Technological overoptimism lurks as a persistent risk to both professional and amateur watchers of advances, from artificial intelligence to the flying car. But sometimes new technologies actually live up to some of the wildest expectations for them.
This year’s SciAm 50 awards are replete with instances of new machines or chemicals that come close to the true meaning of innovation as something entirely new. One winner has created an instrument that measures fluids in zeptoliters, or sextillionths of a liter. (You know, the zeptoliter, the measurement unit that is 1,000th of an attoliter?)
Another innovator has devised a method that could recharge a phone without plugging it in. All you would have to do is sit at the dining room table, phone in pocket, a few feet away from a recharging coil hidden in the ceiling. Still another visionary is paving the way for treating mysterious and deadly prion diseases such as mad cow and kuru.
Award winners highlighted here have the potential to contribute much more to human health, consumer electronics and numerous other fields than if they were simply offering another antidepressant that tweaked serotonin levels or ratcheting up the speed of a microprocessor. What they have done is decidedly new.
1. The Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium
2. Amyris Biotechnologies
3. X Prize Foundation
4. Marin Soljacic, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (research)
5. Apple (business)
6. Robert Ghrist, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and Vin de Silva, Pomona College (research)
7. Manjunath N. Swamy, Immune Disease Institute, Harvard Medical School (research)
8. Hans Boumans, Netherlands Organization for Applied Research (research)
9. James A. Dumesic, University of Wisconsin–Madison (research)
10. Radoslav R. Adzic, Brookhaven National Laboratory (research)
11. Shelley D. Minteer and Tamara Klotzbach, Saint Louis University (research)
12. Patricia A. Hunt, Washington State University (research)
13. American Pharmacists Association and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (policy)
14. Peter W. Sutter and Eli A. Sutter, Brookhaven National Laboratory (research)
15. Groups of physicists at Hokkaido University, Japan, and the University of Bristol, England (research)
16. Marcelo Jacobs-Lorena, Johns Hopkins University (research)
17. Bruce A. Hay, California Institute of Technology (research)
18. Nancy R. Sottos and Scott R. White, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (research)
19. Benoît Roman and José Bico, City of Paris Industrial Physics and Chemistry Higher Education Institution (research)
20. Robin G. Hicks, University of Victoria, British Columbia, and Rajsapan Jain, University of Windsor, Ontario (research)
21. Sergej Demokritov, University of Muenster, Germany (research)
22. Itay Baruchi and Eshel Ben-Jacob, Tel Aviv University (research)
23. Richard D. Smith, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, and Desmond J. Smith, University of California, Los Angeles (research)
24. Stina M. Tucker, Esther Oh and Juan C. Troncoso, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine (research)
25. Beka Solomon, Tel Aviv University (research)
26. Yurii A. Vlasov, IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center (research)
27. Takasumi Tanabe, NTT Basic Research Laboratories, Japan (research)
28. E. Fred Schubert, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (research)
29. Eugene S. Polzik, Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen, and Ignacio Cirac, Max Planck Institute for Quantum Optics, Germany (research)
30. Giovanna R. Mallucci, Institute of Neurology, London (research)
31. Robert Rohwer, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Baltimore (research)
32. Gregory S. Engel, University of Chicago (research)
33. Steven Van Dessel, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (research)
34. Shinya Yamanaka, Kyoto University (research)
35. Peidong Yang, University of California, Berkeley, and Bruce R. Conklin, Gladstone Institute of Cardiovascular Disease, San Francisco (research)
36. Frank D. McKeon, Harvard Medical School (research)
37. Kevin Eggan, Harvard Stem Cell Institute (research)
38. Masahiro Furusawa, Seiko Epson Corporation, Japan (business)
39. Hanan Dery, University of California, San Diego (research)
40. Todd A. Kuiken, Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago (research)
41. Dean Kamen, DEKA Research & Development Corporation (research)
42. Cato T. Laurencin, University of Virginia (research)
43. Dominik Schultes, University of Karlsruhe, Germany (research)
44. Google (business)
45. IntelliOne (business)
46. Brian Schulkin, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (research)
47. Lawrence C. Rome, University of Pennsylvania and Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Mass. (research)
48. Actelion Pharmaceuticals, Switzerland (business)
49. Conor R. Caffrey, University of California, San Francisco (research)
50. Ilaria Capua, Vialle University, Italy (policy)
Reprinted with permission from Scientific American.