Neil Gershenfeld
Template:Short description Template:Use American English Template:Use mdy dates Script error: No such module "Template wrapper".Template:Main otherScript error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters". Neil Adam Gershenfeld (born December 1, 1959) is an American scientist. He is a professor in the MIT Program in Media Arts and Sciences[1] and the director of the MIT Center for Bits and Atoms.[2] He works mainly on interdisciplinary topics in physics and computer science, such as quantum computing, nanotechnology, and personal fabrication.
Early life and education
Gershenfeld was born on September 1, 1959 in Ardmore, Pennsylvania to a Jewish family.[3][4] His father, Walter Gershenfeld, was a law professor at Temple University who specialized in labor relations and arbitration,[5] and his mother Gladys Gershenfeld was also a lawyer and specialized in the same fields.[6][7]
He attended Plymouth-Whitemarsh High School in Plymouth Meeting, Pennsylvania. Later he attended Swarthmore College, graduating in 1981 with a B.A. degree in physics with high honors.[8] In 1990, he earned a Ph.D. in physics at Cornell University, titled Representation of chaos.[9]
Career
In 1998, Gershenfeld started a class at MIT called "How to make (almost) anything". Gershenfeld wanted to introduce expensive, industrial-size machines to the technical students. However, this class attracted a lot of students from various backgrounds: artists, architects, designers, students without any technical background. In his interview to CNN, Gershenfeld said that "the students... were answering a question I didn't ask, which is: What is this stuff good for? And the answer is: Not to make what you can buy in stores, but to make what you can't buy in stores. It's to personalise fabrication".[10] Gershenfeld believes that this is the beginning of a new revolution: digital revolution in fabrication that will allow people to fabricate things, machines on demand.
Gershenfeld has presented his course on "How to make (almost) anything" at the Association of Professional Model Makers (APMM) 2010 Conference.[11]
This class later has led Gershenfeld to create Fab lab[12] in collaboration with Bakhtiar Mikhak at MIT. Gershenfeld feels very passionate about this project, as he believes that teaching kids how to use technology and create it themselves will empower the future generations to become more independent and create technology that each individual community needs, not a technology that is currently available on the market. Fab labs have spread around the world, having been established in the remotest of places and countries. In his interview with Discover magazine on the question what personal fabrication might be useful for, Gershenfeld said, "There is a surprising need for emergent technologies in many of the least developed places on the planet. While our needs might be fairly well met, there are billions of people on the planet whose needs are not. Their problems don't need incremental tweaks in current technology, but a revolution".[13]
As well as "How to make (almost) anything" class, Gershenfeld has started teaching the following classes: "How To Make Something That Makes (almost) Anything", "The Physics of Information Technology", "The Nature of Mathematical Modeling".[14]
Gershenfeld has been a keynote speaker at the Congress of Science and Technology Leaders (2015, 2016).
Research and recognition
His work has been published in Science as well as in The American Physical Society journal. Amongst many is the research on Experimental Implementation of Fast Quantum Searching,[15] Microfluidic Bubble Logic research,[16] Physical one-way functions.[17] Gershenfeld is also known for releasing the Great Invention Kit in 2008, a construction set that users can manipulate to create various objects.[18]
He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society. Scientific American named Gershenfeld one of their "Scientific American 50" for 2004 and has also named him Communications Research Leader of the Year.[19] Gershenfeld has been featured in The New York Times,[20] in The Economist,[21] and on NPR.[22] He was named as one of the 40 modern-day Leonardos by the Museum of Science and Industry Chicago.[23] Prospect named him as one of the top 100 public intellectuals.[24]
Bibliography
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References
External links
- Template:Official website
- Center for Bits and Atoms at MIT
- Science magazine website
- American Physical Society website
- Fab Foundation website
- Template:TED speaker
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- 1959 births
- Living people
- American quantum information scientists
- 21st-century American physicists
- Jewish American scientists
- Cornell University alumni
- Fellows of the American Physical Society
- Harvard Fellows
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology faculty
- MIT Media Lab people
- Plymouth-Whitemarsh High School alumni
- Swarthmore College alumni