

The AI Data Layer: Building Trust, Accuracy, and Scale in Life Sciences
Join Springer Nature for a free lunch event during BIO!
As biotech and pharma organizations accelerate adoption of AI across discovery, R&D, medical affairs, and knowledge workflows, the foundation for success is becoming clear: specialized, vetted, and well-structured scientific data underpins the most reliable outcomes and insights from AI systems.
Join Dr. Prathik Roy, Product Director of AIGP Solutions at Springer Nature, for an exclusive off-site lunch event during the BIO International Convention. The session will explore:
How semantically enriched scientific content improves downstream AI performance
Delivery of scientific data through scalable architectures, including APIs, MCP, and private cloud deployments
Approaches for enabling secure, copyright-cleared enterprise AI applications
How trusted scientific literature serves as an integration-ready “data layer” for retrieval-augmented generation (RAG), model development, and agentic AI systems
Practical strategies for life sciences organizations to reduce risk in AI implementation, strengthen the quality of outputs and build trusted infrastructure
Attendees will gain a candid, real-world perspective grounded in experience across scientific publishing, R&D, and AI-enabled content access. This event is free and lunch will be provided.
Dr. Prathik Roy is Product Director of AIGP Solutions at Springer Nature, where he leads product and business development across text and data mining, AI-enabled content access, and scientific data solutions. With more than a decade of experience in scientific publishing and R&D, he brings a practical perspective on the role of trusted scientific literature, licensing, and data in advancing AI adoption across research-intensive industries. Dr. Roy holds a Ph.D. in Chemistry from National Taiwan University and has published over 30 research papers, contributed to several books, and received multiple international awards for his work in Chemistry and Materials Science.