Byron SpiceThursday, October 23, 2014Print this page.
PITTSBURGH—Fifteen teams have been chosen to work at the Carnegie Mellon University Innovation Corps (I-Corps) Site, designed to create an effective and replicable process to commercialize innovations based on customer discovery and product adaptation.
The objective of the I-Corps Site is to help students and faculty members hone their skills, collaborate with industry professionals and entrepreneurs, and transition their research out of the lab and into commercial sectors. As a vehicle for promoting university innovation, entrepreneurship and growth, the program leverages CMU’s acknowledged strength in encouraging and fueling entrepreneurship as well as building relationships with internal and external partners in the business community.
The 15 teams are comprised of faculty members, alumni and students at the undergraduate, graduate and Ph.D. levels. The companies cover enterprises ranging from adaptive traffic signals and on-the-go food options to lightweight, durable air freight containers.
The 2014 CMU I-Corps Site teams include:
In June 2014, the National Science Foundation awarded a three-year, $300,000 grant to the Carnegie Mellon Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship (CIE) to create the I-Corps Site on campus. CIE was created in 2012 to support the culture of innovation at Carnegie Mellon and to accelerate the commercialization of university research and innovative ideas.
The creation of the CMU I-Corps Site has been a collaboration among several members of the CMU community. I-Corps was started by CMU President Subra Suresh when he was the director of the National Science Foundation. The principal investigator on the project is Lenore Blum, professor of computer science and co-director of the CIE. Co-PIs are Randal E. Bryant, former dean of the School of Computer Science, currently on sabbatical leave; Robert Dammon, dean of the Tepper School of Business; David Mawhinney, co-director of the CIE; and Robert Wooldridge, director of the Center for Technology Transfer and Enterprise Creation. The program will combine CMU's curricula with curricula from other I-Corps programs.
Byron Spice | 412-268-9068 | bspice@cs.cmu.edu