Things have changed since the days when promising antipodean inventions were snapped up by rich overseas companies, according to the new head of the representative body for Australian scientists and technologists. But there is still a long way to go.
RMIT University electronics engineer Sharath Sriram said Australia needed two things to build a commercialisation culture to match its innovation culture. One聽was better integration of the disparate schemes to help researchers develop their ideas. The other聽was enough funding to shepherd those ideas across the 鈥渟even to 15-year horizon鈥 of success.
This required 鈥渟eamlessness鈥 between programmes 鈥渟o that one can flow into another鈥, said Professor Sriram, named Science & Technology Australia (STA) president on 28 November. 鈥淎nd [we need] investment revenue to hold the whole thing together. We鈥檝e been advocating for a research translation future fund similar to the聽Medical Research Future Fund.鈥
As STA policy chair since 2018, he has kept a close eye on developments. 鈥淭here have been a lot of positive shifts in the last three to five years,鈥 he said. A key advance was the former government鈥檚聽University Research Commercialisation Package.
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It featured a A$1.6 billion (拢837 million) fund to support translation and commercialisation activities, known as 鈥溾. Other elements included the聽聽and the聽Trailblazer Universities scheme, which funds manufacturing-focused research and industry hubs.
Professor Sriram also hailed the current government鈥檚聽听补苍诲听National Reconstruction Fund. But many of these schemes lacked longevity and connectedness, he said: 鈥淸They] tend to be operated by different agencies, and it鈥檚 really funding over a shorter period.鈥
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He reserved special praise for the longstanding聽聽stream, which matchmakes small or medium-sized companies with research organisations. While it聽was small in scope, with grants capped at A$3 million for three-year collaborations, he said, it had two distinct advantages.
One聽was connectivity, with many participants progressing into commercialisation funds run by the industry growth centres. The other聽was feedback for unsuccessful applicants: 鈥淚t鈥檚 one of those rare schemes where there鈥檚 actually a loop. You apply; you learn why you missed out. You work on that, then try again. I鈥檝e seen so many projects go from very early stage to significant maturity.鈥
One of those success stories is聽, a smart monitoring system launched by Melbourne company Sleeptite using technology developed by Professor Sriram鈥檚聽聽research group. It features stretchable sensors that gauge older people鈥檚 movements and vital signs, embedded in a medical grade mattress, and a data analysis platform that notifies remote carers of health risks, falls or distress.
Professor Sriram is credited with initiating commercial partnerships that have earned RMIT聽more than聽A$6 million over the past five years. Many have yielded medical devices harnessing his breakthrough technologies in nanoelectronics.
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He said he had switched his focus from semiconductors after leaving his native India, partly inspired by Australia鈥檚 vastness. 鈥淥ur simple vision is, how do you bring the hospital to the home?
鈥淢ost of the products we make are focused on that: aged care monitoring, early detection of viruses or cancer, [using] data science to look at [indicators] of聽, with saliva so you鈥檙e not drawing blood. Screen people rapidly; the data can be analysed [by] a city specialist. Take medicine to the place of need.鈥
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