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WINDOW ON SCIENCE: Those strolling
through the Clark Center can see experiments in progress.
Linda Cicero
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from his ground-floor office in the neuroscience
cluster, Krishna Shenoy can look across a grassy lawn
into the robotics lab. And anyone strolling through the courtyard—a
surgeon in blue scrubs, perhaps, en route to a neighboring
office—can stop and peer through the glass wall at
Shenoy’s latest experiments with prosthetic devices.
It’s like working in a fishbowl, in the best sense.
“We’re always asking, ‘How do you help students
and other faculty know about work going on at the University?’” the
assistant professor of electrical engineering says. “In
the end, it’s by word of mouth: ‘Hey, you should
go talk to . . .’ And I think the Clark Center will serve
that function.”
Shenoy is one of about 40 junior and senior
faculty from three schools—Humanities and Sciences, Engineering,
and Medicine—who are taking up residence in the $146.6
million James H. Clark Center that opened on October 24. With
their
lab groups and with hundreds of affiliated faculty and
researchers in other campus buildings, they compose the
Stanford experiment
known as Bio-X.
Some compare the promise of Bio-X to the
collaborative spirit that fueled wartime discoveries
at Los Alamos, N.M.,
where scientists worked, ate and lived together. Whatever
their specialty, the chemists, physicists, clinicians
and computer scientists of Bio-X all have a passionate curiosity
about
how
biology interacts with “X,” the variable that can
stand for engineering, computation, medicine and more.
Shenoy,
for example, is an engineer who works with complex systems
that process information, like computers and
mobile satellite communication systems. But he also
is fascinated by what he calls the “ultimate computation”—the
human brain. “How does it do what our most sophisticated
computer systems still can’t do?” he wants to know. “How
can it coordinate elaborate movements, like golf swings
or violin playing?”
Those kinds of questions swept Shenoy
into six years of postdoctoral study in neurobiology,
with the goal of learning
how to take electronic measurements of the brain as it
controls body movements. In the Neural Prosthetic Systems
Laboratory he now heads, Shenoy is eavesdropping on the brain’s
signals—“neurons chattering away” —and
trying to decipher and then translate the detailed electrical
impulses into mathematical algorithms that someday will
enable a computer chip to guide a prosthetic arm. He suggests
that
those and other breakthroughs will come about as, say,
engineers collaborate with, say, neurosurgeons in the Clark
Center cafeteria
or over a cup of Peet’s coffee, available on the third
floor.
“The idea is for this to be a community center for interdisciplinary
biological science,” says Matt Scott, Bio-X’s chair
and a professor of developmental biology and of genetics. “As
people run into each other in the courtyard and on the
balconies, they’re getting to know each other and using
the space for the larger community, and not just for the
people who happen
to live here.”
By day, the Clark Center conjures up a
starship docking station, all gleaming curves and glistening
glass, with
metal stairways that wind up the exterior like exotic
extraterrestrial vines. At night, when the lights go on in
the labs and
bubble
up from the skylights of the underground auditorium,
the limestone facade glows.
Inside the three wings that house
researchers from dozens
of departments, the pursuit of possibilities is palpable.
Chemists cross invisible lines from their “wet” labs,
outfitted with fume hoods and safety stations, into the “dry,” intricately
wired spaces assigned to biocomputational teams. Researchers
from the biodesign cluster who go for a stroll can quickly
find themselves standing in front of a computer table littered
with brightly colored blocks and guarded by multitasking
robots. Branching off from the labs are “brainstorming” rooms
with whiteboards on wheels, and scattered throughout the
see-through honeycomb are bright yellow “hotel benches” where
visitors can check in and out with short-term projects.
Scott
is determined to spread the gospel of Bio-X by inviting
campuswide audiences to regular “TIE,” Talks
in English. Shenoy says undergraduates already are on board,
with increasing numbers of electrical engineering majors
seeking to apply their skills to the life sciences and
medical therapies.
This year, he plans to introduce “a more neuroengineering
flavor” to his courses on transistors and circuit design. “A
great way to get students excited is to slip in biomedical
applications.”
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