Thirty-six aspiring tech entrepreneurs will be supported by the Venture Builder Incubator, which provides a bridge between academic research and business, empowering university researchers to turn their digital innovations into thriving start-ups.
Since 2021, the Venture Builder Incubator has supported more than 130 academics at the University of Edinburgh, with past cohorts raising more than £55 million in grants and investments.
Helping founders
This year, for the first time, the scheme is open to all of Scotland’s universities, and will provide founders with access to funding, office space, and mentorship at the Bayes Centre, the University of Edinburgh’s innovation hub for AI and data science.
Among this year’s innovations from across 10 universities are an AI-system to detect fake alcohol (University of St Andrews), an app offering support for young people with brain tumours (Strathclyde University), and an award-winning AI approach to streamlining admin tasks for lawyers (University of Dundee).
Avoiding falls
Nazia Gillani, a PhD researcher at the University of Edinburgh, is developing a smart home system to help older people avoid falls, working with 60 older adults, carers and clinicians to hone its design.
The non-contact system will sense subtle signs of frailty and use AI to predict an individual’s decline, sending timely warning alerts to help prevent falls.