As part of the recent Technion – Israel Institute of Technology Board of Governors meeting events, senior members of the Technion and guests from all over the world visited Madatech, the national science, technology, and space museum located in one of the University’s historic buildings. Madatech’s General Director, Yossi Ani, accompanied the visitors.

During the festive visit, the group inaugurated the historic Technion classroom and the Nobel Gallery exhibition, which will soon open to the public. Distinguished Research Professor Aaron Ciechanover, a faculty member in the Ruth and Bruce Rappaport Faculty of Medicine, gave a talk about his academic journey as well as about his discovery of the ubiquitin system, for which he won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Recently, Prof. Ciechanover donated his Nobel Prize medal and certificate to Madatech, along with his doctoral thesis on which he based the ubiquitin system discovery. These items will be displayed in the gallery and will serve as an inspiration to the museum’s young visitors.

On the steps of the Madatech museum

On the steps of the Madatech museum

Prof. Ciechanover completed his PhD at the Technion’s Rappaport Faculty of Medicine, which had just been founded at the time. He then continued on to a four-year post-doctoral fellowship at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), before returning to the Technion. In 2004, he received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry together with Prof. Avram Hershko, also of the Technion’s Rappaport Faculty of Medicine, and American scientist Prof. Irwin Rose.

Prof. Ciechanover recounted that he and his doctoral thesis supervisor, Prof. Hershko, chose a field of research that was then considered unimportant: protein degradation. Over the course of their joint research, Profs. Hershko and Ciechanover discovered that a covalent attachment of ubiquitin to a target protein signals it for degradation and to the cellular “garbage dump.” According to Prof. Ciechanover, “the ubiquitin system manages our health by getting rid of damaged protein, but it doesn’t always function properly, and failures may lead to neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s, and to cancer. Velcade, the first drug that was developed as a result of our discovery, partially repairs these failures. A new company which we recently founded does something similar, and we already obtained encouraging results in pre-clinical trials.”

The Technion’s Board of Governors meeting convenes every year at the Technion campus and is attended by numerous supporters of the Technion, including representatives of the Technion Friends’ Associations from Israel and around the world. During the annual meeting, various decisions are made that are pertinent to the future of the Technion. The recent Board of Governors meeting officially opened on Sunday morning with a report from Technion President Prof. Uri Sivan. The meeting continued over three days, during which discussions were held about the Technion’s different fields of activity. In addition, honorary degrees and prizes were bestowed, and various inauguration ceremonies were held.

Nobel laureate Distinguished Research Professor Aaron Ciechanover, with his Nobel medal

Nobel laureate Distinguished Research Professor Aaron Ciechanover, with his Nobel medal

The André Cohen Deloro Prize for 2023 was awarded to Professor Jackie Schiller of the Rappaport Faculty of Medicine on Monday, June 12 during the Technion’s Board of Governors meeting. The prize is bestowed annually in recognition of outstanding multidisciplinary research in the field of human health, on behalf of the Adelis Foundation, in memory of the late André Cohen Deloro. Prof. Schiller received the prize from Technion President Professor Uri Sivan and Trustee of the Adelis Foundation Mr. Sidney Boukhris.

The award is recognized by the André Cohen Deloro Institute for Transformative Biomedical Sciences and Engineering. The Adelis Foundation is currently supporting the construction of a new Technion center – the André Cohen Deloro Institute for Transformative Biomedical Sciences and Engineering. The new institute will serve as the epicenter of the Technion’s multidisciplinary research activities in human health and will feature state-of-the-art infrastructure necessary to drive innovation, including cutting-edge laboratories and equipment.

From left to right: Mr. Sidney Boukhris, Prof. Jackie Schiller and Technion President Prof. Uri Sivan

From left to right: Mr. Sidney Boukhris, Prof. Jackie Schiller and Technion President Prof. Uri Sivan

The André Cohen Deloro Institute will also serve as a hub of the newly established Technion Human Health Initiative. This large-scale initiative will further facilitate innovative research at the Technion by focusing on the next level of medical innovation through partnerships with Technion-affiliated hospitals and cutting-edge pharmaceutical and biomedical companies.

Prof. Schiller joined the Technion faculty following her post-doctoral fellowship with Nobel laureate Bert Sakmann at the Max Planck Institute in Germany. She is an experienced neurobiologist who researches the brain in the context of inter-disciplinary collaboration. Her research focuses on the way information is processed and stored in the cerebral cortex and is carried out in two parallel axes: she studies the computational abilities of the cortex and, at the same time, tries to understand the learning mechanisms and the cortex cells’ physical transformations. Prof. Schiller believes that “these cells have a remarkable ability to learn all the time, from the moment we are born and until we die, even though our brain cells die over the years.”

Technion President Prof. Uri Sivan

Technion President Prof. Uri Sivan

Technion President Prof. Uri Sivan said, “André Cohen Deloro passed away in 2012 but his legacy continues to flourish in the skillful, loving hands of Mrs. Rebecca Boukhris and Mr. Sidney Boukhris, both trustees of the Adelis Foundation. Prof. Schiller is a highly accomplished scientist whose work is a powerful combination of medicine and technology. Like the cells in the cerebral cortex, which don’t stop learning during their lifetime, so too Jackie never stops learning, researching, and leading her research group to dramatic and inspiring discoveries about the way we think and process information. She does all this while developing original and innovative technologies for studying the brain, which also contribute enormously to the world of research and medical applications. Prof. Schiller epitomizes the type of scientist of whom the Technion is so proud and so blessed to be home.”

Mr. Sidney Boukhris at the ceremony

Mr. Sidney Boukhris at the ceremony

Sidney Boukhris, Trustees of the Adelis Foundation, said, “it is with immense pride that the Adelis Foundation bestows the prestigious André Cohen Deloro Research Prize upon Prof. Jackie Schiller. Prof. Schiller is dedicated to unraveling the intricate structure of the cerebral cortex, the largest and most complex part of the brain. Undoubtedly, the field of neuroscience holds immense relevance in our modern era, as life expectancy continues to rise, and the pursuit of an enhanced quality of life becomes increasingly crucial. The impact of brain-related disorders on daily existence cannot be understated.”

Prof. Schiller explained that “studying the brain is a varied and multi-disciplinary research field that requires advanced engineering tools and profound theoretical work as well as pre-clinical and clinical trials. My research focuses on understanding the mechanisms of memory and learning on cellular and subcellular levels and on the level of the cortical network. We are studying the mechanisms in the cerebral cortex that enable the process of learning, representing and remembering new movements. We are especially interested in how different types of cells learn and carry out their roles.”

Prof. Jackie Schiller

Prof. Jackie Schiller

Unlike most research on this subject, Prof. Schiller’s research group focuses on representing information about motion on the level of dendrites. “This is a level of resolution that has never been studied before. It provides deep insights into the mechanisms for learning and representing information. Since dendrites are the parts of the nerve cell that carry the data, we believe that the only way to achieve an in-depth understanding of the process is through this level of research. In this way, we were able to trace the most basic and deep information about how the brain creates movement commands.”

Prof. Schiller also studies what goes wrong in cerebral cortex cells in pathophysiological cases such as Parkinson’s disease. “Using advanced tools from the field of imaging, genetics, virology, behavior and computation, we study the cells at an unprecedented resolution. Beyond the scientific interest, there is substantial potential for developing treatments for a large variety of diseases.”

 

THE ADELIS FOUNDATION

The Adelis Foundation is an Israeli foundation that was created in 2006 by an exceptional man, André Cohen Deloro (z”l) (1933 – 2012). A graduate of the prestigious École Polytechnique and the École Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées, André Cohen Deloro (z”l) had a brilliant career in construction. Realizing his unbreakable link with the State of Israel, he built the Adelis Foundation – the most important work of his life. The Adelis Foundation was built so that André Cohen Deloro (z”l) could contribute in his own way to the wellbeing of the Jewish People and to the security of the State of Israel.

The Adelis Foundation was created based on the conviction that the security and future of Israel, its economic development, and its influence among the nations depended on the excellence of its universities and research centers. The Adelis Foundation believes that it is crucial to guarantee the knowledge of Israel’s next generations through the high level of education of its human capital in order to improve its future. But a strong nation is also a nation that knows how to take care of its weakest links.

Thus, the Adelis Foundation intervenes in the following key areas: scientific and medical research of excellence (65%), education – mainly in the social and geographical periphery (25%), and social well-being (10%).

In the field of science, the Adelis Foundation has a desire to help Israel through preserving its position among the world leaders in research and innovation through exploring new technological frontiers. The Adelis Foundation promotes these directives by financing research infrastructure in the country’s most promising academic institutions, as well as by granting research budgets to excellent researchers from the best universities in key areas where the State of Israel has added value. Research is likely to create scientific breakthroughs that improve the well-being of Israel’s citizens and of humanity as a whole, as our Jewish values ​​teach us.

Technion President Prof. Uri Sivan

Technion President Prof. Uri Sivan

The Board of Governors, which convened last week at the Technion, officially confirmed the Technion Council’s selection of the incumbent Technion President, Prof. Uri Sivan, for an additional four-year term. Prof. Sivan’s second term is scheduled to commence on October 1, 2023 and will conclude on September 30, 2027. The decision was taken following the recommendation of the Presidential Appointment Committee and the Academic Assembly. The start of Prof. Sivan’s second term will coincide with the Technion’s 100th anniversary celebration and will be dedicated to further establishing the Technion as a leading international research university at the forefront of global research.

“I would like to thank the members of the Board of Governors, the Senate, the Presidential Appointment Committee and the Academic Assembly for placing their faith in me,” said Prof. Sivan. “I view the role of Technion President as a great privilege, a calling and a responsibility to carry forward the legacy of my predecessors in developing the Technion for the sake of the State of Israel and all of humankind. One hundred years after the first classroom was inaugurated, we look back on the past with pride in the achievements of this grand institution since its establishment and up to the present – and we look forward with a deep commitment and belief in the Technion’s ability to continue enabling society and the State of Israel to flourish and prosper.”

Prof. Sivan joined the faculty of the Technion’s Department of Physics in 1991 after three years at the IBM research center in Yorktown Heights, New York. He holds the Bertoldo Badler Chair within the Technion’s Department of Physics. He is one of Israel’s pioneering researchers in the field of nanotechnology, and his research throughout the years covered a broad range of subjects – from quantum mechanics in miniature electronic systems to harnessing biology to build nanometric electronic devices. In recent years, he has been researching the structure of water near surfaces and molecules. Prof. Sivan’s scientific achievements have been recognized by numerous prizes, and the results of several of his research projects have been implemented in industry.

Since assuming the role of President in 2019, Prof. Sivan has advanced the Technion in many areas, including expanding inter-disciplinary research, repositioning the Technion and strengthening the ties between academia and industry, promoting teaching methodologies, empowering diversity and inclusion, and continuing to develop the campus.

The 36th Umbrella Symposium opened at the Technion on May 30, 2023. Its focus was on the subject of “Life Science & Engineering: Data Analytics, Neuroscience & Multiscale Biomedical Engineering.”

These annual symposia are part of a long-time partnership between the Technion and two institutions in Germany: Forschungszentrum Jülich and RWTH Aachen University. The partnership promotes scientific collaborations among the three institutions, and each year the location of the symposium rotates among them.

This year’s Umbrella Symposium marks 40 years of this strategic partnership, which was launched in 1983. The event began with opening remarks from Prof. Koby Rubinstein, Executive Vice President for Research at the Technion. “In the 40 years of our collaboration,” Prof. Rubinstein said, “the world has changed, and science with it. But Umbrella remained at the forefront of scientific research. Few collaborations not only last for 40 years, but continue to produce revolutionary breakthrough research. May the next 40 years of our collaboration be as bountiful!”

Prof. Ute Habel, Vice-Rector for International Affairs at RWTH Aachen University said “this strategic partnership is of great importance to us. It is a notable element of our international standing. This partnership broadens our horizons and allows international and multidisciplinary work to tackle the great challenges humanity faces.”

Prof. Frauke Melchior, Member of the Board of Directors of Forschungszentrum Jülich added that “this is the third symposium that deals with the connection between engineering and life sciences, a very important connection for both research and application. Without a doubt, this conference is an opportunity to make riveting science and to get better acquainted with the Technion.

After the opening remarks on the first day, Umbrella Awards were conferred upon Dr. Arielle Fischer of the Technion Faculty of Biomedical Engineering (Wearable BioMonitoring: Integrating Motion and Biochemical Sensing), Dr. Roger Molto Pallares of RWTH Aachen University (Manipulating f-element chemistry for healthcare applications) and Dr. Stefan Wiefels of Forschungszentrum Jülich (Variability-Aware Characterization of Memristors for Neuromorphic Applications). These prizes, worth €5,000 each, are given every year to outstanding researchers in the field covered by the symposium that year. The prizes are awarded since 2018, and are dedicated to furthering German-Israeli scientific cooperation. Each winner presented his or her research to the audience.

The symposium took place at the Technion’s Visitors’ Center on May 30 – June 1, 2023.

13 June 2023 | Brussels/Paris – EuroTech Universities Alliance president since June 2022, Éric Labaye, the Chairman and President of École Polytechnique and of the Institut Polytechnique de Paris, welcomed the presidents of the EuroTech partner institutions, of which the Technion – Institute of Technology is one, at École Polytechnique for their annual meeting on 7 June 2023.

During his mandate as EuroTech president, Éric Labaye has made the common commitment to sustainability a priority. Over the past year, the partner universities have reinforced their collaboration to establish a joint research agenda for sustainability, to further integrate sustainability into their teaching curricula, and to harness innovation for sustainable development. Each institution also pursues its plan to achieve a green campus.

École Polytechnique organised the “EuroTech Universities: An alliance working for global sustainability” symposium on 28 March 2023. The event brought together academic staff, students, operational directors, and the leadership of the EuroTech Alliance’s six European partner universities. Photo: Jérémy Barande, École Polytechnique

On 28 March 2023, the symposium “EuroTech Universities: An alliance working for global sustainability” brought together academic staff, students, operational directors, and the leadership of the six EuroTech partner universities at École Polytechnique. As a direct outcome of the meeting, the presidents of EuroTech’s member institutions now publish a seven-point “Declaration for Sustainability”, to drive the EuroTech Universities’ shift towards sustainability.

For Eric Labaye, “With this declaration, we confirm our joint efforts to tackle the current challenges faced by society, science, and technology and to develop solutions to reach sustainable development. To succeed, we are increasing and intensifying our collaboration within EuroTech, in all our areas of activity: research, initial and life-long education, and innovation.”

The EuroTech Universities of Science and Technology

  1. Are committed to sustainable development, embodied by the 17 Sustainable Development Goals of the United Nations adopted in 2015 as the prime challenge for humanity today.
  2. Will integrate the challenges posed by sustainable development in initial education and life-long training as a principal responsibility to train students and professionals to understand and solve key scientific, technological, and societal challenges.
  3. Commit to advancing the frontiers of knowledge, technology, and innovation as essential tools for transformation towards absolute sustainability and will develop original technological solutions needed to address the world’s acute problems.
  4. Recognize that technological development and scale-up must be complemented by behavioural changes to ensure responsible consumption, to avoid strain on the environment, and to reach a circular economy.
  5. Are Living Labs committed to implementing sustainable solutions across their campuses, training, research, and innovation activities.
  6. Commit to mobilizing their entire community as drivers of transformation through a collaborative, participative, inclusive and transparent approach.
  7. Will also activate their global partner network to reach societal wellbeing and global sustainability.

Within the EuroTech Universities Alliance, six leading European universities of science and technology join their forces to elaborate ambitious joint research projects on a European scale in priority areas such as artificial intelligence, sustainable development, health, and bio-engineering. The six partner institutions are École Polytechnique, the Technical University of Denmark (DTU), École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), the Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e), the Technical University of Munich (TUM), and the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology.

The strategic alliance bundles the member universities’ expertise in research and education for the construction of a strong, sustainable, sovereign, and resilient Europe. Éric Labaye has been invested with the EuroTech Universities Alliance presidency in June 2022 for a one-year period. The presidency rotates among the partner institutions’ presidents every twelve months.

See Eurotech press release here: https://eurotech-universities.eu/news-and-events/news/eurotech-commitment-to-sustainability/

What has the Technion been doing in the past year?

Tackling climate change, partnering with industry, building new research centers, combining art and science, and much more. Read the year’s highlights and detailed reports in the President’s Report here.

The Technion President’s Award for Exceptional Achievement was conferred upon Prof. Eli Biham
for his exceptional and unique contribution to the field of cyber.

Prof. Biham, an esteemed faculty member at the Henry and Marilyn Taub Faculty of Computer Science, has made remarkable and unparalleled contributions to the field of cybersecurity. His expertise played a pivotal role in the Technion’s rapid and efficient recovery from the recent cyber attack.

What’s new in the Technion – June 2023 🎓🔬

Click here to read about health, climate, hackathons, conferences, a Nobel Laureate’s visit, and more.

Prof. Gideon Grader

Prof. Gideon Grader

Professor Gideon Grader of the Wolfson Department of Chemical Engineering received recently the Grand Prix Scientifique in Chemistry and Hydrogen from the Charles Defforey Foundation – Institute of France. The prestigious prize was awarded on June 21, 2023, as a research grant for developing innovative green hydrogen technology.

Institut de France (Institute of France) is a non-profit learned society that unites the five French academies. Founded in 1795 and placed under the protection of the President of the French Republic, the Institut de France encourages research, supports creativity, and provides funding for many humanitarian projects in the form of prizes, bursaries, and grants.

Prof. Gideon Grader receives the Prize from Prof. Odile Eisenstein

Prof. Gideon Grader receives the Prize from Prof. Odile Eisenstein

Prof. Grader completed his bachelor’s degree at the University of California, Berkeley, and his Ph.D. at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech). He joined the Technion’s Wolfson Faculty of Chemical Engineering in 1990 following a post-doctoral fellowship at the AT&T Bell Laboratories. He is currently a member of the faculty and the founding director of the Grand Technion Energy Program.

Over the past decade, Prof. Grader developed the E-TAC process of splitting water into hydrogen and oxygen, whereby the production of the two gases is decoupled in time, along with Professor Avner Rothschild, Dr. Hen Dotan, and Dr. Avigail Landman. Based on this innovative technology, green hydrogen company H2Pro was founded in 2019 and currently employs around 100 people. The company has raised over $100 million from venture capital funds, including Bill Gates’ BEV fund, TEMASEK, and Horizon Ventures, and from several large strategic partners including steel and ammonia producers, Arcellor Mittal and Yara, respectively. H2Pro was recently selected by BloombergNEF as one of the most promising companies for solving the climate change crisis.

The ceremony at the Institut de France

The ceremony at the Institut de France

The existing E-TAC method uses several consecutive steps, during which hydrogen and oxygen are produced on stationary electrodes at different times in a batch process. This is achieved by circulating electrolyte solutions at different temperatures through the electrodes. The main idea for which Prof. Grader won the prize is the transformation of the E-TAC idea from a batch into a continuous process. This goal is being achieved by developing unique electrodes that can move continuously between the separated sites where the hydrogen and oxygen are produced simultaneously, while the solution remains stationary. This development will simplify process control, improve stability, and enable long-term operation at a low cost. Such a continuous system will also enable easier scale up to industrial level.

BizTec, Israel’s leading entrepreneurship program founded in 2004 at the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, recently announced the opening of its 2023 class. The opening event took place as part of the t-day entrepreneurship and career day organized by the t-hub: the Technion Hub for Entrepreneurship and Innovation. To date, BizTec has supported thousands of students, and almost 600 past groups have developed their ideas into a venture. According to Program Director Dr. Lital Attia, the key to success at BizTec is a combination of finding a solution suitable for a large market, adapting the product to the client’s and the user’s needs, using suitable technologies, and strong teamwork skills. “I believe that each of the accepted ventures has tremendous potential to become a success,” Dr. Attia said.

Ran Korber & Emil Fisher, Breezometer founders

Ran Korber & Emil Fisher, Breezometer founders

Numerous graduates of the program attended the opening event, including Ran Korber, founder of BreezoMeter (BizTec 2013), which recently sold to Google for $200 million; Dr. Meital Segev Bar, who together with Dr. Gady Konvalina and Professor Hossam Haick, developed Feelit (BizTec 2016) and raised more than $10 million; Zinat Awad and Assaf Licht, current students in the double medicine and biomedical engineering track and co-founders of Harmony (BizTec 2020); Karny Ilan, one of the founders of Feminai (first place winner in BizTec 2022); and Anastasia Nepomnyashchaya, one of the founders of Speculate (second place winner in BizTec 2022). All shared their stories and offered advice for the young entrepreneurs.

Dr. Meital Segev Bar

Dr. Meital Segev Bar

Participants in the program benefit from lectures, workshops, training, and mentoring from academia, industry, and the venture capital sector. At the conclusion of the program, the successful ventures pitch their ideas at a major event, called Demo Day, to investors and opinion leaders. The program is held under the sponsorship of the Bronica Entrepreneurship Center, established by Yehuda and Yehudit Bronicki, founders of Ormat Technologies and winners of the Israel Prize for Lifetime Enterprise in Industry. The program is accompanied by the law firm S. Horowitz & Co. and runs in collaboration with venture capital funds Glilot Capital Partners, the Takwin Fund, and more.

Zinat Awad & Assaf Licht

Zinat Awad & Assaf Licht

Dr. Gady Konvalina

Dr. Gady Konvalina