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Collegiate Inventors Competition® Announces 2014 Finalists

Forging the Future of Innovation, Undergraduate and Graduate Students Compete at United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO)

NORTH CANTON, Ohio, Oct. 2, 2014 — (PRNewswire) — The Collegiate Inventors Competition announced today its 2014 finalists, up-and-coming leaders and the future of American innovation. Established in 1990, this nationwide Competition encourages innovation, entrepreneurship and creativity by recognizing and rewarding undergraduate and graduate college students for their cutting-edge inventions. The Collegiate Inventors Competition is a program of Invent Now and the National Inventors Hall of Fame and sponsored by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) and AbbVie Foundation.

Each year, individuals representing a broad cross-section of technological fields serve as first round judges, selecting the finalists based on originality of the idea, process (or technology used), level of student initiative, as well as potential value and usefulness to society. The finalists will travel to Alexandria, Va., to present their inventions on Monday, November 17, 2014, to an esteemed panel of final round judges, comprised of the most influential inventors and invention experts in the nation - National Inventors Hall of Fame Inductees, USPTO experts and AbbVie scientists.

"The Collegiate Inventors Competition advances the innovative spirit in higher education by recognizing students for their emerging ideas and encouraging them to remain on the path to entrepreneurship," says Competition judge and National Inventors Hall of Fame Inductee Marcian E. (Ted) Hoff, Jr., Co-Inventor of the Microprocessor. "From my own experience, I know how important it is to receive recognition for the inventive spirit at a young age, especially when I was considering my career. As a National Inventors Hall of Fame Inductee, I feel honored to be part of the process as students evolve their ideas and develop prototypes and to see this next generation of inventors first-hand." 

Michelle K. Lee, Deputy Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Deputy Director of USPTO, will host the Collegiate Inventors Competition Awards Ceremony in which the winners will be announced. The top undergraduate winner will receive $12,500 and the top graduate winner will receive $15,000. Second and third place winners will also be recognized with cash prizes.

As part of the evolution of the Collegiate Inventors Competition, this year an all-new Expo will be held to feature the finalists' prototypes and research. The Collegiate Inventors Competition Expo is free and open to the public. It will be held on November 17, 2014, from 8 a.m. to 9:30 a.m. and from 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. in the USPTO Madison Building Auditorium. All Expo attendees are encouraged to post a comment, photo, or video and tag #CICExpo for a chance to win a $250 gift card and Collegiate Inventors Competition prize packages.

Follow the Collegiate Inventors Competition on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn for live updates and additional information.

The 2014 Undergraduate and Graduate Finalists are:

UNDERGRADUATE FINALISTS

Anvesh Annadanam, Ravi Gaddipati, Luis Herrera, Eric Xie
Johns Hopkins University
Invention: AccuSpine
Spinal fusion surgery requires pinpoint accuracy. That's why AccuSpine is designed to provide surgeons with unprecedented real-time, continuous feedback for the accurate placement of surgical screws. The result: fewer damaged nerves and arteries due to misplaced screws. All at lower cost and greater safety for doctors and patients.
Advisor: Robert H. Allen

Katherine Cagen
Harvard University
Invention: Ferrotouch
Ferrotouch is about to give people with visual impairments the graphic equivalent of braille: the ability to feel an image. The Ferrotouch display uses iron-fluid-filled pixels, each controlled by a tiny magnet. Turn on the magnet and the pixel forms a bump – one of many that puts a diagram literally at your fingertips.
Advisor: Daniela Faas

Emily Cen, Forrest Miller, Elsa Swanson, David Xing
Columbia University
Invention: TKAone 
The post-surgical infection of artificial knee joints is a major reason why knee replacement surgery fails. TKAone is the first orthopedic implant that can detect such infections and immediately alert patients to the need for treatment. This early warning system will reduce failed surgeries and have patients walking again sooner.
Advisor: Aaron M. Kyle

Will Doniger, Brian Pekron, Eric Ronning
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Invention: Remex Mixer
When engineers mix materials, whether making pharmaceuticals or in wastewater treatment, they need the perfect flow. The Remex Mixer provides a gentler, energy efficient flow that optimizes mixing. It's the industrial equivalent of a countertop mixer that produces the perfect smoothie - with applications from petrochemicals to fragile biotechnologies.
Advisor: Thomas R. Mackie

Chase DuBois, Jorge Martinez-Blat, John Pamplin, Christopher Roberts  University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill
Invention: VoluMetric: High-Accuracy, High-Precision, Low-Cost, Handheld Drug Delivery
Adding just the right dose is critical when it comes to mixing chemotherapy drugs for cancer treatment. VoluMetric is putting advanced volume-measurement technology in nurses' hands. A special sensor attached to a syringe measures the amount of fluid to within less than one-percent of weight. It's the right dose, every time.
Advisor: Devin Hubbard

Taylor Fahey, Charles Haider, Cedric Kovacs-Johnson
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Invention: Spectrom: Low-Cost, High-Precision, On-Demand Full Color 3D Printing
Industrial 3D printing is about to get a lot more colorful. Spectrom is the first device that enables Fused Deposition Modeling, or additive 3D printers, to print in full, variable color. The technology leverages the precise application and rapid changing of proprietary dyes to create crisp, multi-colored objects.
Advisor: Tim A. Osswald

Ryan Gedney, Charles Laughlin, Nicholas Marais, Taylor Pate
Clemson University
Invention: Insita Pro: Arthroscopic Surgical Tool to Enhance the Repair of the Rotator Cuff
Surgeons usually fix a torn shoulder tendon (rotator cuff repair) using arthroscopic surgery, working through just a button-hole-sized incision. Now, Insita Pro provides the first standardized method to hold, fold and deliver repair materials through this tiny incision. The technology will reduce operating times and increase surgical success rates, all at minimal cost.
Advisor: John D. DesJardins                                           

GRADUATE FINALISTS

James Allen, Martin de la Presa, Ahrash Poursaid, Nate Rhodes
University of Utah
Invention: LIGHT LINE Catheter™
Catheters–thin plastic tubes–are among the most commonly used and important medical tools. Yet, catheter-related bacterial infections kill thousands of American hospital patients every year. LIGHT LINE Catheter will go a long way to preventing this. The light-therapy sterilization system targets and kills the bacteria that cause these infections.
Advisor: John Langell

Keith A. Brown, Xing Liao
Northwestern University
Invention: The Desktop Nanoprinter
As technologies like computer chips get smaller and smaller, the ability to quickly make tiny structures is increasingly important. The Desktop Nanoprinter provides a tool for engineers to create nano-prototypes with the touch of button. The nanoprinter uses thousands of tiny, independently controlled beams of light to write nano-scale features.
Advisor: Chad Mirkin

Keith Hearon
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Invention: Sustainable Nanocomposite Performance Plastics
Imagine a durable, biodegradable plastic bag made from orange peels. That's the future with Citrene™, a new family of plastics made from a naturally occurring citrus rind extract. This sustainably sourced plastic could soon be used in applications from medical devices to protective coatings, and of course, bags for oranges. 
Advisor: Duncan Maitland

George Korir 
Stanford University
Invention: Punch Card Programmable Microfluidics
Worldwide, nearly half of children who die under the age of five—98% of these in developing countries—are newborns. Punch Card Programmable Microfluidics technology is designed to change this. A simple-to-use, remarkable low-cost technology, it employs paper punch cards and a hand-crank system for the rapid and accurate diagnosis of neonatal sepsis.
Advisor: Manu Prakash

Rahul Mukherjee, Eklavya Singh
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Invention: Advanced All-Carbon Lithium Ion Batteries
As anyone with a smart phone knows, the Holy Grail of battery technology is faster charging and longer lasting. The Advanced All-Carbon Lithium Ion battery technology uses a mix of materials to deliver both. It's a biodegradable "green" chemistry combination, with no toxic metals, for abundant electricity on the go.
Advisor: Nikhil Koratkar

Alexander R. Nectow
The Rockefeller University
Invention: Retro-TRAP: Molecular Profiling of Neurons Based on Connectivity
For new treatments of brain diseases from depression to Parkinson's, neuroscientists need to determine how brain cells, or neurons, are both physically and functionally connected. Retro-TRAP provides the route to this 21st century view of our brains. It enables the ability to profile neuron types based on their connectivity in the brain.
Advisor: Jeffrey M. Friedman

Katarzyna M. Sawicka
SUNY Stony Brook University
Invention: Immuno-Matrix
Imagine vaccination without a needle and as simple as putting on a Band-Aid®. The innovative ImmunoMatrix skin patch uses nanofibers to hold and effectively deliver a vaccine through the skin. It's painless, self-administered and doesn't produce biohazardous waste. The future of large-scale vaccination just got a patch on the arm.
Advisor: Sanford R. Simon

The 2014 final round judges include 10 Inductees from the National Inventors Hall of Fame: Edith Flanigen (Molecular Sieves), Eric Fossum (CMOS Active Pixel Image Sensor Camera-on-a-Chip), Marcian "Ted" Hoff (CPU), Don Keck (Optical Fibers), Al Langer (Implantable Heart Defibrillator), Kumar Patel (Carbon Dioxide Laser), Steve Sasson (Digital Camera), Spencer Silver (Post-It Notes), Jim West (Electret Microphone), and Robert Wilson (Plasma Display). Other judges include Elizabeth L. Dougherty (USPTO), George Elliott (USPTO), Wolfgang Fraunhofer (AbbVie) and Jeffrey Y. Pan (AbbVie).

About the Collegiate Inventors Competition: 
The Collegiate Inventors Competition recognizes and rewards undergraduate and graduate students who are committed to research, discovery, invention and innovation as they address the problems of today's world. The Competition specifically recognizes and rewards the innovations, discoveries and research by college university students and their advisors for projects leading to inventions that may have the potential of receiving patent protection. Introduced in 1990, the Competition has awarded more than $1 million to winning students for their innovative work and scientific achievement through the help of its sponsors.

CONTACT:
Desiree Bartoe
Gatesman+Dave
Email Contact  
412-339-5161

Video - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k3UBBK-EHZM

SOURCE Collegiate Inventors Competition

Contact:
Collegiate Inventors Competition
Invent Now
National Inventors Hall of Fame
United States Patent and Trademark Office
AbbVie Foundation
Web: http://www.collegiateinventors.org