Five questions with Krithik Ramesh, winner of the $75,000 Gordon E. Moore Award - 京东影业影视传媒

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Five questions with Krithik Ramesh, winner of the $75,000 Gordon E. Moore Award

By Communications Team

Krithik explains his project to a competition judge at Intel ISEF 2019 PHOTO COURTESY OF SOCIETY FOR SCIENCE & THE PUBLIC/CHRIS AYERS

This post is part of a series profiling the top award winners of the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF) 2019. Intel ISEF is the largest pre-college, international STEM competition in the world. This year鈥檚 competition included participants from 80 countries, regions and territories. Every year, the brightest young scientists from all over the world come together to participate in this incredible fair.

In this year鈥檚 competition, Krithik Ramesh of Englewood, Colorado, as featured on , was one of the winners in the category of biomedical engineering. He then went on to receive the $75,000 Gordon E. Moore Award, the top award at Intel ISEF, for his work developing 聽a real-time navigation system for spinal reconstruction surgery that requires only one CT or MRI Scan. The sixteen-year-old, , collaborated with medical professionals to design an effective algorithm that could predict spinal behavior to guide the optimal screw placement and reconstruction of a damaged spine.

Here is our conversation with Krithik.

What was your experience like at Intel ISEF?

Intel ISEF is a life-altering experience that forever changes your understanding of what it means to be a researcher. You get the opportunity to meet with like-minded individuals that love research just as much as you do, from Nobel Laureates to middle school children, the exposure to talented, passionate and intelligent individuals is incredible. Some of my closest friends are ones I met at ISEF, and I am endlessly grateful for connections that I know will last a lifetime. The finalist mixer, which is essentially a Drake concert for nerds, and the Intel Quad are also dreams come true for the inner child in all finalists. ISEF has been an experience that has reinforced my love for science and motivates me to conduct research that can change the world.

What’s the biggest lesson you鈥檝e learned thus far in your scientific career?

You have to love what you do. It seems pretty obvious, but in reality, it鈥檚 one of the hardest things to learn. It was discouraging to stay up late studying complicated material that wasn鈥檛 particularly interesting at first glance, but the desire to research kept my motivation alive and would be crucial to my later discoveries. It鈥檚 understandable to lose motivation when things don鈥檛 go your way with your results or you don鈥檛 win the award you want, but, at the core, we all do research because we want to.

How do you deal with setbacks?

Somewhere along the way we associated mistakes with something bad鈥攖his stigmatization that mistakes shouldn鈥檛 happen because they aren鈥檛 the desired result. I think that you should make mistakes, face every possible setback and be on the brink of giving up.

Why?

Because in making as many little mistakes as possible, you prevent the big ones. I see setbacks as an integral part of conducting research, and, more often than not, we see that these setbacks are serendipitous鈥攖here have been a number of discoveries stemming from a scientist making a mistake in a lab, and those are the discoveries that make the world go round. Whenever I meet a setback, I remind myself that it just puts me one step closer to what I am trying to accomplish!

What is something you don’t currently understand that you wish you understood?

One of the most humbling things about conducting research is the fundamental understanding that we don鈥檛 know everything. I think one of the most pressing problems that humankind faces is the early identification and attempted diagnosis of cancer. Even when we catch pancreatic cancer in its first stage, the five-year survival rate is still incredibly low. To this day, we are still seeking to understand the mechanics behind cancer and its pathology. 聽

What issues do you feel all countries should unite to take on?聽

I remember a debate resolution from my sophomore year that stated 鈥developed nations ought to help developing nations.鈥 The answer seems like an obvious yes, right? But it鈥檚 actually a lot more complicated than that: When developed nations provide aid, it can end up crippling the countries they aim to help. I think that all countries should collaborate on finding sustainable solutions that develop infrastructure for regions in need. Giving everyone opportunities to dialogue is the way we develop the discoveries and inventions that could save the world.