The 9th Hyper Interdisciplinary Conference
- Conference Theme
- A New Era of Knowledge Manufacturing
- Day & Time
- April 23, 2020 (Thursday) 9:00-19:00
- Place
- Held online
The main conference of the Society for Hyperdisciplinary Research continues to run as a place where new knowledge that cannot be found anywhere else is constantly being created. The 9th Annual Conference will have up to 40 slots for sessions. We are able to manufacture knowledge that no one else in the world has done yet because we bring together diverse people with different knowledge, such as healthcare, brain science, IoT, data science, materials, energy, organizational development, and local ecosystems, and fuse their knowledge with each other.
This is the essence of a hyperdisciplinary conference, where individuals with a passion for solving global-scale problems can take the first step toward social implementation.
Please join us here and let's start a new project together.
<To whom it may concern
Academia, ventures, large companies, SMEs, local governments, secondary and high school students, etc.
<Project Keywords.
Energy, Life Science, Architecture, Chemistry, Mobility, Robotics, Data Science, Materials, Computer Science, Agri, Electronics, Food, Psychology etc.
<Registration
Audience participation deadline: last minute registration possible
<For Poster Presenters and Booth Presenters
Due to the change to an online format, poster and booth presentations will be changed to a 3-minute pitch format (session name: Technology Splash).
<Participation fee for auditing
Due to the change to an online conference, there will be no auditing fee.
Thursday, April 23, 2020 9:00 - 19:00
Time | Online (schedule and speakers are subject to change) |
9:00 | [Opening talk] [Technology Splash]Part 1 (Short Pitch for Poster and Booth Presentations) |
10:00 | [Panel Discussion] The Frontiers of GovTech (Government x Technology) to Solve Deep Issues |
11:00 | [Session] Solving the "Marine Litter Problem" with a team of super-disciplinarians |
12:00 | [Technology Splash]Part 2 |
13:00 | [Session] TECH INSTALL Project - A new way for startups to take full advantage of large companies |
14:00 | [Panel Discussion] The intestinal environment can be designed. |
15:00 |
[Panel Discussion]Role of Regional Banks in Local Development |
16:00 | [Panel Discussion] Can open patents of major companies be a seed for innovation? |
17:00 | [Panel Discussion] Softness changes engineering |
18:00 | [Technology Splash]Part 3 |
18:50 | [Closing talk] |
9:00-9:50
- online
Opening Talk (Opening Ceremony)
Group CEO and Representative Director, LIVERNESS Co.
Yukihiro Maru
D. in Applied Biotechnology from the Graduate School of Agricultural and Life Sciences at the University of Tokyo. 2002, while still a graduate student, he founded LIBANES with only undergraduate and graduate students in science and engineering. In 2002, while still in graduate school, he founded LIVERNESS, a business that offers "delivery laboratory classes in cutting-edge science" for the first time in Japan. He operates a "knowledge manufacturing business" that creates new knowledge by combining technologies and management resources that lie dormant in universities and local communities. As the instigator of one of Asia's largest venture ecosystems, he works to solve global-scale social issues by discovering deep tech from around the world. He is also an innovator involved in the launch of numerous deep tech ventures, including Euglena.
Director, Knowledge Foundation Research Center, Liverness, Inc.
Hiroyuki Takahashi
D. from Yokohama City University in 2009. D. in Science, focusing on creating new research projects between industry and young researchers, including the launch of the "Liberace Research Fund" for young researchers under the age of 40. In addition, he continues to organize the "Super Interdisciplinary Society," a place to generate new knowledge and seeds for research and development by combining individual knowledge, technology, and passion for problem solving without being bound by the framework of academia.
Founding Development Division, Osaka Head Office, Liverness Co.
Machika Hamaguchi
D., Osaka University, 2019. D. (Science). He joined LIVERNESS in the same year, aiming to create a mechanism to accelerate research and business in the bio-medical field, where hurdles such as regulatory approval are high. He is also involved in the development of incubation facilities that can be used as wet laboratories.
10:00-10:50
- online
The forefront of GovTech (government x technology) to solve deep issues
Session Partner: Drone Fund
GovTech (Government x Technology), which uses new technology to solve long-standing problems faced by governments and municipalities, has begun to attract attention in recent years. In Japan, disaster prevention is an area where GovTech is needed, as seen most recently in the devastation caused by typhoons and other natural disasters in the Kansai region in 2018 and in the Kanto region in 2019. In addition, there are many issues that need to be solved on a national level, such as education, food/agriculture, and health/healthcare.
In this session, we will discuss how government and private companies should promote GovTech by making full use of "DeepTech" technology to solve the deep global issues that humanity is facing. Key persons from the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry and the Cabinet Office will join Drone Fund, a VC firm specializing in drone and air mobility, to discuss the forefront of GovTech and how government and private companies should promote GovTech.
11:00-11:50
- online
Solving the "Marine Litter Problem" with a super interdisciplinary team
Session Partners: The Nippon Foundation, Japan Advanced Institute for Research and Development of Human Resources for Science and Technology Education (JASTO)
The time has come when solving social issues can be the seed of a new business. Project Ikkaku," launched by the Nippon Foundation, JASTO, and LIVANES, focuses on the issue of marine litter, which has been attracting increasing attention in recent years, and aims to create "businesses that contribute to the reduction of marine litter. This is an activity to create business opportunities driven by solving social issues, and it aims to grow based on the empathy of people with various attributes, such as researchers, businesspersons, and designers. In this session, we will discuss with the leaders of the teams that have started their activities under the project, how to tackle the solutions to issues that are not easy to solve, and where the breakthroughs in both technology and business can be made.
12:00-12:50
- online
Pitches by researchers and venture companies in very different fields
technology splash
The word "splash" means "to splash, to splash, or to fall with a zap. In this program, researchers and venture capitalists who are presenters will share the most passionate aspects of their research and business with the participants, transcending the boundaries of their fields and affiliations. Participants, on the other hand, will be plunged into the world of different fields while being exposed to the knowledge and enthusiasm of the researchers who will appear one after another. In a series of short presentations in very different fields, the enthusiasm of the presenters and the enthusiasm of the participants collide, and new research ideas and friends are born as if by splashing. That is what Technology Splash is all about.
13:00-13:50
- online
TECH INSTALL Project
〜A new way for startups to take full advantage of large companies.
The word INSTALL comes from the Latin, in stare, meaning "to stand in. When a researcher who loves the technology he or she has developed as if it were his or her own child entrusts it to a venture company, the technology stands on its own in the venture company and turns into a business. This project is named after such a future. TECH INSTALL" is a project to accelerate startups by implementing technologies of large companies into society with the thoughts of the researchers who developed the technologies. We believe that it is good for startups to make the most of large companies. That is what we believe.
The main actors in this year's event are three researchers from Takenaka Corporation's Technical Research Institute, the technology they have developed, and three startup companies that have been inspired by the technology to devise new ideas for using the technology. On the day of the event, the researchers and the start-up teams will present the technologies they have developed and the new applications they have devised based on those technologies. The session will be an interactive session where the audience can add their own ideas to the presentations.
What will happen when we "INSTALL" Takenaka Corporation's "TECH" to a start-up? Stay tuned!
14:00-14:50
- online
The intestinal environment can be designed
Session Partner: Kyowa Hakko Bio Co.
Comprehensive analysis of the intestinal environment has successively revealed the relationship between humans and their intestinal flora. In order to utilize this knowledge for health maintenance and disease prevention, it is important to promote behavioral changes to achieve these goals and to design the intestinal environment appropriately. In this session, researchers involved in intestinal environment, food nutrition, and medicine related to lifestyle-related diseases will gather to discuss how we can design the intestinal environment through diet and lifestyle.
15:00-15:50
- online
Role of Regional Banks in Local Development
Session Partner: Nihon Unisys, Ltd.
While the crisis over the concentration of business in Tokyo is being discussed in various places, regional banks are playing a role in promoting regional development by taking root in their local communities and revitalizing their industries. As the Cabinet approved the "Long-term Vision for the Creation of Towns, People, and Jobs" and the second phase of the "Comprehensive Strategy for the Creation of Towns, People, and Jobs" in 2028, regional development is seen as an important factor that could influence the future trends of the Japanese economy. In this context, some regional banks are promoting a strategy of identifying and fostering the science and technology accumulated in academia as the nucleus for the creation of industries from local regions.
We will discuss the future of regional banks in regional development by inviting a person in charge of the regional tech planter promoted by RIVANES, who is active as an industry creation partner in discovering seeds, fostering venture companies, and promoting the participation of local companies in projects.
16:00-16:50
- online
Can open patents of major companies be a seed for innovation?
Session Partner: Mitsubishi Electric Corporation
While many major companies are seeking open innovation moves from collaboration with venture companies, Mitsubishi Electric and LEVANES have focused on "their own open patents" and have worked to bring together various entities, including students, local factories, and venture companies, with their own researchers who created the patents. In the course of these activities, we have succeeded in adding new knowledge to open patents to find new ways to utilize them. Can this experimental method really become a method that can be used by other companies? Are there any ideas for developing this method into a better one?
In this session, Professor Shichitake of Tokyo University of Technology, who is involved in innovation research in academia and also researches R&D strategies of major companies, and Mr. Takata, who supports IP utilization by small and medium-sized companies and venture companies at the Japan Patent Office, will be invited to discuss innovation methods based on dormant patents of large companies. We will discuss about innovation methods on the theme of dormant patents of large companies.
17:00-17:50
- online
Softness changes engineering.
Session Partner: Murata Manufacturing Co.
The time is coming when it will be possible to take advantage of softness, for example, by using soft materials, or by having softness as a structure even if each individual part is hard. For example, the use of soft materials has a great potential to bring diversity in grasping and movement to robots that have generally been made using hard materials. However, there have not been many cases where robotics engineers have teamed up with material suppliers, and thus the potential has not been fully exploited. In this session, researchers working on accelerating manufacturing with soft matter and soft robotics will discuss the impact softness has in engineering and the challenges it poses for implementation, with examples.
<List of Technology Splash Presentations
Announcement time | order of presentation | Name (titles omitted) | belong to |
9:30-10:00 | A01 | Hiroki Oka | Waseda University |
A02 | Shigeru Ichinoura | Laboratory of Production Machinery, Faculty of Agriculture, Yamagata University | |
A03 | Ikutaro Masaki | The University of Tokyo | |
A04 | Hiroaki Ito | Gastroenterological Surgery, Showa University Koto Toyosu Hospital | |
A05 | Toshi Kanie | Nagoya University | |
A06 | Masaki Misawa | National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST) | |
A07 | Hiroaki Yano | University of Tsukuba | |
A08 | Daichi Okabe | Japan Healthcare Corporation | |
A09 | Masanobu Kowaka | Hamano Manufacturing Co. | |
A10 | Yoshimi Ui | aba Corporation | |
12:00-12:50 | B01 | Yotoku Takamitsu | Nariko Seimitsu Co. |
B02 | Sayuri Goryoda | Tsuji Institute of Culinary Education, Dokkyo Medical University | |
B03 | Tomoaki Takaya | Oyama National College of Technology | |
B04 | Tomohiro Murayama | Urawa Jitsugyo Gakuen Junior & Senior High School | |
B05 | Takushi Ikeda | Urawa Jitsugyo Gakuen High School | |
B06 | Takeshi Ito | Yuge Merchant Marine Technical College | |
B07 | Kohei Aso | Euglena Co. | |
B08 | Shinichiro Takezawa | Seturotech Corporation | |
B09 | Lin Butei | Hosei University Graduate School | |
B10 | Hiroji Akimoto | Albatross Technology, LLC. | |
B11 | Austin Yoshino | Manaola Innovations | |
B12 | Meguro, Scholar | National Institute for Materials Science | |
B13 | Nakatani Warm | Department of Mechanical Engineering, Graduate School of Science and Technology, Hosei University | |
B14 | Rio Takahashi | Department of Mechanical Engineering, Graduate School of Science and Technology, Hosei University | |
B15 | Ryo Sakakibara | Department of Mechanical Engineering, Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Hosei University | |
B16 | Yutaka Kudo | Ten no Gijutsu Co. | |
B17 | Shun Yokota | Hosei University | |
B18 | Masahiro Tsugita | Tokai University Graduate School | |
B19 | Yoshinao Kishimoto | Tokyo City University | |
B20 | Kanazawa, et al. | (KanaLABO Inc. | |
18:00-18:50 | C01 | Kazuhiro Nishioka | Kisvin Science Corporation |
C02 | Sousuke Ohtaki | Urawa Jitsugyo Gakuen Junior & Senior High School | |
C03 | Sun Kim | Urawa Jitsugyo Gakuen High School | |
C04 | Aimi Ishii | Keio University | |
C05 | Seima Yabe | Specialized in Biology, Department of Science, Faculty of Education, Waseda University | |
C06 | Jilan Sadjawijit Manirat | Kanagawa Prefectural Central Agricultural High School | |
C07 | Ken Ueno | Smolt Corporation | |
C08 | Keisuke Igarashi | Japan Cellular Agriculture Association, NPO | |
C09 | Rei Miyano | Kitasato University Graduate School | |
C10 | Hiroshi Nakayama | University of Tsukuba | |
C11 | Yuhei Natsume | Chiba University International Education Center | |
C12 | Naoki Yaraoka | HiLable, Inc. | |
C13 | Mitsuo Nagao | Nihon University | |
C14 | Tetsuya Tsugami | Department of Electrical Engineering, Graduate School of Engineering, The University of Tokyo | |
C16 | Rei Kurozumi | University of Tsukuba Graduate School | |
C17 | Koutaro Sakamoto | University of Tsukuba | |
C18 | Genjiro Maeda | Correspondence course student, Faculty of Science and Technology, Akita University | |
C19 | Hajime Tamaki | Agro Design Studio, Inc. | |
C20 | Tomoji Nakamura | Umi no Kabushiki Kaisha, Ltd. | |
C21 | Kazunori Otobe | National Agricultural Research Center, National Agriculture and Food Research Organization | |
C22 | Shinjiro Saeki | The Society for the Scientific Study of Edible Insects, NPO |
Click here for details of abstracts
Some of the presenters in the above list (announced online on April 23) are different from those who were scheduled to present on March 6-7.
*Only those who have given us permission to post on the web will be posted.