Empresas y finanzas

InnoCentive Winner Donates Award Money to Cal Poly at San Luis Obispo



    InnoCentive announced that one of its latest scientific-challenge
    winners, Dr. Jim P. Boyce, a scientist at Amgen Inc., has donated his
    "Solver" award of $5,000 to the Chemistry Department at Cal Poly San
    Louis Obispo. Dr. Boyce's winning solution involved devising a
    chemical sensor-based method for detecting crop fumigants at low
    levels.

    Ali Hussein, InnoCentive's chief marketing officer, vice president
    of global markets, said, "Dr. Boyce's generosity is a good example of
    the dedication that many of our 100,000 on-line Solvers feel toward
    the importance of helping to promote science and the next generation
    of scientists. However, Dr. Boyce is the first InnoCentive winner to
    donate his award to a scientific university."

    Dr. Boyce said, "It was personally rewarding for me to participate
    in this international chemistry competition and to challenge myself to
    'think outside the box' on an issue that affects the safety of farm
    workers. I am also pleased to be able to help support the next
    generation of chemists."

    InnoCentive has developed a solid global brand with their unique
    virtual R&D network of over 100,000 scientists spanning more than 175
    countries that has greatly helped companies reduce the escalating
    costs required to bring products to market. InnoCentive's goal is to
    further advance scientific research and collaboration in worldwide
    markets.

    About InnoCentive

    InnoCentive is the first online forum that allows world-class
    scientists and science-based companies to collaborate in a global
    scientific community to achieve innovative solutions to complex
    challenges. Companies including Dow AgroSciences, Eli Lilly and
    Company, Procter & Gamble and others, which collectively spend
    billions of dollars on R&D, post scientific problems confidentially on
    the InnoCentive Web site where over 100,000 scientists and scientific
    organizations in more than 175 countries can solve them. Scientists
    who deliver solutions that best meet InnoCentive's challenge
    requirements receive financial awards ranging up to and over $100,000.
    To learn more and to register as an InnoCentive Solver, visit the
    InnoCentive Web site at www.innocentive.com.