What will medicine look like by 2050?
Patient centered, digitally enabled healthcare solutions are being built out, tested and adopted the technology industry.
Patient centered, digitally enabled healthcare solutions are being built out, tested and adopted the technology industry.
If we are to meet the imperative of leaving our grandchildren with a healthier planet, we must shift to a decarbonized, decentralized and digitalized energy system, as well as an electrif...
Imagine a heart monitor that relays unusual heart activities straight to your cardiologist – just one example of how linking doctors, patients and medical facilities through technology wi...
The Citizen Confidence Index would ask people how able they feel to shape their context and find agency, purpose, community support and an intent to participate meaningfully in the world.
India’s principal endeavor in the coming decades must be to put in place a new framework for its own security, growth and development, and that of developing countries around the world.
Currently, 1.2 billion people worldwide - one in every six people on the planet - do not have access to electricity. A radical new approach is needed if this trajectory is to be remedied.
What if they asked how their core technology could be used in the public interest?
Global productivity has become sluggish in the last few years, but a new global patent market could help.
We must learn from current systems to navigate economic, political and social uncertainty.
Quantitative easing was used in response to the 2009 Financial crisis, but how effective was it?
Disruptive technologies could help distribute food, wealth and data, reduce hunger and waste, and empower farmers. Or they could consolidate the food sector, expanding bad practices rathe...
"As social entrepreneurs, we need to do what we do best: examine our field and identify challenges, then find solutions to propel our work forward."
As AI increasingly influences our lives, it might be that its governance will require further artificial intelligence.
Since the 19th century, humans have believed the rate of change is increasing. But a surge is always followed by a slump – and that's when the real work begins.
As our understanding of the brain advances, do we need to rethink the ethics of influencing free will?