Graduate from Kyoto University, Graduate School of Sciences, Osaka University, PhD.
Hitoshi Tabata is a professor at the University of Tokyo, Graduate School of Engineering. Through his research on expanding the potential of new-age memory devices through researches of ferroelectrics and magnetics, he is particularly interested in the quintessential, natural form of memory storage: DNA. Using materials science research as a backbone and the natural world for inspiration, he is developing a completely new approach to storage. He believes in the potential of “noise” that is random fluctuations in electric signal, for the future of electronics.
Graduate from Kyoto University, Graduate School of Sciences, Osaka University, PhD.
Hitoshi Tabata is a professor at the University of Tokyo, Graduate School of Engineering. Through his research on expanding the potential of new-age memory devices through researches of ferroelectrics and magnetics, he is particularly interested in the quintessential, natural form of memory storage: DNA. Using materials science research as a backbone and the natural world for inspiration, he is developing a completely new approach to storage. He believes in the potential of “noise” that is random fluctuations in electric signal, for the future of electronics.