At the opening of Science in the Age of Experience 2019 in Boston, Massachusetts, Patrick Johnson, Dassault Systemes Vice President of Sciences and Corporate Research, declared “Science is what powers our experience and our future.”
"Today and tomorrow are about the new age of science and how it helps us invent new horizons. 250 different companies from various industries are present today to be part of this journey."- Patrick Johnson, VP Corporate Science & Research #science pic.twitter.com/6K4HrOt0dh
— Dassault Systèmes (@Dassault3DS) October 14, 2019
The two-day conference has brought together more than 300 executives and thought leaders from companies, academia and governmental groups, as well as key members of Dassault Systèmes executive committee.
“This conference is about a new age of Science, a new age of experiencing and shaping science,” continued Patrick. ” We have this conviction that the virtual world is providing new unique and disruptive approaches to do science, shape science and to look at theories, as well as experiments, and invent new horizons with science as an incredible catalyst.”
To officially get the conference started, Patrick introduced CEO and Vice Chairman of Dassault Systèmes, Bernard Charlès. “Science is fundamentally shaping our way forward,” he related, “especially in sustainability.”
"Science is really a way to understand the past and navigate the future" Bernard Charles, CEO @Dassault3DS #3DEXPERIENCE pic.twitter.com/6sIu4CmWPA
— 3D Printing Industry (@3dprintindustry) October 14, 2019
Next came the conference keynote speaker, Dr. Lisa Randall, Professor of theoretical physics working in particle physics and cosmology at Harvard, She has studied and taught at Harvard, Princeton, Berkeley and MIT.
“When you look at the history, theories get developed concurrently with technology. And so the role of theory is to tell people what to look for, or they’ll miss things.”- Dr. @lirarandall of @Harvard
is speaking today at Science in the Age of Experience 2019. pic.twitter.com/DZkJOcux2D— Dassault Systèmes (@Dassault3DS) October 14, 2019
“By doing simulations, by having data, we can really do things at a level where we can probe the fundamental interactions of things we can’t see, like Dark Matter.”- Dr. @lirarandall of @Harvard #live now at Science in the Age of Experience 2019. pic.twitter.com/I3qhunManv
— Dassault Systèmes (@Dassault3DS) October 14, 2019
After the keynote and a short break came Dr. Hugh Herr with the most inspirational talk of the day. Dubbed the leader of the bionic age, Dr. Herr is an American rock climber, engineer and biophysicist. He is a Professor at MIT where he heads the Biomechatronics research group and co-directs the MIT Center for Extreme Bionics.
“Human bionics is the merging of biology with design. Sometimes, we extract fundamental principles of nature and biology and those principles define what we design.”- @hughherr of @medialab at Science in the Age of Experience in #Boston. pic.twitter.com/5N7B3a5SAG
— Dassault Systèmes (@Dassault3DS) October 14, 2019
His inventions mimic the functions of real limbs and bring hope to amputees and disabled people across the world. He himself had both legs amputated below the knees following frostbite when climbing.
“My legs were amputated in 1992 and my doctor told me I couldn’t climb or bicycle ever again. He was dead wrong. As a young man, I began imagining new worlds and that my limbs were not anthropomorphic and I could fly.”- @hughherr of @medialab pic.twitter.com/TYj8Lt0nOi
— Dassault Systèmes (@Dassault3DS) October 14, 2019
“Each of my legs has three computers the size of your thumbnail. These devices were designed using @SOLIDWORKS so thank you for that.” – @hughherr of @medialab at Science in the Age of Experience #live now! pic.twitter.com/bUkSC8r5X0
— Dassault Systèmes (@Dassault3DS) October 14, 2019
“I ask people, “what did you see looking at me then and what do you see now?” And I think they see the future. And so we will ultimately eradicate #disability from this planet.”- @hughherr of @medialab closing his speech at Science in the Age of Experience 2019. pic.twitter.com/D2mUIuUkej
— Dassault Systèmes (@Dassault3DS) October 14, 2019
Next, Patrick asked Claire Biot, Dassault Systems Life Sciences Industry Vice President to join him on stage and introduce the next keynote Dr. Ameet Nathwani, Executive Vice President Medical, Chief Medical and Digital Officer at Sanofi, a global leader in healthcare.
“Drugs for many diseases are only part of the solution. If you’re lucky, you’ll get a 50-70% response. But we do know that technologies can amplify the value of the drugs and the outcomes.”- Dr. Ameet Nathwani of @sanofi. pic.twitter.com/hLqkJTKXgP
— Dassault Systèmes (@Dassault3DS) October 14, 2019
“The inexorable rise of digital health is disrupting healthcare everywhere, such that we can now democratize healthcare delivery.”- Dr. Ameet Nathwani of @sanofi at Science in the Age of Experience, 2019 in #Boston. pic.twitter.com/DJDX7TA11x
— Dassault Systèmes (@Dassault3DS) October 14, 2019
“This is the first time in history that we could see a #robot that’s fully qualified in most of the key disciplines in medicine. We may soon see the first non-human licensed to practice medicine.”- Dr. Ameet Nathwani, @sanofi #live in #Boston now. pic.twitter.com/m5cTBhnwkR
— Dassault Systèmes (@Dassault3DS) October 14, 2019
Bakul Patel, Director of Digital Health Division at the Center for Devices and Radiological Health (CDRH) from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration took the stage next to explain what part regulatory frameworks can play in the digital health technology revolution.
“Our work is augmented by information around us that we couldn’t actually capture before and now we can observe how it moves through the patient and impacts them," says @_bakulpatel of @US_FDA at Science in the Age of Experience. pic.twitter.com/sAkxXjvpjg
— Dassault Systèmes (@Dassault3DS) October 14, 2019
Next, Claire moderated a customer panel discussion to discuss how patient experience and outcomes are being improved, as well as the lives of the healthcare professionals who care for them, with the development of breakthrough therapies and technologies. Panelists were Peter Bergethon, Vice President & Head of Digital and Quantitative Medicine at Biogen, a pioneering company in neuroscience with worldwide innovative therapies for people living with serious neurological and neurodegenerative diseases:
“Today, we’re involved in understanding the brain, which is an anatomical structure and so you have to treat it like a 3 dimensional structure.” – Peter Bergethon of @biogen speaks at our customer panel in #Boston now. pic.twitter.com/eDAimsHbA9
— Dassault Systèmes (@Dassault3DS) October 14, 2019
Erik Gathenlon, Co-founder & CEO CellLink, the world leader in designing and developing bioprinting technologies, that enable researchers to 3D print organs and tissues for applications that span industries, from pharmaceutical to cosmetic:
“@Dassault3DS softwares are providing us the ability to design and stay ahead of the innovation curve. This is critical for how our researchers are working today.”- @egatenholm of @CELLINK3D is #live in #Boston for Science in the Age of Experience 2019! pic.twitter.com/tLYJznDJpa
— Dassault Systèmes (@Dassault3DS) October 14, 2019
and Pierre-Yves Frouin, CEO Bioserenity, one of the leading global providers of smart remote diagnostic solutions and online telehealth services to help healthcare professionals and patients with solutions that focus on epilepsy, cardiology, urology and sleep disorders:
“The markers are everywhere, but we focus on electro-physiology and we see that it speeds up processes significantly. We can thus help the right patient receive the right treatment much faster.”- Pierre Frouin of @BioSerenity speaks at our panel in #Boston now. pic.twitter.com/zr3Zpkd5lY
— Dassault Systèmes (@Dassault3DS) October 14, 2019
After the panel discussion, Patrick and Claire welcomed to the stage Mr. Glen de Vries, President and Co-founder of Medidata Solutions. Dassault Systemes has announced the intention to join forces with Medidata, pending approvals, which will strengthen Dassault Systemes’ presence in the critical clinical trials arena. Medidata is leading digital transformation of the life sciences industry for clinical development, commercial, and real-world data.
“Looking at the kinds of therapies on the market, we are taking diseases that were chronic and we’re curing them, and we’re taking life threatening diseases and rendering them chronic. These are amazing things we’re bringing to patients."- @CaptainClinical of @Medidata live now. pic.twitter.com/dn61PgBBUK
— Dassault Systèmes (@Dassault3DS) October 14, 2019
Wrapping up the Better Living segment, Dr. Anne Goupil of the Dassault Systemes’ brand BIOVIA described a case study where researchers used the collaborative and analytic capabilities of the 3DEXPERIENCE platform to develop treatments.
“We need to devise creative ways to sift through mountains of data that is produced during treatment."- Dr. @anne_goupil wraps up the Better Living segment of the Science in the Age of Experience 2019. CC: @3dsBIOVIA pic.twitter.com/mcdbAcn2px
— Dassault Systèmes (@Dassault3DS) October 14, 2019
The final segment of the day was about Science in Nature: Sustainable Planet. Dr. Jennifer Wilcox, Professor of Chemical Engineering at Worcester Polytechnic University presented about how avoiding CO2 emissions is not enough – we need to remove the CO2 buildup already in place.
“It’s not just about removing the #carbondioxide that’s in the atmosphere. It’s also about certain sectors, such as transportation and cement making that chemically produce carbon dioxide, and that’s a very difficult thing to avoid.”- @jwilceclab speaking in #Boston now. pic.twitter.com/kuIfDyOcR2
— Dassault Systèmes (@Dassault3DS) October 14, 2019
The next speaker was Marcel Wubbolts, Chief Technology Officer at Corbion, where he is responsible for their global science & Innovation portfolio.
"We are really heating up the planet in ways that are no longer sustainable. We have to move towards sustainable manufacturing as an industry.”- @marcelwubbolts, Chief Technology Officer, @CORBION at Science in the Age of Experience, 2019. pic.twitter.com/ZETCccvQgm
— Dassault Systèmes (@Dassault3DS) October 14, 2019
The final panel of the day was moderated by Raoul Jacquand, CEO of Dassault Systèmes’ GEOVIA brand, with panelists Dr. Byron Pipes, who was elected to the National Academy of Engineering in 1987 and currently leads the Indiana Center of Excellence of the DOE Institute for Advanced Composites Manufacturing Innovation:
“How much time do we have to change things? We had a century to get to where we are. We don’t have a century to get to where we need to be.”- Dr. Byron Pipes, @PurdueChemE pic.twitter.com/R6satGjTjb
— Dassault Systèmes (@Dassault3DS) October 14, 2019
Bob McCarthy, a professional mining engineer with 30 years’ experience, is a senior consultant at SRK, a world leading international consulting practice to the earth and water resource industries:
“We ask ourselves, "how can we do things differently? How can we manage our waste materials and place them such that we no longer have these legacy issues?""- Bob McCarthy of @SRKConsulting. pic.twitter.com/yxKtm8elg9
— Dassault Systèmes (@Dassault3DS) October 14, 2019
and Raja Sengupta, the Principal Feature Leader and global technology specialist for Aerodynamics at Volvo Trucks North America, responsible for both product development and aerodynamic certification:
“Science is at the core of what we do. Simulations give you the visual cues, the feedback you need to know what to focus on.”- Raja Sengupta, Global Technology Specialist, Aerodynamics, @VolvoTrucks. pic.twitter.com/kla0ldH4Vn
— Dassault Systèmes (@Dassault3DS) October 14, 2019
That was it for Day 1 of Science in the Age of Experience.
Watch for more tweets and posts tomorrow from Day 2.
Thank you for being part of Science in the Age of Experience, Day 1! Join us tomorrow for more sessions on how technology is going to reshape the sustainability revolution. pic.twitter.com/GqlEr1U4aZ
— Dassault Systèmes (@Dassault3DS) October 14, 2019