Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology

Coordinates: 26°27′43.01″N 127°49′51.8″E / 26.4619472°N 127.831056°E / 26.4619472; 127.831056
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26°27′43.01″N 127°49′51.8″E / 26.4619472°N 127.831056°E / 26.4619472; 127.831056

File:Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University Logo.jpg
Established1 September 2005
PresidentJonathan M. Dorfan
Faculty46
Staff~200
BudgetUS$ 154 million
Location,
Okinawa 904-0495, Japan
Websitewww.oist.jp

The Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University (OIST) is an interdisciplinary graduate school located on Okinawa, Japan. The school offers a 5-year PhD program in Science. Over half of the faculty and students are recruited from outside Japan, and all education and research is conducted entirely in English.[1]

The university has no departments—OIST researchers conduct multi-disciplinary research in neuroscience, mathematical and computational sciences, physics, chemistry, integrative biology and molecular, cell, and developmental biology.[2]

According to the Mission Statement, OIST’s objectives are to "conduct internationally distinguished education and research in science and technology in Okinawa, to contribute to the promotion and self-sustaining development of Okinawa and to contribute to the development of science and technology worldwide."[1]

History

In 2001, Koji Omi, the Minister of Okinawa and Northern Territories Affairs, and Science and Technology Policy, announced the plan to establish an international graduate university in Okinawa. In May 2002, former minister Junichiro Koizumi pledged that the Japanese government will promote the project to establish the new graduate university in Okinawa at the 30th anniversary ceremony marking the reversion of Okinawa to Japan. Two years later, it was decided that the university will be located in Onna and four research proposals were selected in order to form the Initial Research Project (IRP), which started in Uruma in 2004.[3]

The Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Promotion Corporation (OIST P.C.) was established on September 1, 2005, after the Diet of Japan approved the OIST P.C. Act (Act No. 26 of 2005) in March 2005. The promotion corporation was established in order to prepare the way for an international graduate university dedicated to science and technology. Nobel laureate Sydney Brenner was appointed first president of OIST P.C. in August of the same year. OIST P.C. became an independent administrative institution.[3]

In March 2007, site preparation for constructing the new OIST campus in Onna Village commenced and one year later, construction work for the center building and the first laboratory building started. The interior fittings of the buildings were completed in March 2010 and most of the research groups moved from the temporary sites in Uruma to the Onna campus.[3]

Following the successful establishment and operation of OIST P.C., the Diet of Japan passed the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology School Corporation Act (Act No. 76 of 2009) mid-year 2009, thereby providing the institutional basis for the University and establishing a framework for transitioning from a research institute to a fully functioning graduate university. The OIST S.C. act was enacted on 10 July 2009. From the perspective of respecting the autonomy and the management flexibility of the school, the Act stipulates the establishment of the graduate university as an independent special school corporation. Based on the Act, the graduate university submitted an application to the minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology in March 2011. The university received accreditation on November 1, 2011 and is recruiting students for fall 2012.[4]

School Corporation & University Management Structure

In keeping with the mandate of the OIST School Corporation Act, the OIST School Corporation (OIST S.C.) and the Graduate University present a unified management structure. The ultimate authority and responsibility for the management and operation of the OIST S.C. is vested in its Board of Governors (BOG). The BOG consists of world-renowned scientists who monitor all actions conducted by OIST S.C. and the implementation of strategies. It includes:

  • Jerome Friedman, Nobel laureate
  • Tim Hunt, Nobel laureate
  • Yuan-Tseh Lee, Nobel laureate
  • Susumu Tonegawa, Nobel laureate
  • Torsten Wiesel, Nobel laureate
  • Lord Martin Rees, Master of Trinity College, Cambridge
  • Akito Arima, Japan Science Foundation Chairman
  • Ichiro Kanazawa, Former president of the Science Council of Japan
  • Kiyoshi Kurokawa, Former special cabinet advisor in charge of Science, Technology and Innovation
  • Hiroko Sho, Director of the Okinawa Learning Center
  • Jonathan M. Dorfan, President-Elect of OIST and Previous Director of Stanford Linear Accelerator Center
  • Robert Baughman, CEO of OIST and Past associate director for Technology Development at NINDS
  • Rita Colwell, Past president of the American Institute of Biological Sciences
  • Hiroshi Komiyama, Mitsubishi Research Institute chairman
  • Cherry A. Murray, Dean of the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences
  • K. VijayRaghavan, advisory committee member of Janelia Farm Research Campus
  • Takeshi Yasumoto, Senior research manager of the Academic-Industry Collaboration for Okinawa Coastal Lines, MEXT

The BOG is in charge of selecting a Chief Operating Officer (CEO) for OIST S.C., and the CEO also serves as the President of the University. The BOG entrusts the day-to-day management of the University to the President. Additionally, the BOG appoints the Provost, who is also the Vice-CEO. Vice Presidents of the University are nominated by the President and approved by the BOG. The President, in consultation with the BOG, establishes a management structure for the University, a structure which is to be an efficient and effective vehicle for operating an international graduate university and which will ensure transparency and accountability in its administrative and fiscal operations. The institute is thus led by an Executive Office, which consists of the President, Vice President and Executive Director, and Chief Administrative Officer. Jonathan Dorfan was named president-elect of the graduate university.

Funding

OIST relies on public subsidies paid by the Japanese government. The government subsidy for OIST comes in two areas: a subsidy for operations and a subsidy for facilities. Since its launch in September 2005, the budget of OIST has steadily increased, and with continued funding, the center building, Laboratory 1, Laboratory 2 will be completed to accommodate the target of about 50 PIs at the time of the opening of the graduate university in FY2012. The annual budget for fiscal year 2011 showed direct public subsidies to the amount of approximately 11.9 billion yen (US$ 154 million), and additional acquisition of external funding such as donations, competitive research grants, and sponsored research.

Researchers and Research Units

As of October 1, 2011, OIST had over 200 researchers (approximately 80 non-Japanese from 30 countries) and about 100 administrative staff. The research staff includes marine biologist, physicists, neuroscientists, geneticists, ecologists, nanotechnologists and mathematicians just to mention a few. OIST has over 355 research publications (FY2010), more than 28 joint research projects worldwide (FY2010) and ten patents applications (4 accepted).

Successful faculty recruitment was featured in Nature in June 2011.[5] OIST faculty includes the following well-known scientists: Sydney Brenner, Nobel laureate (for work with Caenorhabditis elegans) and heads the unit of molecular genetics; Noriyuki Satoh, renowned developmental biologist, who was professor at Kyoto University and now heads the Unit for Developmental, Evolutionary, and Environmental Genomics of Marine Invertebrates; Mitsuhiro Yanagida, world-renowned cell biologist, who had been working as a professor at Kyoto University on the eukaryotic cell cycle and now heads the Unit on Cellular Strategy for Starved G0 Arrest and Vegetative Proliferation; and Tsumoru Shintake, Free Electron Laser award winner (Riken SACLA facility) who now heads the Quantum Wave Microscopy Unit.

Research Units OIST’s research programs are interdisciplinary and aim to be at the leading edge of research in science and technology in particular in the life sciences, the physical sciences and mathematics. The five main research areas covered at OIST are Neuroscience, Molecular, cell and developmental biology, Integrative biology, Mathematical and computational science, and Physics and Chemistry. These five research areas together constitute a total of 45 research units head by research experts in these fields. They are listed below.

Arbuthnott, Gordon Brain Mechanisms for Behavior
Bandi, Mahesh Collective Interactions
Brenner, Sydney Molecular Genetics
Busch, Thomas Quantum Systems
Chakraborty, Pinaki Fluid Mechanics
Dani, Keshav Femtosecond Spectroscopy
De Schutter, Erik Computational Neuroscience
Doya, Kenji Neural Computation
Economo, P Evan Biodiversity and Biocomplexity
Goryanin, Igor Biological Systems
Gioia, Gustavo Continuum Physics Unit
Hikami, Shinobu Mathematical and Theoretical Physics
Isoda, Masaki Unit on Neural Systems and Behavior
Jenke-Kodama, Holger Microbiology and Biochemistry of Secondary Metabolites
Kitano, Hiroaki Open Biology
Konstantinov, Denis Quantum Dynamics
Kuhn, Bernd Optical Neuroimaging
Luscombe, Nicholas Genomics and Regulatory Systems
Marquez-Lago, Tatiana Integrative Systems Biology
Maruyama, Ichiro Information Processing Biology
Masai, Ichiro Developmental Neurobiology
Mikheyev, Alexander Ecology and Evolution
Miller, Jonathan Physics and Biology
Mitarai, Satoshi Marine Biophysics
Nic Chormaic, Síle Light-Matter Interactions
Price, Mary Ann Developmental Signaling
Qi, Yabing, Energy Materials and Surface Sciences
Samatey, Fadel Trans-Membrane Trafficking
Satoh, Noriyuki Marine Genomics
Saze, Hidetoshi Plant Epigenetics
Shannon, Nic Theory of Quantum Matter
Shintake, Tsumoru Quantum Wave Microscopy
Sinclair, Robert Mathematical Biology
Skoglund, Ulf Structural Cellular Biology
Sowman, Mukhles Ibrahim Nanoparticles by Design for Nanotechnology and Biomedical Applications
Takahashi, Tomoyuki Cellular and Molecular Synaptic Function
Tanaka, Fujie Chemistry and Chemical Bioengineering
Tonomura, Akira Electron Microscopy
Tripp, Gail Human Developmental Neurobiology
Van Vactor, David Formation and Regulation of Neuronal Connectivity
Wickens, Jeff Neurobiology Research
Wolf, Matthias Molecular Cryo-Electron Microscopy
Yamamoto, Tadashi Cell Signal
Yanagida, Mitsuhiro G0 Cell
Yazaki-Sugiyama, Yoko Neuronal Mechanism for Critical Period

Graduate University

In the fall of 2011 OIST gained full accreditation as a university. The first class of OIST S.C. graduate students will commence their doctoral studies in the fall of 2012.

The academic structure and the physical layout of the research environment have been designed to optimize cross-disciplinary interactions between the faculty, student and research staff. Every year, 20 students accepted for admission will benefit from OIST’s low student to instructor ratio and financial support for living costs, health care, and housing. This will enable them to focus on the science as they work side-by-side with faculty in state-of-the-art facilities at the campus in Onna, Okinawa.

Campus

The new Onna campus was opened in March 2010 and is located on a hillside surrounded by subtropical forest. The whole campus area covers around 222 hectares with the main campus having approximately 80 hectares. The Onna campus consists of the Center Building and three laboratory wings, but currently, only the Center Building and one laboratory building are in operation. Construction of Laboratory 2 is ongoing and completion of this is expected in April 2012. Occupancy of the building, housing an additional 16 faculty members is expected in mid-2012.

The main features of the graduate university include: a single interdisciplinary graduate program, five-year integrated doctoral program, about 20 students per year with about 50 faculty members, education and research conducted in English and at least half of the students/faculty members to be non-Japanese.

The key concepts of the objectives embody:

  • Best in the World: the graduate university is for top-class scientists who conduct “best in the world” research and education in science and technology.
  • Flexible: in compliance with government regulations an unconventional administration structure and high-level of government funding support the graduate university is to become one of the best-in-the-world, and assure the autonomy and flexible management of the corporation.
  • International: more than half of the faculty and students are non-Japanese, and English is the official language.
  • Global Networking: develop partnership with leading universities and research institutions worldwide with OIST as a hub in the international network of scientists particularly in the Asia-Pacific region.
  • Collaboration and Industry: establish attractive schemes for collaboration with the private sector. Form a scientific industrial cluster by attracting corporate laboratories and venture businesses.

Public criticism

OIST was criticised for wasting public money. In March 2010, the institute's Board of Governors had to admit that breach of fiscal procedures occurred in the context of the construction work for the new campus site.[20] In April 2010, the Government Revitalization Unit, which seeks to trim wasteful government spending, pointed out excesses in operating costs, salaries and meetings of the Board of Governors and concluded that the institute's budget should be decreased.[21][22] The working group panel also demanded that the management of OIST should be reviewed. The Government Revitalization Unit pointed out particularly that the salary level at OIST is too high having a value of 132 on a scale where 100 is the average for public servants in Japan.[23] Furthermore, it criticized the high costs for meetings of the board of governors.

Many concerns about OIST were answered in a Nature editorial in June 2011.[6]

Further issues that have been under public discussion are: Unrealistic budget estimates - initially it was announced that US$ 600 million was sufficient to install a fully functional institute, but US$ 700 million has already been spent.

References

  1. ^ a b http://www.oist.jp/oist-nutshell
  2. ^ "Where rats and robots play". The Economist. Retrieved 15 December 2011.
  3. ^ a b c http://www.oist.jp/history
  4. ^ http://www.oist.jp/press-room/news/2011/10/27/idea-becoming-reality
  5. ^ http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v474/n7353/full/474541b.html
  6. ^ http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v474/n7353/full/474541b.html

External links