Difference between revisions of "Team:Harvard/Collaborations"

 
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<h3>★  ALERT! </h3>
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<p>This page is used by the judges to evaluate your team for the <a href="https://2017.igem.org/Judging/Medals">medal criterion</a> or <a href="https://2017.igem.org/Judging/Awards"> award listed above</a>. </p>
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<p> Delete this box in order to be evaluated for this medal criterion and/or award. See more information at <a href="https://2017.igem.org/Judging/Pages_for_Awards"> Instructions for Pages for awards</a>.</p>
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<h1>Collaborations</h1>
 
<h1>Collaborations</h1>
  
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Sharing and collaboration are core values of iGEM. We encourage you to reach out and work with other teams on difficult problems that you can more easily solve together.
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<h3>Silver Medal Criterion #2</h3>
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The spark for our collaboration was the fact that we had an idea for a microfluidic device and the Boston University iGEM team had the expertise to turn that idea into reality. Our initial concept paved the way for the Boston University team to incorporate the role of electronics in microfluidic devices into their narrative.
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Complete this page if you intend to compete for the silver medal criterion #2 on collaboration. Please see the <a href="https://2017.igem.org/Judging/Medals">2017 Medals Page</a> for more information.  
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See the <a href="https://2017.igem.org/Team:Harvard/Microfluidic">microfluidics page</a> on our wiki for a detailed description of the device.
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<h3>A map of our collaboration:</h3>
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/2/29/Harvard--Collab_Final.jpeg" align="middle">
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We met with Ningren Han (Peter)
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Researcher at Laboratory of Electronics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  
<h4> Which other teams can we work with? </h4>
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You can work with any other team in the competition, including software, hardware, high school and other tracks. You can also work with non-iGEM research groups, but they do not count towards the iGEM team collaboration silver medal criterion.
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In order to meet the silver medal criteria on helping another team, you must complete this page and detail the nature of your collaboration with another iGEM team.
 
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Here are some suggestions for projects you could work on with other teams:
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<li> Improve the function of another team's BioBrick Part or Device</li>
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<li> Characterize another team's part </li>
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<li> Debug a construct </li>
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<li> Model or simulating another team's system </li>
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<li> Test another team's software</li>
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<li> Help build and test another team's hardware project</li>
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<li> Mentor a high-school team</li>
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Latest revision as of 04:00, 2 November 2017

Collaborations


The spark for our collaboration was the fact that we had an idea for a microfluidic device and the Boston University iGEM team had the expertise to turn that idea into reality. Our initial concept paved the way for the Boston University team to incorporate the role of electronics in microfluidic devices into their narrative. See the microfluidics page on our wiki for a detailed description of the device.

A map of our collaboration:



We met with Ningren Han (Peter) Researcher at Laboratory of Electronics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology