TPC25-1000

HACKATHON

The general sessions of TPC25 on July 29-31 will be preceded by a day and a half of hackathons, July 28-29. During the TPC25 Hackathon, TPC working groups will be meeting to advance collaborative efforts, building on previous hackathons in October 2024, March 2025, and May 2025.

Hackathon / Tutorial Opening Plenary Talk

Introduction to AI for Science and the Hackathon/Tutorials Program

Neeraj Kumar, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

This opening presentation sets the stage for TPC25’s comprehensive AI for Science program, providing attendees with a strategic overview of how artificial intelligence is revolutionizing scientific discovery. We will present the current landscape of AI adoption in scientific research, highlighting breakthrough applications from protein folding to climate modeling, and demonstrate why community-driven efforts like TPC are essential for advancing such transformation. The session will introduce participants to the carefully designed Hackathon and Tutorial programs, explaining how each track addresses critical aspects of AI implementation in scientific workflows. Attendees will learn about the progression from foundational concepts to hands-on implementation, including opportunities to work with large language models, build agentic systems, develop evaluation frameworks, and enhance research productivity with AI tools.

Advancing Science and Medicine with AI Physician-scientists

Vivek Natarajan, Google DeepMind 

This talk highlights general purpose AI systems designed at Google to democratize medical expertise and accelerate scientific discovery. We will first take a look at the AI co-scientist, built to accelerate scientific breakthroughs by assisting scientists in generating novel hypotheses and aiding experimental design. This system has yielded validated results in areas like genetic discovery, drug repurposing, target discovery, and understanding antimicrobial resistance. Secondly, we will examine the AI co-physician, AMIE, developed to make medical expertise universally accessible through capabilities such as advanced diagnostic dialogue. In simulations, AMIE outperformed primary care physicians on multiple clinical evaluation axes and showed promise as an assistive tool, with ongoing real-world validations. Together, these AI initiatives demonstrate the potential to transform scientific research and care delivery.

Building Agentic Systems for Science

This is a hands-on tutorial and hackathon for academic scientists with limited experience in agentic AI systems. Over 1.5 days, participants will learn to build and extend AI agents tailored to scientific challenges, particularly in biology and chemistry.

With guidance from mentors and access to NVIDIA and Cerebras compute resources, teams will collaborate on projects such as molecular tool development, protein engineering, and reasoning agents. This open-format event emphasizes collaborative learning and practical implementation, building on foundational AI concepts from a shared tutorial session. It is ideal for researchers eager to explore agentic systems and apply them to their own scientific work.

Learning Takeaways

Participants will gain a working knowledge of agentic system architecture, learn how to apply agentic methods to domain-specific scientific problems, and develop prototype tools or agents. They’ll collaborate with peers and mentors, access advanced compute resources, and leave with hands-on experience that empowers further exploration of AI in science.

Session One

Shared foundations in AI for science

Session Two

Intro to agentic systems and use cases

Session Three

Team formation and project kickoff

Session Four

Hands-on hacking with expert mentorship

Session Five

Midpoint sync, debugging, optional breakouts

Session Six

Final demos, project showcases, wrap-up discussion

Additional Hackathons

Hackathon space is also being made available for working groups to use for internal planning and hands-on coding/testing. If you wish to reserve space for your team, please submit your request via email here. Put “HACKATHON” in the subject line and note the name of the working group, how many are expected to participate, and provide an abstract on the goals of your hackathon.

Plenaries and Breakouts

are open to all conference attendees.

Tutorials

are open to all conference attendees, for an additional fee.

Hackathons

are open to TPC members and invited guests.

Job Fair

is open to all, July 30. For information on getting a table,

Exhibition Area

is open to all, July 29-30. For information on getting a table,

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