Doha, Qatar. - Monday, 06. October 2025
Season 17 contenders determined to prove that perseverance transforms inventions into global impact
Across
the world, challenges have always been catalysts for innovation. In the
Arab region, Stars of Science has quietly forged something
extraordinary: a generation of innovators who turned setbacks into
stepping stones. This perseverance isn’t just part of the show’s legacy,
it’s the heartbeat of Season 17.
The Qatar Foundation
edutainment show is raising the bar once again. This year’s contestants
aren’t just building from scratch - they’re attempting something
uniquely challenging: refining what already exists. That kind of
progress requires more than creativity. It demands precision, patience,
and above all, targeted optimization.
Among the standout projects
currently in the running is Razan Salem Bahabri’s adaptive
rehabilitation gaming system, and Mohamed Kahna’s AR-assisted surgical
navigation tool. Both push the boundaries of existing methods, and both
are driven by a clear understanding of the real-world problems they aim
to solve.
"To improve what already works, you need more than invention, you need endurance," says Bahabri, a contestant from Saudi Arabia.
Her
approach is timely. Globally, there are 12.2 million new strokes each
year, and rehabilitation centers now incorporate gamified therapy tools
to support recovery, a field she is helping localize and adapt. Her
project builds on those successes, offering a more engaging and
accessible way to support neuroplasticity and user motivation in stroke
rehabilitation.
“When lives are at stake, you don’t start from
scratch, you make what’s working even safer,” says Kahna, her fellow
Season 17 contestant.
For Kahna, the stakes are high. Each year,
more than 310 million major surgeries are performed around the world.
The Tunisian’s project seeks to improve outcomes by using augmented
reality to support surgical decision-making, potentially helping
surgeons avoid complications and act with greater clarity under
pressure.
As these innovators work to realize their vision, Stars
of Science continues to be backed by an ecosystem that believes in
purpose-driven technology. As the region’s leading hub for deep tech and
impact, Qatar Science & Technology Park (QSTP), a member of Qatar
Foundation, ensure that Stars of Science innovations don’t stop at the
prototype stage. Through mentorship, access to state-of-the-art labs,
and investor connections, QSTP helps contestants, like Season 16 winner,
Yaman Tayyar, transform their ideas into viable startups that create
global impact.
Another shining example of resilience with
long-haul success, when show alumnus, long-standing mentor and now
co-host, Anwar Almojarkesh, joined Stars of Science in Season 5, he
finished in fifth place. But his story didn’t conclude there, it just
began. Driven by advanced engineering, Almojarkesh developed a smart
assistive pillow for the hearing impaired that detects emergencies such
as fire alarms, alerting users through vibration, light, scent, and app
notifications.
After the show, he took the core of his invention
and founded two companies — Innovation Factory in the UK and Sound
Genetics in the US — bringing AI-powered technologies to governments,
transport authorities, and healthcare providers worldwide.
"You
don’t have to win the show to win in life. The real success comes with
the determination to keep achieving, after the spotlight fades," says
Almojarkesh.
Among his flagship projects is the Wildlife Animal
Deterrence System (WADS), preventing deer strikes and saving millions in
damages on British and Irish rail systems. His companies have also
developed real-time graffiti detection tools, cutting-edge voice
authentication and deepfake detection technologies.
"I just kept
refining my models and each product’s algorithms kept developing," says
Almojarkesh. The inventor is living proof that Stars of Science doesn’t
just launch prototypes - it launches careers with global impact.
With
alumni like Anwar setting the bar high, this year’s contestants have a
lot to live up to. If history is any guide, with vision and perseverance
this season’s innovators will be ready to make headlines of their own.
Follow
the contestants’ journeys, as they strive forward in realizing their
inventions, by visiting the Stars of Science website and keeping up to
date with broadcasts every week until October 2025.
About Stars of Science:
Throughout
17 years of success, Stars of Science – the edutainment TV initiative
of Qatar Foundation (QF) – has leveraged its position as the premier
innovation show in the Arab world to empower Arab innovators to
successfully transform innovative ideas into tangible solutions,
strengthening the culture of innovation among Arab youth. In its
sustained journey that started in 2009, the show has demonstrated how
young Arab innovators develop technological solutions for their
communities, aiming to improve people’s well-being, provide financial
opportunities to their local citizens, and advance sustainable
development.
Over a 12-week process, the contestants develop
their solutions experimentally in a shared innovation space, competing
against time with the mentorship and support of a team of experienced
engineers and product developers.
An expert panel of jurors
assesses and selects more promising innovators and their projects every
week across several prototyping and testing rounds until three finalists
remain to compete for a share of the Grand Prize. Jury deliberation and
online voting from the public determine the rankings of the two top
winners.
To know more about Stars of Science, please visit: Website, Facebook, X, Youtube, Instagram, Tiktok, and LinkedIn.
Permalink
https://www.aetoswire.com/en/news/sos10062025e
Contacts
Ghewa Barakat – gbarakat@webershandwick.com
Tuesday, October 7, 2025
Arab Innovators Rise to the Challenge, Elevating Scientific Practice on QF’s Stars of Science
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment