herbert Simon of Carnegie Mellon University predicted that computers would exceed human intelligence within a generation. Their prophesies inspired sci-fi writers like Arthur C. Clarke—creator of the cybervillain HAL—as well as younger AI visionaries like Kurzweil, Moravec, and Vinge.

But even Minsky admits that computers are still idiot savants. “I wish I could tell you that we have intelligent machines, but we don't," he says. The world's most powerful computers, he acknowledges, lack the common sense of a toddler; they can't even distinguish cats from dogs unless they are explicitly and painstakingly programmed to do so.

Nevertheless, singularitarians are quite right that, if current trends continue, supercomputers will exceed 10 quadrillion operations per second within a decade. IBM's Blue Gene/P supercomputer, introduced nearly a year ago, can be configured to process up to 3 quadrillion operations per second, although no customer has yet ordered one with the full complement of 884 736 processors that would be needed to get that kind of a processing rate. Argonne National Laboratory, in Illinois, is now completing the upgrade of a Blue Gene/P that should be good for around half a quadrillion operations per second.

So would a fully configured Blue Gene/P be cognitive, perhaps like a monkey or a tree frog, if not like us? Of course not. As any singularitarian would agree, intelligence requires software at least as much as hardware. And that software will soon be available, the singularitarians say, because scientists will in the next couple of decades reverse engineer the brain's software, yielding all sorts of benefits. First, the brain's programming tricks will be transferred to computers to make them smarter. Moreover, given the right interface, our brains and computers will communicate as readily as Macs and PCs. And eventually, of course, our personal software will be extracted from our frail flesh and blood and uploaded into advanced robots or computers. (Don't forget to back yourself up on a hard drive!) We'll walk the earth in impervious titanium-boned bodies. Or we'll inhabit impossibly lush virtual paradises specifically created to please and stimulate our disembodied, digital psyches.

Many neuroscientists do assume that, just as computers operate according to a machine code, the brain's performance must depend on a “neural code," a set of rules or algorithms that transforms those spikes into perceptions, memories, meanings, sensations, and intentions. If such a neural code exists, however, neuroscientists still have no idea what that code is. Or, more accurately, like voters in a U.S. presidential primary, researchers have a surfeit of candidates, each seriously flawed.

The first neural code was discovered more than 70 years ago by the British electrophysiologist Edgar Adrian, who found that when he increased the pressure on neurons involved in the sense of touch, they fired at an increased rate. That so-called rate code has now been demonstrated in many different animals, including Homo sapiens. But a rate code is a crude, inefficient way to convey information; imagine trying to communicate solely by humming at different pitches.

Neuroscientists have long suspected that the brain employs subtler codes. One of them might be a temporal code, in which information is represented not just in a cell's rate of firing but also in the precise timing between spikes. For example, a rate code would treat the spike sequences 010101 and 100011 as identical because they have the same number of 0 and 1 bits. But a temporal code would assign different meanings to the two strings because the bit sequences are different. That's a vital distinction: the biophysicist William Bialek of Princeton University calculates that temporal coding would boost the brain's information-processing capacity close to the Shannon limit, the theoretical maximum that information theory allows for a given physical system.

Some neuroscientists suspect that temporal codes predominate in the prefrontal cortex and other brain structures associated with “higher" cognitive functions, such as decision making. In these regions, neurons tend to fire on average only one or two times per second, compared with the 100 or more times of sensory and motor neurons.

Other neural-coding theories abound. On a more macro level, researchers are seeking “population codes" involving the correlated firing of many neurons. Edelman, at the Neurosciences Institute, has advocated a scheme called neural Darwinism, in which our recognition of, say, an animal emerges from competition between large populations of neurons representing different memories: Dog? Cat? Weasel? Rat? The brain quickly settles on the population that most closely matches the incoming stimulus. Perhaps because Edelman has cloaked it in impenetrable jargon, neural Darwinism has not caught on.

Wolf Singer of the Max Planck Institute for Brain Research, in Frankfurt, has won more support for a code involving many neurons firing at the same rate and time. Do such synchronous oscillations play a crucial role in cognition and perhaps even underpin consciousness? Singer thinks they might.

Consciousness is not easy to define, let alone create in a machine. The psychologist William James described it succinctly as attention plus short-term memory. It's what you possess right now as you read this article, and what you lack when you are asleep and between dreams, or under anesthesia.

In 1990, the late Nobel laureate Francis Crick and his colleague Christof Koch proposed that the 40-hertz synchronized oscillations found a year earlier by Singer and his collaborator were one of the neuronal signatures of consciousness. But Singer says the brain probably employs many different codes in addition to oscillations. He also emphasizes that researchers are “only at the beginning of understanding" how neural processes “bring forth higher cognitive and executive functions." And bear in mind that it's still a very long way from grasping those functions to understanding how they give rise to consciousness. And yet without that understanding, it's hard to imagine how anyone could build an artificial brain sophisticated enough to sustain and nurture an individual human consciousness indefinitely.

Given our ignorance about the brain, Singer calls the idea of an imminent singularity “science fiction."

Kochshares Singer's skepticism. A neuroscientist at Caltech, Koch was a close friend and collaborator of Crick, who together with James Watson unraveled the structure of DNA in 1953. During the following decade or so, Crick and other researchers established that the double helix mediates an astonishingly simple genetic code governing the heredity of all organisms. Koch says, “It is very unlikely that the neural code will be anything as simple and as universal as the genetic code."

Neural codes seem to vary in different species, Koch notes, and even in different sensory modes within the same species. “The code for hearing is not the same as that for smelling," he explains, “in part because the phonemes that make up words change within a tiny fraction of a second, while smells wax and wane much more slowly."

Evidence from research on neural prostheses suggests that brains even devise entirely new codes in response to new experiences. “There may be no universal principle" governing neural-information processing, Koch says, “above and beyond the insight that brains are amazingly adaptive and can extract every bit of information possible, inventing new codes as necessary."

Theoretical quibbles notwithstanding, singularitarians insist that neural prostheses are already leading us toward bionic convergence. By far the most successful prosthesis is the cochlear implant. During the past few decades, about 100 000 hearing-impaired people around the world have been equipped with the devices, which restore hearing by feeding signals from an external microphone to the auditory nerve via electrodes. But as the deaf memoirist Michael Chorost points out, cochlear implants are far from perfect.

In his 2005 book, Rebuilt: How Becoming Part Computer Made Me More Human, Chorost recounts how he learned to live with an implant after losing his hearing in 2001. Although thrilled by the device, which restored his social life, he also recognizes its limitations. Because a cochlear implant provides a crude simulacrum of our innate auditory system, it generally requires a breaking-in period, during which technicians tweak the device's settings to optimize its performance. With that assistance, the brain—perhaps by devising a brand-new coding scheme—learns how to exploit the peculiar, artificial signals. Even then, the sound quality is often poor, especially in noisy settings. Chorost says he still occasionally relies on lip reading and contextual guessing to decipher what someone is saying to him. Cochlear implants do not work at all in some people, for reasons that are not well understood.

By far the most ambitious neural-prosthesis program involves computer chips that can restore or augment memory. Researchers at the University of Southern California, in Los Angeles, have designed chips that mimic the firing patterns of tissue in the hippocampus, a minute seahorse-shaped neural structure thought to underpin memory. Biomedical engineering professor Theodore Berger, a leader of the USC program, has suggested that one day brain chips might allow us to instantly upload expertise. But the memory chips are years away from testing. In rats.

Discussions of memory chips leave Andrew Schwartz cold. A neural-prosthesis researcher at the University of Pittsburgh, Schwartz has shown that monkeys can learn to control robotic arms by means of chips embedded in the brain's motor cortex. But no one has any idea how memories are encoded, Schwartz says. “We know so little about the higher functions of the brain that it seems ridiculous to talk about enhancing things like intelligence and memory," he says. Moreover, he says, downloading complex knowledge directly into the brain would require not just stimulating millions of specific neurons but also altering synaptic connections throughout the brain.

That brings us to the interface problem, the most practical obstacle to bionic convergence and uploading. For now, electrodes implanted into the brain remain the only way to precisely observe and fiddle with neurons. It is a much messier, more difficult, and more dangerous interface than most people realize. The electrodes must be inserted into the brain through holes drilled in the skull, posing the risk of infection and brain damage. They often lose contact with neurons; at any one moment an array of 100 electrodes might make contact with only half that many cells. Scar tissue or blood can encrust the electrode, cells around it might shift their position or die, and electrodes have been known to corrode.

Researchers are testing various strategies for improving contact between neurons and electronics. They are making electrodes out of conducting polymers, which are more compatible with neural tissue than silicon or metal; coating electrodes with naturally occurring glues, called cell-adhesion molecules, which helps cells in the brain and elsewhere stick together; and designing electrode arrays that automatically adjust the position of the electrodes to maximize the reception of neural signals.

At Caltech and elsewhere, engineers have designed hollow electrodes that can inject fluids into the surrounding tissue. The fluids could consist of nerve-growth factors, neurotransmitters, and other substances. The nerve-growth factors encourage cells to grow around electrodes, while the neurotransmitters enhance or supplement electrical-stimulation treatment. Neuroscientists are also testing optical devices that can monitor and stimulate neurons, as well as genetic switches that turn neurons on or off.

To be sure, it's promising work. Terry Sejnowski, a neuroscientist at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, in San Diego, says the new technologies will make it possible “to selectively activate and inactivate specific types of neurons and synapses as well as record from all the neurons in a volume of tissue." That, in turn, might make it possible to build more effective and reliable neural prostheses.

But again, it's a fantastically long way from there to consciousness uploading. Even singularitarians concede that no existing interface can provide what is required for bionic convergence and uploading: the precise, targeted communication, command, and control of billions of neurons. So they sidestep the issue, predicting that all current interfaces will soon yield to very small robots, or “nanobots." Remember the 1966 motion picture Fantastic Voyage? That's the basic idea. But try to imagine, in place of Raquel Welch in a formfitting wet suit, robotic submarines the size of blood cells. They infiltrate the entire brain, then record all neural activity and manipulate it by zapping neurons, tinkering with synaptic links, and so on. The nanobots will be equipped with some sort of Wi-Fi so that they can communicate with one another as well as with electronic systems inside and outside the body.

Nanobots have inspired some terrific “X-Files" episodes as well as the Michael Crichton novel Prey . But they have as much basis in current research as fairy dust [see “Rupturing the Nanotech Rapture,"].

Steven Rose has nothing against technoenhancement. The neurobiologist at England's Open University wears eyeglasses and is proud of his titanium knee and dental implants. He says a lot can be done to improve the brain's performance through improved drugs, neural prostheses, and perhaps genetic engineering. But he calls the claims about imminent consciousness uploading “pretty much crap."

Rose disputes the singularitarians' contention that computers will soon surpass the brain's computational capacity. He suspects that computation occurs at scales above and below the level of individual neurons and synapses, via genetic, hormonal, and other processes. So the brain's total computational power may be many orders of magnitude greater than what singularitarians profess.

Rose also rejects the basic premise of uploading, that our psyches consist of nothing more than algorithms that can be transferred from our bodies to entirely different substrates, whether silicon or glass fibers or as-yet-unimaginable quantum computers. The information processing that constitutes our selves, Rose asserts, evolved within—and may not work in any medium other than—a social, crafty, emotional, sex-obsessed flesh-and-blood primate.

To dramatize that point, Rose poses a thought experiment involving a “cerebroscope," which can record everything that happens in a brain, at micro and macro levels, in real time. Let's say the cerebroscope (hey, maybe it's based on nanobots!) records all of Rose's neural activity as he watches a red bus coming down a street. Could the cerebroscope reconstruct Rose's perception? No, he says, because his neural response to even that simple stimulus grows out of his brain's entire previous history, including the incident in his childhood when a bus almost ran him over.

To interpret the neural activity corresponding to any moment, Rose elaborates, scientists would need “access to my entire neural and hormonal life history" as well as to all his corresponding experiences. Scientists would also need detailed knowledge of the changing social context within which Rose has lived; his attitude toward buses would be different if terrorists recently had attacked one. The implication of his thought experiment is that our psyches will never be totally reducible, computable, predictable, and explainable. Or, disappointingly enough, downloadable into everlasting new containers.

Perhaps the old joke is right after all: If the brain were simple enough for us to understand, we wouldn't be smart enough to understand it.

Let's face it . The singularity is a religious rather than a scientific vision. The science-fiction writer Ken MacLeod has dubbed it “the rapture for nerds," an allusion to the end-time, when Jesus whisks the faithful to heaven and leaves us sinners behind.

Such yearning for transcendence, whether spiritual or technological, is all too understandable. Both as individuals and as a species, we face deadly serious problems, including terrorism, nuclear proliferation, overpopulation, poverty, famine, environmental degradation, climate change, resource depletion, and AIDS. Engineers and scientists should be helping us face the world's problems and find solutions to them, rather than indulging in escapist, pseudoscientific fantasies like the singularity.

For more articles, videos, and special features, go to The Singularity Special Report.

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Terahertz Chip Promises Big Power Without Big Lenses

New on-chip approach uses patterned holes to boost radiating power

3 min read
A terahertz wave generator with its dielectric matching sheet

By affixing a thin, patterned sheet of material to the back of the chip, highlighted in the center and shown in the left side micrograph, the researchers produced a more efficient, yet scalable, chip-based terahertz wave generator.

Jinchen Wang, Daniel Sheen et al.; MIT News

Terahertz waves have been proposed as a powerful tool to quickly transfer giant volumes of data in potential 6G networks and to see through solid matter, like X-rays—only without the hazardous ionizing radiation. Actually implementing these ideas as real-world applications, however, has proven difficult. Now, a research team says it’s bringing the terahertz dream closer to reality with a device that can put powerful terahertz waves on a chip.

Terahertz waves inhabit a neglected section of the electromagnetic spectrum between microwaves and far infrared light, usually in the range of 0.1 to 10 terahertz. Apart from having the ability to penetrate many materials, terahertz waves have higher frequencies than radio waves, which allow them to transmit more information. The downside to terahertz waves is the challenging physics of harnessing them. They are quickly absorbed by water vapor in air, experience losses in commonly used electronics materials such as copper, and the methods of generating these frequencies are often large or can only produce them at low power.

This problem is evident when trying to generate terahertz waves in chips because of the difference between the dielectric constant in the silicon and the air. The term dielectric constant refers to a material’s ability to concentrate an electric field. When a wave meets a boundary between materials with different dielectric constants, part of the wave is reflected, and part is transmitted. The greater the contrast between materials, the greater the reflection. The dielectric constant of silicon is 11.9, much higher than that of air (1), and as a result, terahertz waves are reflected at the interface between silicon and air. This results in significant signal loss.

One workaround is to place silicon lenses on chips to boost radiating power, making terahertz signals propagate farther, but these lenses are expensive and can be larger than the chips themselves.

Boosting Terahertz Waves with Patterned Sheets

Attempting to overcome this limitation, researchers at MIT took a different approach. Instead of a lens, they attached a special patterned sheet to the backside of a chip to boost the transfer of the electromagnetic wave from silicon to air. The sheet contains many holes, making it part silicon and part air and giving it a dielectric constant in between that of silicon and air and allowing most waves to be transmitted rather than reflected. The researchers achieved what they say is higher radiating power than existing devices, and did so without resorting to silicon lenses.

In a paper and slides presented at the recent IEEE International Solid-States Circuits Conference, held in San Francisco in late February, the team outlines how the terahertz radiator device incorporates arrays of on-chip amplifier-multiplier chains, doublers, and broadband bowtie-shaped slotline antennas. That all adds up to a system that produced radiation between 232 and 260 gigahertz.

In addition to the dielectric sheet, the chip uses high-power Intel transistors with a breakdown voltage of 6.3 volts and maximum frequency of 290 GHz, higher than those of conventional CMOS transistors. Mounted on a printed circuit board measuring 51 by 40 millimeters with the dielectric matching sheet exposed at the back, the chip’s peak radiated power was measured at 11.1 decibel-milliwatts, higher than comparable devices in the 200 to 300 GHz band, according to the team.

Dielectric sheets are not a new concept, but a CMOS terahertz source is an ideal scenario for their application, says Jinchen Wang, a graduate student at MIT’s Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science.

The radiator is low cost and could be manufactured at scale. Potential application fields include high-resolution radar imaging, broadband wireless transmissions, and better medical imaging.

“The main challenges are temperature and current density management. Currently, the circuit operates under relatively extreme conditions, which reduces the transistors’ lifetime,” says Wang.

“Besides, if we scale the system into a large CMOS array, thermal management will become a critical issue,” he adds. “It requires a more refined heat sink and fan design. However, we anticipate that these challenges can be effectively addressed within the next two to four years.”

Mona Jarrahi, a professor of electrical and computer engineering at University of California Los Angeles who was not involved in the research, calls it “a groundbreaking achievement” in high-frequency electronics.

“This remarkable advancement not only pushes the limits of CMOS technology in the terahertz regime but also offers an unprecedented combination of high output power, low cost, and compact integration,” says Jarrahi.

“Extending this great performance to higher terahertz frequencies remains a challenge that many researchers are tackling. Physical limitations such as cutoff frequency of transistors, device parasitic, and interconnect losses are the main constraints for higher frequency operation.”

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It’s a SNaP: New Technique Paves Way for Scalable Therapeutic Nanoparticle Manufacturing

Bridging the gap between lab-scale drug delivery research and large-scale pharmaceutical manufacturing

5 min read
An illustration of green dots and purple lines.
NYU Tandon School of Engineering

This sponsored article is brought to you by NYU Tandon School of Engineering.

In a significant advancement for the field of drug delivery, researchers have developed a new technique that addresses a persistent challenge: scalable manufacturing of nanoparticles and microparticles. This innovation, led by Nathalie M. Pinkerton, Assistant Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at the NYU Tandon School of Engineering, promises to bridge the gap between lab-scale drug delivery research and large-scale pharmaceutical manufacturing.

The breakthrough, known as Sequential NanoPrecipitation (SNaP), builds on existing nano-precipitation techniques to offer improved control and scalability, essential factors in ensuring that drug delivery technologies reach patients efficiently and effectively. This technique enables scientists to manufacture drug-carrying particles that maintain their structural and chemical integrity from lab settings to mass production—an essential step toward bringing novel therapies to market.

Using 3D Printing to Overcome a Challenge in Drug Delivery

Nanoparticles and microparticles hold tremendous promise for targeted drug delivery, allowing precise transport of medicines directly to disease sites while minimizing side effects. However, producing these particles consistently at scale has been a major barrier in translating promising research into viable treatments. As Pinkerton explains, “One of the biggest barriers to translating many of these precise medicines is the manufacturing. With SNaP, we’re addressing that challenge head-on.”

Pinkerton is an Assistant Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at NYU Tandon.NYU Tandon School of Engineering

Traditional methods like Flash Nano-Precipitation (FNP) have been successful in creating some types of nanoparticles, but they often struggle to produce larger particles, which are essential for certain delivery routes such as inhalable delivery. FNP creates polymeric core–shell nanoparticles (NPs) between 50 to 400 nanometers in size. The process involves mixing drug molecules and block-copolymers (special molecules that help form the particles) in a solvent, which is then rapidly blended with water using special mixers. These mixers create tiny, controlled environments where the particles can form quickly and evenly.

Despite its success, FNP has some limitations: it can’t create stable particles larger than 400 nm, the maximum drug content is about 70 percent, the output is low, and it can only work with very hydrophobic (water-repelling) molecules. These issues arise because the particle core formation and particle stabilization happen simultaneously in FNP. The new SNaP process overcomes these limitations by separating the core formation and stabilization steps.

In the SNaP process, there are two mixing steps. First, the core components are mixed with water to start forming the particle core. Then, a stabilizing agent is added to stop the core growth and stabilize the particles. This second step must happen quickly, less than a few milliseconds after the first step, to control the particle size and prevent aggregation. Current SNaP setups connect two specialized mixers in series, controlling the delay time between steps. However, these setups face challenges, including high costs and difficulties in achieving short delay times needed for small particle formation.

A new approach using 3D printing has solved many of these challenges. Advances in 3D printing technology now allow the creation of precise, narrow channels needed for these mixers. The new design eliminates the need for external tubing between steps, allowing for shorter delay times and preventing leaks. The innovative stacked mixer design combines two mixers into a single setup, making the process more efficient and user-friendly.

“One of the biggest barriers to translating many of these precise medicines is the manufacturing. With SNaP, we’re addressing that challenge head-on.”
—Nathalie M. Pinkerton, NYU Tandon

Using this new SNaP mixer design, researchers have successfully created a wide range of nanoparticles and microparticles loaded with rubrene (a fluorescent dye) and cinnarizine (a weakly hydrophobic drug used to treat nausea and vomiting). This is the first time small nanoparticles under 200 nm and microparticles have been made using SNaP. The new setup also demonstrated the critical importance of the delay time between the two mixing steps in particle size control. This control over the delay time enables researchers to access a larger range of particle sizes. Additionally, the successful encapsulation of both hydrophobic and weakly hydrophobic drugs in nanoparticles and microparticles with SNaP was achieved for the first time by Pinkerton’s team.

Democratizing Access to Cutting-Edge Techniques

The SNaP process is not only innovative but also offers a unique practicality that democratizes access to this technology. “We share the design of our mixers, and we demonstrate that they can be manufactured using 3D printing,” Pinkerton says. “This approach allows academic labs and even small-scale industry players to experiment with these techniques without investing in costly equipment.”

A stacked mixer schematic, with an input stage for syringe connections (top), which connects immediately to the first mixing stage (middle). The first mixing stage is interchangeable, with either a 2-inlet or a 4-inlet mixer option depending on the desired particle size regime (dotted antisolvent streams only present in the 4-inlet mixer). This stage also contains pass-through for streams used in the second mixing step. All the streams mix in the second mixing stage (bottom) and exit the device.

The accessibility of SNaP technology could accelerate advances across the drug delivery field, empowering more researchers and companies to utilize nanoparticles and microparticles in developing new therapies.

The SNaP project exemplifies a successful cross-disciplinary effort. Pinkerton highlighted the team’s diversity, which included experts in mechanical and process engineering as well as chemical engineering. “It was truly an interdisciplinary project,” she noted, pointing out that contributions from all team members—from undergraduate students to postdoctoral researchers—were instrumental in bringing the technology to life.

Beyond this breakthrough, Pinkerton envisions SNaP as part of her broader mission to develop universal drug delivery systems, which could ultimately transform healthcare by allowing for versatile, scalable, and customizable drug delivery solutions.

From Industry to Academia: A Passion for Innovation

Before arriving at NYU Tandon, Pinkerton spent three years in Pfizer’s Oncology Research Unit, where she developed novel nano-medicines for the treatment of solid tumors. The experience, she says, was invaluable. “Working in industry gives you a real-world perspective on what is feasible,” she points out. “The goal is to conduct translational research, meaning that it ‘translates’ from the lab bench to the patient’s bedside.”

Pinkerton — who earned a B.S. in Chemical Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (2008) and a doctoral degree in Chemical and Biological Engineering from Princeton University — was attracted to NYU Tandon, in part, because of the opportunity to collaborate with researchers across the NYU ecosystem, with whom she hopes to develop new nanomaterials that can be used for controlled drug delivery and other bio-applications.

She also came to academia because of a love of teaching. At Pfizer, she realized her desire to mentor students and pursue innovative, interdisciplinary research. “The students here want to be engineers; they want to make a change in the world,” she reflected.

Her team at the Pinkerton Research Group focuses on developing responsive soft materials for bio-applications ranging from controlled drug delivery, to vaccines to medical imaging. Taking an interdisciplinary approach, they use tools from chemical and materials engineering, nanotechnology, chemistry and biology to create soft materials via scalable synthetic processes. They focus on understanding how process parameters control the final material properties, and in turn, how the material behaves in biological systems — the ultimate goal being a universal drug delivery platform that improves health outcomes across diseases and disorders.

Her SNaP technology represents a promising new direction in the quest to scale drug delivery solutions effectively. By controlling assembly processes with millisecond precision, this method opens the door to creating increasingly complex particle architectures, providing a scalable approach for future medical advances.

For the field of drug delivery, the future is bright as SNaP paves the way toward an era of more accessible, adaptable, and scalable solutions.

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New Virtual Series Highlights Hot Topics from IEEE Conferences

It covered innovations in power, photovoltaics, and AI tech

4 min read
An Asian man sitting and paying attention during a business conference in an auditorium.
iStock

Attending an IEEE conference is an opportunity to learn about the latest advances in technology, meet some of the world’s leading researchers, and network with thought leaders and industry practitioners.

Last year IEEE held nearly 2,300 conferences in 109 countries. The research from these cutting-edge events comprises more than 72 percent of the IEEE Xplore Digital Library.

Not everyone can attend an international conference in person, though. To more broadly share some of the cutting-edge research that was conducted last year, IEEE Conferences, Events & Experiences, in collaboration with the IEEE China office, produced a new virtual series. Held in December, the IEEE Tech Frontiers event curated content from three leading gatherings: the IEEE Transmission and Distribution Conference and Exposition, the IEEE Photovoltaic Specialists Conference, and the IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition.

Those conferences cover some of today’s most important technologies, such as power and energy, photovoltaic technology, and artificial intelligence, and they attract article submissions from all over the world. Conference organizers were able to highlight the hot topics and interesting elements of each event.

Nearly 2,500 people attended the two-hour session, which was presented in English and Mandarin.

“IEEE conferences are tech frontiers that provide scholars and engineers with a platform to exchange and learn about the latest developments so that we can have innovation and excellence,” Bin Zhao, president of the IEEE Electron Devices Society, said at the event. The IEEE Fellow served as the event’s champion and moderator.

“We would like to help professionals build networks and connections,” Zhao said, “so that we have better capabilities to push our tech forward.”

Conferences in China advance tech innovation

IEEE Senior Member Yinghong Wen, chair of the IEEE China Council, kicked off the event.

“IEEE China has continued to grow, and international events have played a key role in our growth,” Wen said. “International events are the best source from which we learn the latest tech breakthroughs and carry out international tech exchanges. IEEE conferences are regarded as the most premier academic gatherings for electronics, electrical engineering, computer science, and other relevant fields.”

Weiqing Tang, CEO of the China Computer Federation, said the organization believes in the importance of cooperation with international organizations such as the IEEE Computer Society. The CCF has nearly 120,000 members and holds more than 1,600 events each year. The two organizations have partnered on several initiatives including member development, publications, and conferences. The collaboration supports common missions, Tang said.

“The CCF steadfastly supports IEEE China in continuing to hold events,” he said, “and is willing to lend a helping hand so that more people are aware of these events.”

“IEEE conferences are tech frontiers that provide scholars and engineers with a platform to exchange and learn about the latest developments so that we can have innovation and excellence.” —Bin Zhao, IEEE Electron Devices Society president

Wen pointed out that the IEEE Transmission and Distribution Conference and Exposition has promoted technology exchanges and cooperation, allowing China’s power sector to move toward a more sustainable future.

“That [yearly] event has served as an important foundation for China’s smart power grid and efficient power transmission,” she said.

IEEE Fellow C.Y. Chung, a power grid specialist and the IEEE Power & Energy Society’s 2025 president-elect, provided an overview of the annual conference and some of the topics it covers, such as smart grid development and energy storage systems. More than 13,800 people from 78 countries attended last year’s conference, making it among IEEE’s largest, he said.

“Power engineers are working very hard in decarbonizing our power system,” he said. “They are working on employing energy efficiency policies and programs to reduce energy usage, increasing the use of renewable energies such as wind and solar, and promoting economy-wide electrification.”

The IEEE Photovoltaic Specialists Conference (PVSC), sponsored by the IEEE Electron Devices Society, covers developments in PV science and engineering, manufacturing, reliability, deployment, policy, and sustainability.

The IEEE Tech Frontiers presenters (from top left): Bin Zhao, Yinghong Wen, Weiqing Tang, Fred Schindler, Tyler J. Grassman, C.Y. Chung, and Walter Scheirer.IEEE Conferences, Events & Experiences

The PVSC has “promoted tech innovation in the Chinese PV sector, elevating IEEE’s international competitiveness,” Wen said. “This allows China to realize net-zero power transmission and contribute to the global response to climate change.”

IEEE Senior Member Tyler J. Grassman, the 2025 PVSC conference chair, added that the event is a popular venue for announcing new world records set for solar cells and modules.

Another highly attended event is the IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR), which is sponsored by the IEEE Computer Society. The 2024 conference attracted more than 12,000 attendees from 76 countries and regions—the largest to date, says IEEE Senior Member Walter Scheirer. He noted that many of the attendees were from China.

Scheirer is chair of the IEEE Computer Society’s Technical Community on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence.

“It is really exciting to see this cross-Pacific engagement happening,” he said. “We want researchers from all over the globe who are working on computer vision to engage with us.”

He discussed trends in the field, such as generative AI, which is a trending topic in computer vision and other areas.

“There is also a lot of emphasis on AI technologies being used to create images and videos,” he said. “CVPR remains the primary place where this new work is rolling out.”

The conference, Wen said, “stimulates a large number of innovative ideas and the commercialization of computer vision in China.”

Visit the IEEE Tech Frontiers website to view the event on demand. It is available in English and Mandarin.

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Simulation of Pulsed-Field Ablation and Electroporation

Learn how multiphysics simulation software is helping develop applications based on electroporation

1 min read

Pulsed-field ablation can induce temporary or permanent pores in cell membranes using time-varying electrical signals. This process, known as electroporation, allows for the stimulation of cell growth, drug delivery, and tissue ablation. For the development of applications based on electroporation, designers are turning to multiphysics simulation software to accurately represent the process that involves coupled electrical and structural phenomena.

Because of this area’s multiscale and multiphysics nature, numerical modeling can benefit the device manufacturer and the clinical team. Attend this webinar to learn how COMSOL Multiphysics® can be used to address the unique modeling aspects in this field.

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These Graphene Tattoos Are Actually Biosensors

Flexible stick-on patches could monitor blood pressure, stress, and more

10 min read
A hand resting on a table has on its fourth finger both a ring and a nearly invisible band of what looks like clear plastic.

This nearly invisible graphene tattoo can be used to detect various substances in sweat that serve as biomarkers of health or disease.

Dmitry Kireev/University of Massachusetts Amherst
Yellow

Imagine it’s the year 2040, and a 12-year-old kid with diabetes pops a piece of chewing gum into his mouth. A temporary tattoo on his forearm registers the uptick in sugar in his blood stream and sends that information to his phone. Data from this health-monitoring tattoo is also uploaded to the cloud so his mom can keep tabs on him. She has her own temporary tattoos—one for measuring the lactic acid in her sweat as she exercises and another for continuously tracking her blood pressure and heart rate.

Right now, such tattoos don’t exist, but the key technology is being worked on in labs around the world, including my lab at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. The upside is considerable: Electronic tattoos could help people track complex medical conditions, including cardiovascular, metabolic, immune system, and neurodegenerative diseases. Almost half of U.S. adults may be in the early stages of one or more of these disorders right now, although they don’t yet know it.

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Video Friday: Exploring Phobos

Your weekly selection of awesome robot videos

2 min read
A concept image showing a small four wheeled boxy robotic rover driving over the surface of Phobos as a satellite orbits in the background.

DLR's rover is hitching a ride to Phobos on a JAXA spacecraft.

DLR

Video Friday is your weekly selection of awesome robotics videos, collected by your friends at IEEE Spectrum robotics. We also post a weekly calendar of upcoming robotics events for the next few months. Please send us your events for inclusion.

European Robotics Forum: 25–27 March 2025, STUTTGART, GERMANY
RoboSoft 2025: 23–26 April 2025, LAUSANNE, SWITZERLAND
ICUAS 2025: 14–17 May 2025, CHARLOTTE, NC
ICRA 2025: 19–23 May 2025, ATLANTA, GA
London Humanoids Summit: 29–30 May 2025, LONDON
IEEE RCAR 2025: 1–6 June 2025, TOYAMA, JAPAN
2025 Energy Drone & Robotics Summit: 16–18 June 2025, HOUSTON, TX
RSS 2025: 21–25 June 2025, LOS ANGELES
ETH Robotics Summer School: 21–27 June 2025, GENEVA
IAS 2025: 30 June–4 July 2025, GENOA, ITALY
ICRES 2025: 3–4 July 2025, PORTO, PORTUGAL
IEEE World Haptics: 8–11 July 2025, SUWON, KOREA
IFAC Symposium on Robotics: 15–18 July 2025, PARIS
RoboCup 2025: 15–21 July 2025, BAHIA, BRAZIL

Enjoy today’s videos!

In 2026, a JAXA spacecraft is heading to the Martian moon Phobos to chuck a little rover at it.

[ DLR ]

Happy International Women’s Day! UBTECH humanoid robots Walker S1 deliver flowers to incredible women and wish all women a day filled with love, joy and empowerment.

[ UBTECH ]

TRON 1 demonstrates Multi-Terrain Mobility as a versatile biped mobility platform, empowering innovators to push the boundaries of robotic locomotion, unlocking limitless possibilities in algorithm validation and advanced application development.

[ LimX Dynamics ]

This is indeed a very fluid running gait, and the flip is also impressive, but I’m wondering what sort of actual value these skills add, you know? Or even what kind of potential value they’re leading up to.

[ EngineAI ]

Designing trajectories for manipulation through contact is challenging as it requires reasoning of object & robot trajectories as well as complex contact sequences simultaneously. In this paper, we present a novel framework for simultaneously designing trajectories of robots, objects, and contacts efficiently for contact-rich manipulation.

[ Paper ] via [ Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories ]

Thanks, Yuki!

Running robot, you say? I’m thinking it might actually be a power walking robot.

[ MagicLab ]

Wake up, Reachy!

[ Pollen ]

Robot vacuum docks have gotten large enough that we’re now all supposed to pretend that we’re happy they’ve become pieces of furniture.

[ Roborock ]

The SeaPerch underwater robot, a “do-it-yourself” maker project, is a popular educational tool for middle and high school students. Developed by MIT Sea Grant, the remotely operated vehicle (ROV) teaches hand fabrication processes, electronics techniques, and STEM concepts, while encouraging exploration of structures, electronics, and underwater dynamics.

[ MIT Sea Grant ]

I was at this RoboGames match! In 2010! And now I feel old!

[ Hardcore Robotics ]

Daniel Simu with a detailed breakdown of his circus acrobat partner robot. If you don’t want to watch the whole thing, make sure and check out 3:30.

[ Daniel Simu ]

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How Smart Semiconductor Technology Will Improve Personal Health

Supporting a health-conscious lifestyle with smart devices

3 min read
Three adjacent images showing: a woman in a medical facility looking at data, an Infineon circuit board, and a smart watch connected to a smartphone.

The Internet of Things, with technologies such as sensors, microcontrollers, actuators, and connectivity modules together with security solutions and software, has great potential to prevent diseases and improve health.

Infineon Technologies

This sponsored article is brought to you by Infineon Technologies.

We live in a world of rising population. The latest projections by the United Nations suggest that the global population could grow to around 8.5 billion in 2030 and 9.7 billion in 2050. At the same time, life expectancy is increasing. If the global average age was 72.8 years in 2019, it will rise to 77.2 years in 2050.1 This development presents us with major challenges, because we all want to live healthy, vital, and self-determined lives for as long as possible.

In order to prevent a collapse of the healthcare system, the topics of preventive healthcare and well-being are becoming more important. Good health increasingly means taking responsibility of our long-term preventive care rather than sporadically treating acute illnesses. It places great emphasis on enhancing well-being to prevent illness, and it recognizes the role of the home as an important factor in individual health care and, in the event of illness, care.

The role of the IoT for the future of health

Technology, and with it the Internet of Things (IoT) has the potential to support the healthcare sector across all levels, for example with predictive prevention and monitoring, in diagnosis and treatment as well as in follow-up care and support in daily life.

There are numerous health and fitness devices able to track key health markers, such as a user’s heart rate or breathing patterns, that may afford users greater awareness of their health and allow them to make pro-active decisions regarding their health and well-being.

Infineon Technologies

Easy and intuitive health monitoring everywhere

The global IoT market trend in medical devices is clearly moving towards “healthcare is self-care” with a focus on active patient engagement and patient-centric care. The vital signs monitoring segment is expected to grow at the highest rate.

Let’s take smart health devices like fitness wearables as an example: A medical band tracks health and fitness data and enables an efficient monitoring for individuals, doctors, and medical staff. Particularly valuable in critical situations: In the event of conspicuous irregularities, the medical band can advise users to take a certain action first, for example, taking a medication. If serious irregularities develop, the doctor can be contacted or an emergency call can be triggered.

How Infineon Makes Smart Health Work

Infineon’s semiconductor products and software solutions are the perfect match for smart health devices as they meet the needs of digital healthcare applications. We support a health-conscious lifestyle by enabling smart devices that can help improve well-being and stay healthy longer by making them reliable, convenient, personalized — and secure. That’s our contribution to a functioning healthcare system facing a rising global population and aging.

Learn more about Infineon’s smart health solutions →

But there are also smart health devices that do not have to be worn on the body, as the example of smart health monitoring solutions for the home shows. The increase in chronic diseases and health problems in our society often entails the need for home care or self-treatment at home. The desire for a self-determined life is just as decisive for this as the lack of suitable facilities in some regions.

This is where the smart home can help with home automation and health monitoring solutions like sleep monitors based on radar technology that are so small and easy to use that they can replace examinations in the artificial environment of a sleep laboratory. Patients can record their sleeping behavior with high precision at home, without external stress factors, in a familiar environment – even when covered by bedding.

Protecting sensitive health data is a prerequisite

The use of digital technologies in health and lifestyle has advanced exponentially. This increase in digitalization makes the safeguarding of health and patient data urgent and is a basic requirement for the functioning of the digital health system. With topics such as Artificial Intelligence (AI), Machine Learning (ML) and Big Data also playing an increasingly important role, it is becoming essential to secure data to prevent the misuse of private and sensitive information.

Equipping smart health devices with the right security solutions from the get-go is key to helping prevent attacks – whether theft, fraud or manipulation. Companies that are looking for a security solution need one that is equally easy to use – in terms of fast integration and time to market – and trustworthy. Unlike software-only solutions a hardware-based solution is strong, tamperproof and provides a solid foundation.

The vital role of semiconductors for innovative, reliable, and secure smart health appliances

Semiconductors from companies like Infineon are essential components in all solutions as they support the design of innovative technologies and devices for health-monitoring, preventive healthcare like sleep monitoring and, in the event of illness, self-treatment and assisted living at home. Sensors record vital data, microcontrollers process and forward it, actuators trigger actions, networking technologies integrate cloud services with medical expertise, and security solutions ensure the protection of extremely sensitive personal data.

References:

1) United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division (2022): World Population Prospects 2022: Summary of Results. UN DESA/POP/2022/TR/NO. 3.

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Showcasing IEEE’s Role in Combating Climate Change

Its efforts were outlined at COP29 and ITU symposium

4 min read
People walking under an archway entrance for the 29th Conference of the Parties in Baku, Azerbaijan.

IEEE is raising its visibility as a trusted voice on mitigating the effects of climate change and was represented in several sessions at the 2024 U.N. Climate Change Conference, known as COP29.

Michal Busko/Alamy

IEEE continues to raise its visibility as a trusted voice on mitigating the effects of climate change. Last year Saifur Rahman, the 2023 IEEE president, represented the organization in several sessions at the U.N. Climate Change Conference (COP29). Representatives from more than 200 countries attended the November event, held in Baku, Azerbaijan.

Rahman, a power expert, is a professor of electrical and computer engineering at Virginia Tech. In Baku he discussed IEEE’s efforts including helping to develop technologies that help mitigate climate change, teaching sustainable technologies to young engineers in developing countries, and publishing unbiased information.

Then in December, IEEE and the International Telecommunication Union held a symposium on achieving climate resilience. Rahman was the event’s general chair. In addition to high-level representatives from U.N. agencies, there were representatives from other IEEE groups including the Power & Energy Society, the Standards Association, Young Professionals, and the organization’s Europe office.

The event was held at ITU’s headquarters in Geneva on 12 and 13 December. Participants included engineers, industry experts, policymakers, researchers, and standards development organizations. Discussions were held around four key areas: research, technology, and standards; policy, regulation and implementation; education and skills development; and finance, trade, and development.

IEEE’s climate action activities at COP29

IEEE can serve humanity by promoting clean-tech solutions for climate sustainability, Rahman declared in his COP29 presentation.

“Pragmatic and accessible technical solutions are urgently needed to address climate change,” he said. “As engineers and technologists, we are uniquely placed to provide technical solutions and offer a neutral space for discussion and action.”

He highlighted several IEEE resources including the Climate Change website, which houses all the organization’s resources. The IEEE Xplore Digital Library’s climate change collection contains publications, conference proceedings, technical standards, and other research materials. The latest research and upcoming conferences are in the IEEE Technology Center for Climate.

Rahman pointed out IEEE Standards Association Industry Connections programs on green hydrogen, marine carbon dioxide removal, and low-carbon building electrical technology.

He reiterated six feasible solutions for decarbonization in industrialized and emerging economies that he first promoted at COP27 in 2022 to facilitate the global shift toward renewable energy. The solutions involve reducing electricity usage; making coal plants more efficient; using hydrogen, carbon capture, and storage technologies; promoting the use of renewables; installing new types of nuclear reactors; and encouraging cross-border power transfers.

Rahman attended several COP29 side events:

The Towards a Skills Pledge for Tripling Renewables session covered ways to increase electricity capacity by 2030. A skilled workforce is needed to achieve the goal, Rahman pointed out, so it will require an investment in education and training. He said he believes countries must look outside their borders to find experienced technologists to help design, install, and maintain renewable energy projects. IEEE can help enable knowledge transfer and workforce development, he noted.

The Bridging Finance and Technology event focused on funding climate action. Money alone won’t solve the issue, however, Rahman said, without a viable technical plan. He said IEEE’s role is to help facilitate investments in carbon-reduction technologies by promoting energy-efficient systems and renewable energy projects.

“Pragmatic and accessible technical solutions are urgently needed to address climate change. As engineers and technologists, we are uniquely placed to provide technical solutions and offer a neutral space for discussion and action.” —2023 IEEE President Saifur Rahman

In the Developing Green Skills for Young Professionals session, he spoke about the need to train young engineers in developing countries on renewable energy and sustainable technologies. He pointed to the IEEE Young Professionals Climate and Sustainability Task Force, launched in 2023 to encourage the next generation to lead initiatives and develop potential solutions. An article published by The Institute discusses several of the task force’s recent activities.

The Intergenerational Dialog for Shaping Future Climate Landscapes session covered managing long-term atmospheric carbon dioxide, building a global climate risk network, and aligning carbon pricing globally.

Rahman again pointed to IEEE’s 30,000 young professionals from 190 countries. He encouraged the audience to utilize them to help spread the word about how technology can help address climate change.

International Telecommunication Union Secretary-General Doreen Bogdan-Martin and 2023 IEEE President Saifur Rahman were panelists at a U.N. symposium discussing technologies that can help mitigate climate change. D. Woldu/ITU

“IEEE has a very strong climate change program,” he said. “We write papers, but we [also] want to make sure people on the ground benefit from our work. IEEE has sections in over 140 countries. They include engineers, IT professionals, and even businesspeople. I’m pleading with you to use us for the benefit of the local community.”

IEEE-ITU strategic opportunities

In Rahman’s opening remarks, he stressed a bottom-up approach to technology that supports top-down policy frameworks, ensuring that IEEE’s more than 486,000 members—he calls its human technologies—can contribute to solutions.

James E. Matthews III, president of the IEEE Standards Association, stressed that technical standards are the foundation for scalable climate solutions. He said the agility of organizations such as IEEE SA in developing guidelines for new technologies including artificial intelligence and green tech solutions has resulted in their rapid adoption.

In discussing how the role of intellectual property, especially patents, can help achieve the U.N. Sustainable Development Goals, IEEE Fellow Claudio Canizares called for a shift from isolated and proprietary work to more collaborative solutions. The electrical and computer engineering professor at the University of Waterloo, in Ontario, Canada, explained how IEEE could play a crucial role.

Another topic of discussion was the need to educate and train people on implementing climate-resistant technologies. Sneha Satish Hegde, an IEEE member, highlighted how the IEEE Young Professionals Climate and Sustainability Task Force provides mentorship and training. Hegde, a scientific researcher, is the task force’s partnership lead. The task force held a panel session during last year’s Climate Week NYC, which ran from 22 to 29 September to coincide with the U.N. Summit of the Future. Climate-change experts from organizations and government agencies around the world highlighted the intersection of technology, policy, and citizen engagement.

How IEEE can assist

A summary of the IEEE-ITU symposium outlines ways IEEE can continue to take a lead role in climate resilience by expanding partnerships, standardizing solutions, strengthening the repository of data, promoting circular economies, advancing sustainable practices, and bridging the digital divide.

The summary concludes that by finding more partners, creating and strengthening standards, and fostering capacity-building, IEEE could catalyze systemic change, contributing to a more resilient future.

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