Title: info day 29997 MELARI NANO
1Future Emerging Technologies (FETs)
Kostas Glinos DG-INFSO F1
2FET Why are we there?
- To support research that is
- Visionary and exploratory
- Longer term or high risk
- A nursery of novel ideas - trend setting
- It is a multidisciplinary job
- It covers all areas covered by the Key Actions
- from a different perspective.
- The budget is about 300 Meuros
- Two ways of working
- Open - calls without themes - anything goes
- Proactive - highly focused and integrated
initiatives
3The OPEN scheme
- Accept any idea of quality
- Widest possible spectrum
- Proposals submitted at any time
- Innovative work that could lead to breakthroughs
or major advances - Bold ideas involving high risks
- Longer term research
- Quality in FETs Innovative idea, with
potential for strong impact, advancing the state
of the art may be high risk or long term or
combination of both
4The OPEN schemeproject types and evaluation dates
- Assessment projects
- Opportunity to validate an idea
- 1 year contract (lump sum up to 100 keuro)
- Expected scheme closure 15 June 2002
- Full scale projects
- Standard RTD contract
- Scheme closure 28 February 2002
- In both cases, a short proposal is submitted
first! - Planned evaluation dates September December
2001, March and July 2002
5FET Open Scheme
6FET Proactive InitiativesHow they work
- What they are
- Focused research programmes with visionary,
challenging goals - In areas strategic for the future
- critical mass, timeliness, impact
- How they work
- Coordinated project clusters
- Common long term goals
- Shaping vision(s) of the future
- Integrated approach
- Dovetailing projects
- Collective negotiations, grouped reviews
- Adaptation of objectives
- Network of Excellence and Dynamic Roadmaps
7Future and Emerging TechnologiesCalls for
Proposals
Universal Info Ecosystems
The Disappearing Computer
Quantum Information Processing Comm.
Global Computing
Nanotechnology Information Devices
Nanotechnology Information Devices
PRO- ACTIVE
Presence
Neuroinformatics
Quantum Info Proc. Comm.
Life-like Perception Systems
2002
1999
2000
2001
No thematic preference
OPEN
8Life-like perception systems Overall objective
- Integrated perception-response systems
- Bio-inspired
- Perception sensorial, cognitive, control and
response aspects, referring to vision or hearing,
or to any other type of interaction with the
environment by a biological organism - Extension of the capabilities of machines or
augmenting the human senses -
9Life-like perception systems Focus
- Systems approach
- integrating perception with appropriate action
resulting therefrom - independent of implementation issues
- Desirable features
- task-specific adaptability of the perception
system - processes of association (e.g. memory)
- fusion of sensory modalities
- Internal representation of real-world stimuli in
biological systems - Experimental and theoretical research
- novel sensors, computational neuroscience,
cognitive science, computer science, control,
signal processing, cellular engineering,
(bio)mechatronics (microrobotics and
microsystems), etc.
10Life-like perception systemsResearch issues
novel sensors computational neuroscience cognitive
science computer science signal processing and
control cellular engineering biomechatronics
task-specific adaptability of the perception
system processes of adaptation fusion of sensory
modalities
Understanding of the internal representation of
the real-world stimuli in biological systems
11Life-like perception systems on the Web
- http//www.cordis.lu/ist/fetbi.htm
- Deadline for pre-proposals 6 July 2001
12PRESENCE RESEARCH
- Objective
- To develop novel media that convey a sense of
being there - Focus
- Common reference model
- Measuring presence
- Capturing non-verbal cues, group mood,
- eye-contact
- New media technologies for
- richer experiences
Design Practices
New Media Development
Presence Research
Perception, Cognition
13PRESENCE RESEARCH
- Associated Disciplines
- The senses
- Cognitive Sciences
- Psychology
- Neuroscience Neurophysiology
- Psychoacoustics
- Haptics
- The technologies
- Computer Science / A.I.
- Telecommunications
- Hardware technologies
- Media, Arts and Design
14Quantum Information Processingand Communication
- Can we build computers and communication systems
that exploit the properties of quantum mechanics
(entanglement, superposition of states,
uncertainty,) for their opeartion? - Harness de-coherence
- Develop quantum computer science
- Find a scalable implementation technology
- Launched in 1999
- 15 projects - more than 100 partners
- 21 M funding
15QIPC - Questions
- Can we make, in the long term, quantum computers
that scale up and are cost effective? - What problems would they be able to solve?
- Are these problems of sufficient interest to
justify development? - What may be other applications of quantum systems
that would require a modest number of qubits?
16QIPCMain current research topics
- Quantum Algorithms
- Entanglement
- Quantification, manipulation, applications
- Decoherence, scalability
- Error Correction Fault Tolerance
- Quantum Cryptography
- Q. Logic Gates Networks
- Physical models experimental ideas
- Ion traps
- Cavity QED
- Superconductors
- Quantum dots
- Q. interferometry
17Which technologyfor quantum computers?
IONS Innsbruck Oxford Munich
Quantum Dots etc Basel
Cavity QED ENS Paris
NMR Oxford
Josephson Junctions Delft, Karlsruhe, Catania,
Jyvaskyla
18QIPC Structure
NoE Partners
Project Partners
Project n
Project n
Steering Committee
Project n
Project n
Project n
Roadmap
Roadmap
19Specific objectivesof 2002 QIPC Call
- Elementary scalable quantum processor
- Quantum information theory and algorithms
- Simulation of quantum systems
- Novel applications - can useful things be done
soon, even with a few qubits?
20Interdisciplinary balance
theoretical physics
theory
applied physics
chemistry
experiments
computer science
engineering
21FET on the Web
- http//www.cordis.lu/ist/fethome.htm