Emerging Technologies
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New technology is arriving faster than ever and holds the promise of solving many of the world’s pressing challenges such as food and water security, energy sustainability and personalised medicine.
Lighter, cheaper and flexible electronics made from organic materials have found endless practical applications and drugs are being delivered via nanotechnology at the molecular level, at the moment just in medical labs.
However, outdated government regulations, inadequate existing funding models for research and uninformed public opinion are the greatest challenges in effectively moving emerging technologies from the research labs to people’s lives.
1) Robotics 2.0
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Collaborative robotics can accelerate time-to-market, improve production accuracy and reduce rework.
We’ve seen robots that can walk like an ape and run like a cheetah, robots that can mix a perfect martini, help the disabled, or drive you to the store. Robots could replace soldiers on the battlefield. In Japan, robots are being tested in nursing roles: they help patients out of bed and support stroke victims in regaining control of their limbs.
Artificial Intelligence, machine learning and computer vision are constantly developing and perfecting new technologies that “enable the machine” to perceive and respond to its ever changing environment. Emergent AI is the nascent field of how systems can learn automatically by assimilating large volumes of information. An example of this is how Watson system developed by IBM is now being deployed in oncology to assist in diagnosis and personalised, evidence-based treatment options for cancer patients.
2) Neuromorphic Engineering

IBM’s
million “neurones” TrueNorth chip, revealed in prototype in August
2014, has a power efficiency for certain tasks that is hundreds of times
superior to conventional CPU’s
A key aspect of neuromorphic engineering is understanding how the morphology of individual neurones, circuits and overall architectures creates desirable computations, affects how information is represented, influences robustness to damage, incorporates learning and development, adapts to local change (plasticity), and facilitates evolutionary change. Neuromorphic Computing is next stage in machine learning.
IBM’s million “neurones” TrueNorth chip, revealed in prototype in August 2014, has a power efficiency for certain tasks that is hundreds of times superior to conventional CPU’s and comparable for the first time to the human cortex. The challenge here remains creating code that can realise the potential of the TrueNorth chip, an area IBM continues investing in today.
3) Intelligent Nanobots – Drones
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Ambulance drones that can deliver vital medical supplies and “on screen” instructions.
Autonomous drones will improve agricultural yields by collecting and processing vast amounts of visual data from the air, allowing precise and efficient use of inputs such as fertiliser and irrigation.
Ambulance drones that can deliver vital medical supplies and “on screen” instructions. Drones with mounted camera to “learn” about surroundings – with no information about the environment or the objects within it- by using reference points and different angles, it builds a 3D map of surroundings, with additional sensors picking up barometric and ultrasonic data. Autopilot software then uses all this data to navigate safely and even seek out specific objects. Autonomous. Intelligent. Swarming. Nano Drones.
4) 3D Printing (yes, we can’t get enough of it)
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A
future in which we can have tangible goods as well as intangible
services delivered to our desktops or high-street shops over the
Internet.
And a future in which the everyday “atomisation” of virtual objects into hard reality has turned the mass pre-production and stock-holding of a wide range of goods and spare parts into no more than an historical legacy.
Emerging Technologies in 3D printing that eventually lead to lighter, more efficient plane parts that could save fuel on your flights, replacement body parts, from printed knickers to 3D printed pills and from synthetic hearts to 3D printed homes on Mars and other planers.
5) Precision Medicine
From heart disease to cancer, all have a genetic component. Cancer is best described as a disease of the genome. The ability to sequence a patient’s whole genome is close to entering the clinic in cancer hospitals.
With
digitisation, doctors will be able to make decisions about a patient’s
cancer treatment informed by a tumour’s genetic make-up.
With digitisation, doctors will be able to make decisions about a patient’s cancer treatment informed by a tumour’s genetic make-up.
This new knowledge is also making precision medicine a reality by enabling the development of highly targeted therapies that offer the potential for improved treatment outcomes, especially for patients battling cancer and finally by combining whole-genome sequencing (or transcriptome sequencing) with advancing sequence-based drug technology the future really looks amazing!
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