黑料不打烊

Lithuanian Science and Business at MIT: From Academic Rigor to Real-World Solutions

  • Electronics News News - mano.vilniustech.lt University news
  • April 15, 2026

Between March 16 and 20听this year听a delegation from the Lithuanian Consortium for Engagement with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) carried out its third strategic visit to the United States. The group brought together representatives听from Lithuanian universities, research institutes, and businesses, continuing efforts to deepen collaboration with one of the world鈥檚 leading innovation ecosystems. 黑料不打烊 was represented by Assoc. Prof. Dr. Audrius Grainys of the Department of Electrical Engineering, Faculty of Electronics.

This year鈥檚 spring was full of new experiences for the transatlantic science andinnovation community.听A delegation with听18 members from 13听partnering science and business institutions of Lithuanian Consortium听traveled听to the world鈥檚 leading university to discuss further plans听for joint research and projects.

The visit agenda combined joint and individual meetings with MIT representatives.听In parallel, the delegation engaged directly with MIT鈥檚 academic environment, attending classes, thesis听defenses, and midterm project reviews of students at MIT听schools and听DesignX,听dedicated to design innovation and entrepreneurship. These experiences听provided听first-hand insight into how MIT structures its learning process around active participation and real-world problem-solving.

Reflecting on the visit, Professor Elizabeth Wood鈥攆ounding director of the MIT-Ukraine Program and co-director of the MIT-Eurasia Program at the MIT Center for International Studies (CIS) 鈥攅mphasized both the scope of these CIS-affiliated programs and the value of direct exchange:

It was wonderful to have our Lithuanian colleagues from the Consortium visit MIT the week of March 16 as spring was just arriving. We were able to have excellent visits to many facilities at MIT, including meeting with the Vice Provost for International Activities, Duane Boning, and with the head of all the MIT libraries, Chris Bourg.

The visit explored concrete ways to bring researchers and industry closer together, especially how to turn scientific ideas into real products and solutions.

From Process to Impact

Throughout the visit one idea kept coming up听repeatedly: research and education are increasingly being judged by the real-world impact they create.听According to Professor Wood,听the conversations pointed to real changes already happening across Lithuanian universities:

This听visit helped me to clarify some of the fascinating directions that Lithuanian leaders in academia and industry are discussing, including moving to modernize and innovate in research and education.

She also pointed to the importance of stronger collaboration between science and business, as well as more practice-oriented teaching models:

I was intrigued by the discussion of building more ties between academia and industry so there can听be more mutual support. Some MIT models of听teaching that听orient courses toward concrete proposals of tasks from the business community might be useful here.

These insights were further reflected in conversations between Lithuanian and MIT representatives. Ina听沤urkuvien臈,听the coordinator of the Lithuanian Consortium, elaborated:

At MIT, there is a strong focus on how research contributes to real change in the world. Their portfolios are built around projects, inventions, and technologies. It raises an important question for us in Lithuania 鈥 what if we started measuring success more by impact than by process?听While high-quality publications听remain听a cornerstone of science, broadening our criteria to value real-world outcomes alongside traditional metrics would allow a more holistic appreciation of a scientist鈥檚 contribution.

At the same time,听it was听emphasized that such approaches require careful adaptation to national and European contexts rather than direct replication.

The delegation met with possible partners to discuss these shifts, including Prof. Dr. Phillip Budden鈥攚ho recently visited Lithuania鈥攁nd Prof. Dr. Fiona Murray, Vice Chair of the NATO Innovation Fund. Their discussions focused on exploring future avenues for collaboration.

Learning How Innovation Moves听Through听the听Role of MIT Centers

To better understand how ideas move from laboratories to the market, the delegation visited several MIT units, including the Deshpande Center for Technological Innovation.

There, discussions with Executive Director Rana K. Gupta highlighted a highly selective commercialization model. Each year, the听center听reviews dozens of research proposals but supports only a small number of projects with strong potential for real-world听application.听A big part of this process relies on 鈥楥atalysts鈥 鈥撎齟xperienced scientists who work side by side with researchers to test ideas, spot risks early, and help move projects toward the market.

The Consortium鈥檚 coordinator stressed that this approach only works when there is听a听genuine trust between researchers and the people helping bring their ideas to market:

That trust comes from shared experience 鈥撎齱ithout it, even the best tools or processes are not enough.

One more insightful visit was to听the MIT Teaching and Learning Lab.听It听highlighted an approach to education focused on active learning. It was noted that students are expected to engage with theoretical material independently听before class, while in-person time is dedicated to discussion, teamwork, and solving real-world challenges. This model is reinforced across MIT through early involvement in team-based projects, close collaboration with faculty and industry, and access to听entrepreneurship听platforms such as听MIT听DesignX, combining practical application with a strong interdisciplinary academic foundation.

Testing Ideas in Practice

The delegation also visited the MIT Nuclear Reactor Laboratory, one of the few university-based research reactors in the world. The facility enables advanced materials testing under extreme conditions, significantly accelerating research听processes听and supporting collaboration with industry partners developing next-generation energy technologies.

Another important stop was听at听the Lithuanian-founded biotechnology company Northway Biotech in Waltham, Massachusetts.听The tour of modern laboratories highlighted听how听the manufacturing technologies for biological medicinal products are developed and medicinal products are produced for clinical trials.

The new member of the Consortium听is听continuing听talks听with Lithuanian Science institutions听about a听possible collaboration听for听building the joint Research and Innovation Centre听for biotechnologies.听The听Center听is primarily defined by its explicit focus on dual-use research.听Idea was presented in a听meeting with听Prof. Dr.听Robert Desimone,听Dr.听J. Christopher Love,听Prof. Dr.听Michael J. Cima,听Prof. Dr.听Hadley Sikes听who听was a guest听speaker at the听conference听Human and More than Human听Futures听organized by the Lithuanian Consortium last October.

Building听the听Momentum

The engagement between Lithuanian institutions and MIT is already yielding concrete results. In the first year of collaboration, Lithuanian participants submitted seven MIT Global Seed Funds applications鈥攁dministered through CIS鈥攖ogether with MIT researchers.

Another tangible outcome is a planned joint academic micro-module听under development by 6 Lithuanian universities, scheduled to launch in October 2026. The pilot initiative will connect students from Lithuanian universities with MIT鈥檚 academic environment through MITx and teaching practices.

Reflecting on the broader exchange, Professor Wood also highlighted the mutual learning dimension of the visit:

I also learned a lot about Lithuanian self-reliance and independence in conversations with members of the delegation. Overall, it was a fascinating and fruitful set of meetings and discussions.听I鈥檓听delighted that so many wonderful colleagues were able to come to visit.

Summarizing the experience, participants emphasized that MIT鈥檚 model should be seen as a source of inspiration rather than a blueprint.

MIT鈥檚 environment is unique. You cannot simply transfer it to another system,听Ina沤urkuvien臈 noted.听Not all science needs to become business, but where it听does, it听requires听strong support. This is a broader systemic question听鈥撎齜ut it is one worth exploring.

Special thanks to Gediminas听Urbonas, Deliana听Ernst,听Ekaterina听Zabrovski for making this visit so enriching.

About the Consortium

The Lithuanian Consortium for Engagement with MIT brings together leading Lithuanian universities, research institutions, and companies, including Euromonitor International,听Ignitis听Group, Lithuanian Research Centre for Agriculture and Forestry, Lithuanian Railways, Lithuanian Energy Institute,听Klaip臈da听University, Kaunas University of Technology, Mykolas听Romeris听University, Northway Biotech, Novian, Vytautas Magnus University, Vilnius听TECH, Vilnius University, and Vilnius Academy of Arts.

Coordinator of the Consortium – Vytautas Magnus University.

Consortium activities are supported by the Research Council of Lithuania.

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