Interview with Sara Mazzucato, winner of the scholarship
Universities, companies, professionals, researchers and young graduates looking for innovative disruptive applications to explore a central theme ofInternet of Things (IoT) and Artificial Intelligence (AI), the Digital Twin, i.e. the creation of digital replicas of objects or processes, such as an asset, a person, a place, a system or a device, which, using real-time data and algorithms, make it possible to study performance problems and generate possible solutions to be implemented in reality. All of this has been explored since Digital Twin Bootcamp 2022 dell 'Università Campus Bio-Medico di Roma in collaboration with Intesa Sanpaolo and other partners.
The bootcamp has been held since August 22 to September 09 in phygital mode. The students were welcomed to one of the most prestigious Cambridge colleges, Corpus Christi College, where the IT marathon was held in contact with experts and large international companies in the sector. A full immersion in which teachers, researchers, participants, entrepreneurs and supporters have given shape to a learning ecosystem, for the design and implementation of concrete solutions to a given problem. Intesa Sanpaolo supports the initiative by making available scholarships to facilitate participation. For the 2022 edition, the scholarship was awarded to a student who has chosen and successfully pursues the STEM path. It's about Sarah Mazzucato, PhD student at theBiorobotics Institute of the Sant'Anna School of Pisa, Bioelectronics area in the research group "Artificial Intelligence applied to Healthcare".
"I was looking for an international experience related to my field of study that could help me grow both professionally and personally - Sara says - The Bootcamp was an opportunity to meet enlightening figures in the STEM field and beyond. The seminar on the correlation between ethics and artificial intelligence, for example, has opened up new horizons for us by addressing aspects that are often overlooked in university courses, which focus more on concepts". >> Read the whole interview