NSF names three new I-Corps Hubs expanding the National Innovation Network across the U.S.
NSF I-Corps Hubs now include colleges and universities across the country
The U.S. National Science Foundation today announced the addition of three new NSF Innovation Corps (NSF I-Corps™) Hubs that will scale the NSF-led National Innovation Network (NIN), accelerating the translation of discoveries into new solutions that benefit society and the economy. Each NSF I-Corps Hub may receive up to $3 million per year for five years and comprises a regional alliance of at least eight universities. Combined with the existing 10 NSF I-Corps Hubs, these 13 NSF I-Corps Hubs presently span 48 states. See the interactive NSF I-Corps Hubs map.
NSF I-Corps Hubs provide experiential entrepreneurial training to researchers across all fields of science and engineering. I-Corps Hubs form the operational backbone of the NIN, a network of universities, NSF-funded researchers, established entrepreneurs, local and regional entrepreneurial communities and other federal agencies, that collectively help researchers learn to investigate the commercial potential of fundamental discoveries in science and engineering. The NSF I-Corps Hubs work collaboratively to build and sustain an innovation ecosystem that engages all Americans throughout the U.S.
“The goal of the I-Corps program is to deploy experiential education to help researchers reduce the time necessary to translate promising ideas from laboratory benches to widespread implementation that in turn impacts economic growth regionally and nationally,” said Erwin Gianchandani, NSF assistant director for Technology, Innovation and Partnerships. “Each regional NSF I-Corps Hub provides training essential in entrepreneurship and customer discovery, leading to new products, startups and jobs. In effect, we are investing in the next generation of entrepreneurs for our nation.”
Established in 2011, the NSF I-Corps program is designed to nurture the commercialization of deep technologies, which grow from discoveries in fundamental and use-inspired science and engineering. Since its inception, over 3,600 NSF I-Corps teams have participated in the I-Corps program. The strategic goals of the NSF I-Corps Hubs are technology translation, entrepreneurial training and workforce development, economic impact and collaboration and inclusion.
Listed below are the new NSF I-Corps Hubs and partner institutions:
NSF I-Corps Hub: Northwest region – NSF 2430389 University of California, Berkeley - Lead Oregon State University University of Alaska Fairbanks University of California, Davis University of California, Irvine University of California, San Francisco University of California, Santa Cruz University of Washington
NSF I-Corps Hub: Southeast region – NSF 2430380 Georgia Tech - Lead Clemson University Morehouse College The University of Alabama University of Central Florida University of Florida University of Miami University of South Florida
NSF I-Corps Hub: New England region – NSF 2430342 Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Lead Brown University Harvard University Northeastern University Tufts University University of Maine University of Massachusetts Amherst University of New Hampshire
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