Nanotechnology: the big picture (video)

(Nanowerk News) This term, the Oxford Martin School at the University of Oxford is hosting a seminar series on the implications and applications of new technologies. Yesterday's (Jan 28) seminar with Dr Eric Drexler and Dr Sonia Trigueros looked at the future of nanotechnology.
Advancements in nanotechnology could fundamentally change global approaches to manufacturing, medicine, healthcare, and the environment. In this lecture Dr Eric Drexler, Senior Visiting Fellow, Oxford Martin School, looked at current advances in the field of advanced nanotechnology, and the impacts and potential applications of their widespread implementation, and Dr Sonia Trigueros, Co-Director of the Oxford Martin Programme on Nanotechnology, and Oxford Martin Senior Fellow, consider how targeted nanomedicine could change how we treat disease in the future.
About the speakers
Eric Drexler is a Senior Visiting Fellow at the Oxford Martin School, and a pioneering nanotechnology researcher and author. His 1981 paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences established fundamental principles of molecular engineering and identified development paths leading to advanced nanotechnologies. In his 1986 book, Engines of Creation, he introduced a broad audience to the promise of high-throughput atomically precise manufacturing, a prospective technology using nanoscale machinery to guide molecular motion and bonding, thereby structuring matter from the bottom up.
Sonia Trigueros is an Oxford Martin Senior Fellow, an Academic Fellow at the University of Oxford's Department of Physics and was Co-Director of the Oxford Martin Programme on Nanotechnology
Her research focuses on the design of a novel nanodrug delivery system to target dividing cells, specifically cancer cells. She is also developing new Nanomedicines to tackle bacterial antibiotic resistance problem. She has a PhD in molecular biology from IBMB-CSIC and Universidad de Barcelona. After her postdoctoral research fellowships at Harvard and Oxford Universities, Trigueros was a research visitor to several academic institutions including NIH-Washington and Havana University.
Source: Oxford University