News

€17 million fund backs 170 projects to develop disruptive solutions to key societal challenges

ATTRACT initiative starts a one-year race to develop sensing and imaging technologies that will enable breakthrough innovations
Man loading sample in machine

ATTRACT, a Horizon 2020 research and innovation project funded by the European Union and backed by a consortium of 9 partners including Aalto University, has announced 170 breakthrough ideas which will each receive €100,000 to develop technologies to change society. A kick-off meeting being held at CERN in Geneva will start the clock on a one-year countdown for the selected proposals to prove the scientific merit and innovation potential of their disruptive detection and imaging technologies.

The projects selected for funding were drawn from a pool of more than 1,200 proposals from researchers and entrepreneurs in scientific and industrial organisations across the world. An Independent Research, Development and Innovation (R&D&I) Committee used a rigorous evaluation process to determine which of these proposals should receive €100,000 of funding.

‘170 breakthrough ideas were selected based on a combination of scientific merit, innovation readiness and potential societal impact,’ explained Sergio Bertolucci, chair of ATTRACT’s Independent R&D&I Committee. ‘The idea is to speed up the process of developing breakthrough technologies and applying them to address society’s key challenges.’

3 Aalto-related projects were among those selected:

Professor Yu Xiao’s project DEBARE aims to develop a novel, AI-based intelligent sensing platform that is capable of more complex activity recognition and learning than existing technologies. One potential use case is augmented reality smart gloves for industrial maintenance and assembly. The project partner is Hitseed, a Finnish company with expertise in smart sensors. ‘By encouraging collaboration between universities and industry – especially SMEs– who are interested in R&D as well as commercialisation, ATTRACT enables researchers and companies to test and pilot their breakthrough ideas,’ said Professor Yu Xiao.

In Professor Hele Savin’s project, SUGER, a prototype radiation sensor based on new ‘black germanium’ technology will be fabricated. The novel sensor technology aims to get record-high sensitivity, especially for infrared radiation. The application areas include medicine, and nuclear safety and security. Program partners include the Latvian-based company Baltic Scientific Instruments Ltd and Finland-based Pixpolar.

Professor Jyri Hämäläinen and his research group aim to design a monitoring system based on Visible Light Communication technology for indoor areas. If successful, the team hope that it will pave the way for the implementation of new applications like monitoring technology and motion detection. The project partner is Barcelona-based research center Centre Tecnològic de Telecomunicacions de Catalunya (CTTC).

As a part of the ATTRACT initiative, Aalto University will also organise courses for Master's degree students. Students will be challenged to utilise technology developed in ATTRACT projects to design and create consumer products that can be commercialised. The project aims to increase the societal significance of the innovations developed through the ATTRACT program by establishing collaboration between breakthrough technology and student work. Aalto has a long history of providing learning projects that are done in cooperation with the industry partners. The model has attracted more and more interest in the academic world every year. Therefore, the ATTRACT initiative takes Finnish training expertise to the attention of high-tech developers at European level. The student projects are implemented in cooperation with different universities that are part of the Design Factory Global Network.

From augmented reality to smart sensors and devices, many of the chosen 170 ideas will develop disruptive technologies that could help improve clinical diagnosis, health monitoring and personalised treatments for diseases such as cancer, Alzheimer’s, or malaria, as well as heart and neurological conditions.

Interdisciplinary teams of researchers, entrepreneurs and companies from across the globe will also develop novel sensors and devices that will enable radical innovations in many other sectors with high market potential. New technologies will include smart devices for environmental monitoring, green solutions to fight climate change, advanced applications for citizens, smart systems for manufacturing processes, and disruptive technologies to expand our scientific knowledge.

Details of the 170 funded projects are being released today, and are grouped into four broad categories; data acquisition systems and computing; front-end and back-end electronics; sensors; and software and integration.

Most of the breakthrough ideas, — 64% — will develop next-generation technologies involving sensors, 16% will focus on data-acquisition systems and computing, 12% are software and integration projects, and 8% will develop the front and back-end electronics needed for the interfaces of sensors and imaging technology.

The 170 breakthrough projects funded by ATTRACT  will have one year to show that their disruptive ideas are worth further investment, and will present their results at a conference in autumn 2020 in Brussels. During the one-year development phase, business and innovation experts from the ATTRACT Project Consortium’s Aalto University, EIRMA, and ESADE Business School will help the project teams explore how their breakthrough technologies can be transformed into innovations with strong market potential.

Media contacts
Virginia Mercouri
Media Adviser, Science|Business.
Tel: +32 489 095 044
Email: [email protected]

Anna Alsina Bardagí
Content Director, ESADE Business School
Tel: +34 690 957 506
Email: [email protected]

Frequently Asked Questions about ATTRACT | ATTRACT Media Room

Principal Investigators with ATTRACT grants

  • Published:
  • Updated:

Read more news

ınterns
Research & Art, University Published:

Pengxin Wang: The internship was an adventure filled with incredible research, unforgettable experiences, and lifelong friendships.

Pengxin Wang’s AScI internship advanced AI research, fostered global friendships, and inspired his journey toward trustworthy AI solutions.
Radiokatu20_purkutyömaa_Pasila_Laura_Berger
Research & Art Published:

Major grant from the Kone Foundation for modern architecture research - Laura Berger's project equates building loss with biodiversity loss

Aalto University postdoctoral researcher Laura Berger and her team have been awarded a 541 400 euro grant from the Kone Foundation to study the effects of building loss on society and the environment.
Matti Rossi vastaanotti palkinnon
Awards and Recognition Published:

AIS Impact Award 2024 goes to Professor Matti Rossi and his team

The team won the award for technological and entrepreneurial impact
An artistic rendering of two chips on a circuit board, one is blue and the other is orange and light is emitting from their surf
Press releases Published:

Researchers aim to correct quantum errors at super-cold temperatures instead of room temperature

One of the major challenges in the development of quantum computers is that the quantum bits, or qubits, are too imprecise. More efficient quantum error correction is therefore needed to make quantum computers more widely available in the future. Professor Mikko Möttönen has proposed a novel solution for quantum error correction and has received a three-year grant from the Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation to develop it.