Edinburgh University celebrates and recognises innovations with awards

Human-like skin for robots, personalised synthetic voices for people who lose theirs through illness, and environmentally friendly sanitary products were among the prize-winning inventions celebrated at the University of Edinburgh’s innovation awards.

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Inspire Launch Grow, the annual competition for entrepreneurial staff, students and recent graduates saw awards of up to £5,000 presented across five categories, judged by established entrepreneurs and business advisers. Finalists had previously pitched their businesses and social enterprises to the judges.

Engineering PhD student Zakareya Hussein and Product Design masters student Laura Garcia Caberol won the Emerging Innovation Award for Students for their company Touchlab.

They are developing an electronic skin that can be wrapped around any robot to give it a human-like sense of touch, including ‘pain’ when poked with sharp objects.

Taking the Emerging Innovation Award for Staff were research assistants Alice Smith from Edinburgh Medical School and Lovisa Wihlborg from the School of Informatics, for Speak:Unique.

Their technology creates personalised synthetic replica voices for people with conditions such as motor neurone disease who lose the ability to speak.

Using a recording of just 30 minutes of a patient talking, the system is able to turn any text into speech in the person’s own voice, enabling them to have an authentic-sounding voice long after they lose the ability to vocalise themselves.

Smith said: “It’s great to see your hard work come together, and to see the other activity going on in the University startup and spinout scene. We’re at an exciting moment where we’re ready to launch as a spinout company and reach people we couldn’t reach as a research project. It’s been fantastic to have Edinburgh Innovations’ support to help us navigate the path to commercialisation.”

The winner of the Social and Environment Award was Alison Wood, a recent graduate of the School of Economics and founder of Lilypads. Her social enterprise began its work in Kenya, addressing a lack of affordable sanitary products that prevents girls from attending school, and has now introduced an environmentally friendly sanitary product to the UK market.

Dr George Baxter, CEO of Edinburgh Innovations, said: “The finalists have come up with some amazing ideas and shown the necessary enterprising spirit and energy to take them forward as solid business propositions. It’s always an honour to support our staff and student entrepreneurs.”

The Enterprise Award went to postdoctoral researcher Dr Alireza Abbassi Monjezi, founder of Waterwhelm, a technology that turns wastewater into clean water while simultaneously producing renewable electricity and fertilizer. 

Finally, Dr Luca Cassetta, Research Fellow in the MRC Centre for Reproductive Health, took the Innovation Cup for his company Macomics, which is developing antibody-based cancer therapeutics.

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