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I get out of bed for two reasons.
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One, small-scale family farmers need more food.
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It's crazy that in 2019 farmers that feed us are hungry.
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And two, science needs to be more diverse and inclusive.
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If we're going to solve the toughest challenges on the planet,
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like food insecurity for the millions living in extreme poverty,
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it's going to take all of us.
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I want to use the latest technology
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with the most diverse and inclusive teams on the planet
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to help farmers have more food.
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I'm a computational biologist.
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I know -- what is that and how is it going to help end hunger?
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Basically, I like computers and biology
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and somehow, putting that together is a job.
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(Laughter)
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I don't have a story
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of wanting to be a biologist from a young age.
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The truth is, I played basketball in college.
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And part of my financial aid package was I needed a work-study job.
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So one random day,
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I wandered to the nearest building to my dorm room.
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And it just so happens it was the biology building.
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I went inside and looked at the job board.
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Yes, this is pre-the-internet.
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And I saw a three-by-five card
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advertising a job to work in the herbarium.
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I quickly took down the number,
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because it said "flexible hours,"
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and I needed that to work around my basketball schedule.
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I ran to the library to figure out what an herbarium was.
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(Laughter)
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And it turns out
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an herbarium is where they store dead, dried plants.
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I was lucky to land the job.
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So my first scientific job
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was gluing dead plants onto paper for hours on end.
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(Laughter)
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It's so glamorous.
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This is how I became a computational biologist.
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During that time,
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genomics and computing were coming of age.
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And I went on to do my masters
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combining biology and computers.
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During that time,
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I worked at Los Alamos National Lab
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in the theoretical biology and biophysics group.
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And it was there I had my first encounter with the supercomputer,
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and my mind was blown.
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With the power of supercomputing,
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which is basically thousands of connected PCs on steroids,
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we were able to uncover the complexities of influenza and hepatitis C.
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And it was during this time that I saw the power
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of using computers and biology combined, for humanity.
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And I wanted this to be my career path.
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So, since 1999,
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I've spent the majority of my scientific career
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in very high-tech labs,
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surrounded by really expensive equipment.
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So many ask me
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how and why do I work for farmers in Africa.
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Well, because of my computing skills,
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in 2013, a team of East African scientists
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asked me to join the team in the plight to save cassava.
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Cassava is a plant whose leaves and roots feed 800 million people globally.
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And 500 million in East Africa.
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So that's nearly a billion people
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relying on this plant for their daily calories.
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If a small-scale family farmer has enough cassava,
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she can feed her family
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and she can sell it at the market for important things like school fees,
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medical expenses and savings.
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But cassava is under attack in Africa.
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Whiteflies and viruses are devastating cassava.
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Whiteflies are tiny insects
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that feed on the leaves of over 600 plants.
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They are bad news.
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There are many species;
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they become pesticide resistant;
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and they transmit hundreds of plant viruses
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that cause cassava brown streak disease
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and cassava mosaic disease.
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This completely kills the plant.
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And if there's no cassava,
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there's no food or income for millions of people.
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It took me one trip to Tanzania
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to realize that these women need some help.
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These amazing, strong, small-scale family farmers,
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the majority women,
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are doing it rough.
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They don't have enough food to feed their families,
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and it's a real crisis.
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What happens is
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they go out and plant fields of cassava when the rains come.
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Nine months later,
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there's nothing, because of these pests and pathogens.
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And I thought to myself,
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how in the world can farmers be hungry?
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So I decided to spend some time on the ground
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with the farmers and the scientists
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to see if I had any skills that could be helpful.
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The situation on the ground is shocking.
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The whiteflies have destroyed the leaves that are eaten for protein,
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and the viruses have destroyed the roots that are eaten for starch.
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An entire growing season will pass,
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and the farmer will lose an entire year of income and food,
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and the family will suffer a long hunger season.
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This is completely preventable.
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If the farmer knew
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what variety of cassava to plant in her field,
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that was resistant to those viruses and pathogens,
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they would have more food.
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We have all the technology we need,
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but the knowledge and the resources
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are not equally distributed around the globe.
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So what I mean specifically is,
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the older genomic technologies
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that have been required to uncover the complexities
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in these pests and pathogens --
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these technologies were not made for sub-Saharan Africa.
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They cost upwards of a million dollars;
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they require constant power
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and specialized human capacity.
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These machines are few and far between on the continent,
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which is leaving many scientists battling on the front lines no choice
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but to send the samples overseas.
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And when you send the samples overseas,
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samples degrade, it costs a lot of money,
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and trying to get the data back over weak internet
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is nearly impossible.
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So sometimes it can take six months to get the results back to the farmer.
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And by then, it's too late.
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The crop is already gone,
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which results in further poverty and more hunger.
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We knew we could fix this.
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In 2017,
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we had heard of this handheld, portable DNA sequencer
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called an Oxford Nanopore MinION.
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This was being used in West Africa to fight Ebola.
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So we thought:
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Why can't we use this in East Africa to help farmers?
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So, what we did was we set out to do that.
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At the time, the technology was very new,
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and many doubted we could replicate this on the farm.
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When we set out to do this,
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one of our "collaborators" in the UK
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told us that we would never get that to work in East Africa,
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let alone on the farm.
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So we accepted the challenge.
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This person even went so far as to bet us two of the best bottles of champagne
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that we would never get that to work.
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Two words:
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pay up.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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Pay up, because we did it.
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We took the entire high-tech molecular lab
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to the farmers of Tanzania, Kenya and Uganda,
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and we called it Tree Lab.
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So what did we do?
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Well, first of all, we gave ourselves a team name --
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it's called the Cassava Virus Action Project.
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We made a website,
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we gathered support from the genomics and computing communities,
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and away we went to the farmers.
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Everything that we need for our Tree Lab
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is being carried by the team here.
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All of the molecular and computational requirements needed
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to diagnose sick plants is there.
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And it's actually all on this stage here as well.
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We figured if we could get the data closer to the problem,
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and closer to the farmer,
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the quicker we could tell her what was wrong with her plant.
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And not only tell her what was wrong --
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give her the solution.
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And the solution is,
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burn the field and plant varieties
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that are resistant to the pests and pathogens she has in her field.
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So the first thing that we did was we had to do a DNA extraction.
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And we used this machine here.
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It's called a PDQeX,
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which stands for "Pretty Damn Quick Extraction."
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(Laughter)
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I know.
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My friend Joe is really cool.
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One of the biggest challenges in doing a DNA extraction
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is it usually requires very expensive equipment,
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and takes hours.
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But with this machine,
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we've been able to do it in 20 minutes,
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at a fraction of the cost.
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And this runs off of a motorcycle battery.
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From there, we take the DNA extraction and prepare it into a library,
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getting it ready to load on
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to this portable, handheld genomic sequencer,
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which is here,
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and then we plug this into a mini supercomputer,
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which is called a MinIT.
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And both of these things are plugged into a portable battery pack.
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So we were able to eliminate
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the requirements of main power and internet,
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which are two very limiting factors on a small-scale family farm.
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Analyzing the data quickly can also be a problem.
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But this is where me being a computational biologist came in handy.
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All that gluing of dead plants,
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and all that measuring,
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and all that computing
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finally came in handy in a real-world, real-time way.
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I was able to make customized databases
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and we were able to give the farmers results in three hours
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versus six months.
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(Applause)
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The farmers were overjoyed.
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So how do we know that we're having impact?
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Nine moths after our Tree Lab,
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Asha went from having zero tons per hectare
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to 40 tons per hectare.
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She had enough to feed her family
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and she was selling it at the market,
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and she's now building a house for her family.
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Yeah, so cool.
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(Applause)
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So how do we scale Tree Lab?
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The thing is,
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farmers are scaled already in Africa.
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These women work in farmer groups,
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so helping Asha actually helped 3,000 people in her village,
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because she shared the results and also the solution.
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I remember every single farmer I've ever met.
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Their pain and their joy
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is engraved in my memories.
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Our science is for them.
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Tree Lab is our best attempt to help them become more food secure.
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I never dreamt
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that the best science I would ever do in my life
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would be on that blanket in East Africa,
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with the highest-tech genomic gadgets.
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But our team did dream
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that we could give farmers answers in three hours versus six months,
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and then we did it.
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Because that's the power of diversity and inclusion in science.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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(Cheers)