I warned you at my first post.. didn’t I ..that we won’t be only talking about teaching and studies and schools and cognitive learning and such stuff ..we will make this a very inclusive platform..
A colleague from IFMR just forwarded this thing -from forbes.com ..it talks bout 10 ppl. who chould change the world …change the way we see things ..change the way we perciver things ..can change the way we live …isn’t it then about education ? okay lets come to the point ..here are those 10 ppl. according to forbes..
Fighting Poverty Efficiently
Esther Duflo, 34
Economist, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyWhile politicians tend to espouse solutions like “more aid” or “more trade,” entrenched poverty is a great lingering economic mystery. Duflo designs studies to figure out which kind of aid projects work, and which don’t. She was among the first development economists to evaluate aid projects using randomized trials, long the gold standard in scientific testing..
P.C. Stem Cells
Kevin Eggan, 32
Cellular Biologist, HarvardUniversityEggan is leading the way to a world where stem cells–which have tremendous medical promise because of their potential to replace any damaged cell in the body–could be made without destroying embryos. Eggan is also becoming one of science’s more outspoken voices, defending the necessity of pursuing embryonic cell research through all available means as a way of understanding scourges like diabetes and Lou Gehrig’s disease.
Tree Rights
Thomas Linzey, 38
Executive Director, Community Environmental Legal Defense FundLast year the borough of Tamaqua, Pa., passed an unprecedented law giving ecosystems legal rights of their own. Yes, you read that right. The trees, rivers, mountains and all the little critters that live in them have rights just like people. Linzey drafted the law, and is working on passing more ordinances around the country. His efforts fly in the face of thousands of years of Western legal precedent that treats nature strictly as property.
Altering Human Memory
Karim Nader, 40
A scientist asks you to recall a memory, gives you a pill and alters your recollection. It sounds like a scene from the film Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, the sci-fi romance in which ex-lovers have their memories of one another erased. But it’s exactly what Nader is doing with folks who suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder (rape survivors, war veterans and the like). The method does not aim to actually erase bad memories, but it can significantly reduce the severe pain of traumatic memories. His work could revolutionize how doctors treat epilepsy, obsessive compulsive disorder and even drug addiction.Neuroscientist, McGillUniversityCourtesy of Max Tegmark
Measuring the Invisible Universe
Max Tegmark, 40
Cosmologist, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyIf the laws of physics as we know them are correct, the vast majority of the universe–some 96% of it–consists of invisible, mysterious stuff known as “dark energy” and “dark matter.” Tegmark’s ambition is nothing less than to map and measure the entire universe, including these “dark” bits. Courtesy of Josh TenenbaumThe Human Computer
Josh Tenenbaum
Cognitive Scientist, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyScience fiction is rife with intelligent, self-aware computers, from the benevolent “Mike” of Robert A. Heinlein’s The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress to the murderous HAL 9000 in Arthur C. Clarke’s 2001: A Space Odyssey. But before we can actually design and build super-smart machines like those in our books and movies, we need to better understand the nature of human intelligence. That’s where Tenenbaum comes in. He’s using a combination of mathematical modeling, computer simulation and behavioral experiments to explain how people learn new things.
Reprogramming Life
Christopher Voigt, 30
Synthetic Biologist, University of California, San Francisco“We program cells like robots,” says Voigt. He’s at the forefront of a group of young researchers working to deliver on the profound promise of genetic engineering: Rebuilding living organisms to fight disease, make bio-fuels and solve industrial problems. To do this, Voigt works hard to understand what “commands” are programmed on the DNA of simple organisms like the E. coli bacteria. Then he changes the commands so the organism does his bidding.To be completed …



