UC Learning Lab inspires College of Medicine to SIT
Ideation summit sparks diversity of thought
In a convergence of academic integration, the University of Cincinnati's renowned colleges — Design, Architecture, Art, and Planning, Carl H. Lindner College of Business, College of Engineering and Applied Sciences and College of Medicine — recently joined forces at the 1819 Innovation Hub for an ideation session that exemplifies the institution's commitment to interdisciplinary collaboration.
The initiative, spearheaded by the UC Learning Lab, which included the Systematic Inventive Thinking (SIT) approach, served as a dynamic platform for students and faculty from diverse backgrounds to combine their expertise, unleashing an abundance of perspectives and problem-solving approaches.
The topic of discussion was the Pulse Oximeter (PulseOx), a noninvasive medical device that attaches to a body part to measure the oxygen saturation levels of individuals. Widely used and convenient, this medical test has raised some concerns among health care professionals, including cost, sustainability and accuracy.
Working with health care professionals who brought extensive knowledge and insights to the project greatly enriched our ideas and problem-solving process.
Erin Seccia UC NEXT Innovation Scholar
Innovative thinking techniques
RJ Sargent, executive director of learning services, 1819 Innovation Hub. Photo/Aidan Wallace
Arthur Pancioli, MD, chair of the UC Department of Emergency Medicine, contacted the Learning Lab when he identified an opportunity for innovation.
“If we at UC are the place where learning is facilitated by experience, then we must seek to take our learners into the arena where disciplines artfully collide and new ideas result," Pancioli said.
The UC Learning Lab, situated within the 1819 Innovation Hub, is a think tank dedicated to exploring the art and science of learning. RJ Sargent, executive director of learning services, and Rebecca Revalee, assistant director of learning services, steered the multidisciplinary approach by guiding free-flowing discussions and methods to advance the device’s accuracy and user experience.
“We were excited when Dr. Pancioli reached out and asked the Learning Lab to help convene thought leaders from across the university to explore challenges in emergency medicine. The overwhelming support we garnered exceeded our expectations — an amazing mix of faculty and students who volunteered on a Saturday to help generate new ideas in a completely unfamiliar subject area. This was exactly what we and Dr. Pancioli hoped for — eager learners and willing collaborators coming together to solve tough problems,” Sargent said.
If we at UC are the place where learning is facilitated by experience, then we must seek to take our learners into the arena where disciplines artfully collide and new ideas result.
Arthur Pancioli, MD Chair of the UC Department of Emergency Medicine
SIT on it
During the Learning Lab session, Sargent employed SIT, a methodology designed to encourage individuals to break free from conventional thinking patterns to generate innovative ideas on the spot.
SIT provides a framework and a set of techniques to stimulate creative thinking and problem-solving. The SIT method is based on the premise that innovation can be achieved by applying patterns and templates to existing products, services or processes to create new and novel ideas.
Faculty from the Department of Emergency Medicine were present. They answered questions and heard from the various academic colleges who brainstormed ideas related to the medical device.
The UC Learning Lab was the guiding force behind this collective endeavor, skillfully orchestrating the creative process, navigating the exchange of thoughts and fostering an environment where the unification of skilled disciplines paved the way for innovative solutions and insights.
Enthusiastic participants like Erin Seccia, a communication design student and UC NEXT Innovation Scholar, wholeheartedly embraced the multidisciplinary approach to the challenge.
“Working with health care professionals who brought extensive knowledge and insights to the project greatly enriched our ideas and problem-solving process. My relatively limited health care expertise allowed me to approach the problem with a more abstract perspective, which, while not always guaranteed to work, sparked potential innovative solutions,” Seccia said.
Novel approaches
Rakesh Govind, PhD in biochemistry and professor of chemical and environmental engineering, spoke to the diverse backgrounds of participants from multiple colleges and how it allowed everyone to interact and generate new ideas on the PulseOx system. Govind shared how he would like to see the medical school researchers continue to collaborate with faculty from engineering, to improve the medical device.
“We filled a room with bright, energetic folks — all of whom had zero mandate to be there — a delicious mix of intellectual curiosity and the pursuit of intellectual expansion that brought us together,” Pancioli said.
During the ideation session, the Learning Lab effectively harnessed the collective creativity of a unique group, introducing participants to SIT tactics and enabling them to uncover novel approaches to creative thinking.
Featured image at top: Arthur Pancioli, MD, chair of the UC Department of Emergency Medicine speaks during an ideation session at the 1819 Innovation Hub. Photo/Aidan Wallace
Contributing writer: UC student, Next Innovation Scholar, Max Kemats
Innovation Lives Here
The University of Cincinnati is leading public urban universities into a new era of innovation and impact. Our faculty, staff and students are saving lives, changing outcomes and bending the future in our city's direction. Next Lives Here.
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