Description
Transforming research ideas into meaningful impact is no small feat. It often requires the knowledge and experience of individuals from across disciplines and institutions. Collaborators, a new Microsoft Research Podcast series, explores the relationships—both expected and unexpected—behind the projects, products, and services being pursued and delivered by researchers at Microsoft and the diverse range of people they’re teaming up with.In this episode of the podcast, Dr. Gretchen Huizinga welcomes Principal Researcher Dr. Jina Suh (https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/people/jinsuh/) and Principal Applied and Data Science Manager Dr. Shamsi Iqbal (https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/people/shamsi/) to the show to discuss their most recent work together, a research project aimed at developing data-driven tools to support organizational leaders and executives in their decision-making. The longtime collaborators explore how a long history of collaboration helps them thrive in their work to help workplaces thrive, how their relationship has evolved over the years, particularly with Iqbal’s move from the research side to the product side, and how research and product can align to achieve impact.Learn more:* HUE: Human Understanding and Empathy (https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/group/human-understanding-and-empathy/) | Project page* Microsoft Viva (https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-viva) | Product page
Research manager Karin Strauss and members of the DNA Data Storage Project reflect on the path to developing a synthetic DNA–based system for archival data storage, including the recent open-source release of its most powerful algorithm for DNA error correction.Get the Trellis BMA code: GitHub -...
Published 11/19/24
The efficient simulation of molecules has the potential to change how the world understands biological systems and designs new drugs and biomaterials. Tong Wang discusses AI2BMD, an AI-based system designed to simulate large biomolecules with speed and accuracy.Read the paperGet the code
Published 11/14/24