Changing the World
One Startup at a Time

At the University of California San Diego, “innovation” isn’t just a buzzword, it’s an animating principle. It reaches across campus and around the globe. And UC San Diego’s innovations are changing the region and the world.

“Our research has helped launch licensed startups — more than 1,000 companies around the world use or have used technology we created — providing hundreds of jobs and fueling acquisitions by tech giants like Cisco and Apple,” said Chancellor Pradeep K. Khosla. “UC San Diego is also the nation’s fourth strongest public university in startup creation and seventh in the nation for patents.”

UC San Diego research has helped launch licensed startups — more than 1,000 companies around the world use or have used technology the university created.

UC San Diego research has helped launch licensed startups — more than 1,000 companies around the world use or have used technology the university created.

The university's "innovation ecosystem,” as it’s often called, includes a wide range of programs, services, and events that support a diverse array of students, faculty, staff, and alumni in their entrepreneurial quests. There are mentoring programs like Entrepreneurs in Residence that offer guidance to nascent entrepreneurs; incubators and accelerators such as the Basement and StartR where ideas are nurtured into companies; and pitch competitions like Triton Entrepreneur Night and the Fast Pitch at San Diego Startup Week where startups can win funding and free services. The goal of all these programs is to ensure campus innovators are supported in their endeavors, able to learn valuable skills, and have a safe place to test out their ideas.

Associate Vice Chancellor for Innovation and Commercialization Paul Roben says the environment at the university is the key to success: “We have incredibly talented researchers and innovators; we have extremely dedicated staff; we have truly supportive leadership. It’s a winning combination that really allows our innovation and entrepreneurial activities on campus to flourish, creating products and services that directly impact lives around the world.”

For UC San Diego, the 2018-19 fiscal year saw a record number of commercial licenses and patents: One hundred thirty-seven, which is an increase of 16 percent over the previous year. The campus is also one of the top two schools within the University of California system for startup creation.

One of those licenses will have a significant impact on future wireless communications. Samsung has non-exclusively licensed inventions that make an error-correction technology called “polar codes” more practical for use in 5G — the next generation of wireless technology. The advances were created by a team of engineers from the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering co-led by Alexander Vardy, a professor of electrical and computer engineering. The work is already being implemented in millions of 5G chipsets, and it holds potential for application in fiber-optic networks, data storage, and satellite communications.

The university’s startups are also known for contributing to San Diego’s economy. CavoGene, a recent startup that began at UC San Diego, was founded by four colleagues in the School of Medicine’s Department of Anesthesiology: Associate Adjunct Professor Brian P. Head, Professor and Vice Chair for Research Hemal H. Patel, Professor Piyush M. Patel and Professor David M. Roth. The company hopes to develop novel gene therapies to treat neurogenerative disease such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).

UC San Diego student Kristine Khieu pitching her startup SoleMate during Triton Entrepreneur Night.

UC San Diego student Kristine Khieu pitching her startup SoleMate during Triton Entrepreneur Night.

UC San Diego is also the nation’s fourth strongest public university in startup creation and seventh in the nation for patents.

UC San Diego is also the nation’s fourth strongest public university in startup creation and seventh in the nation for patents.

New Partnerships and Programs

UC San Diego’s Innovation and Entrepreneurship Council was formed in 2017 at the request of Chancellor Khosla. The council is composed of leading innovators and entrepreneurs across diverse fields who advise the university on how to best position resources to achieve the long-term objective of becoming globally recognized as a leader in driving social and economic prosperity.

This objective resonates deeply with the chancellor. “One of the stated goals of our strategic plan is community enrichment,” Khosla said. “UC San Diego’s innovation ecosystem is thriving, and it provides many avenues for our students, faculty, and partners to foster community enrichment, support economic development, and bring increased prosperity to the region.”

The council was instrumental to the early strategy of UC San Diego’s partnership with Deerfield Management. Deerfield’s $65-million commitment to the university created Poseidon Innovation, LLC, with the goal of advancing disease-curing therapeutics. Poseidon projects will receive funding to help researchers weather the risky early stages of the drug development process.

Another partnership brought UC San Diego’s Rady School of Management and the Jacobs School of Engineering together to host the first ever Border Innovation Challenge, sponsored by the Smart Border Coalition. The business plan competition focused on improving processes and efficiency at regional ports of entry, where wait times can stretch into multiple hours. The winning company was Curbside Labs, founded by UC San Diego alumnus Cheslav Versky, a 1995 graduate. Curbside Labs uses dynamic data to create border efficiencies.

The Rady School has also partnered with the Jacobs School to create the Institute for the Global Entrepreneur (IGE), now in its fourth year. IGE was created to inspire and prepare engineers to be entrepreneurial leaders and translate technology innovations to market. In addition to continuing successful innovation programs, accelerators and competitions, IGE launched a new program focused on medical technology.

IGE runs quarterly programs for the Innovation Corps (I-Corps) of the National Science Foundation (NSF) Innovation Corps, which teaches lean startup methodology to faculty, students, and staff interested in launching a startup. This year, IGE launched a new I-Corps medical-device workshop series that included 13 UC San Diego and affiliated startups, competing for a series of grants to advance their startup activities. Three teams were awarded grants, totaling $20,000, including first-place winner alumna Debbie Chen, founder of Hydrostais. Chen earned her Bachelor of Science in Bioengineering at UC San Diego.

Sandra A. Brown, vice Chancellor for research at UC San Diego, emphasized the importance of having a diversified and robust innovation ecosystem across campus. “We are an incredibly creative and entrepreneurial campus. Amazing discoveries and groundbreaking research happen here every day. That discovery and research is made most valuable when turned into products and services that improve health, increase prosperity and better society. That is what innovation at UC San Diego is truly about.”

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