MIT Technology Review has selected Sneha Goenka as its 2025 innovator of the year, an annual recognition honoring a single individual whose work the publication admires. Goenka designed the computations behind what it calls the world’s fastest whole-genome sequencing method. According to the announcement, her contribution enables physicians to sequence a patient’s genome and diagnose a genetic condition in less than eight hours, a speed that the publication says could transform medical care.
The Roundtables session titled “Meet the 2025 Innovator of the Year” features Goenka alongside Leilani Battle of the University of Washington and Mat Honan, editor in chief of MIT Technology Review. Recorded on September 23, 2025, the conversation convenes the honoree with an academic voice and the publication’s editorial lead to focus attention on the breakthrough and its implications. The emphasis is on how computational design underpins this rapid sequencing approach and what such acceleration could mean for physicians who need timely answers about genetic conditions.
The event sits within a broader package of related coverage, including a profile headlined “2025 Innovator of the Year: Sneha Goenka for developing an ultra-fast sequencing technology” and this year’s Innovators Under 35 list. Together, these resources frame why Goenka’s work stands out: it establishes a new pace for whole-genome sequencing and ties that performance directly to real-world diagnosis timelines. The recognition underscores the significance of computation in advancing genomics and highlights a path by which faster sequence-to-diagnosis workflows could influence medical care. By elevating the people and ideas behind this achievement, the Roundtables session introduces audiences to the technical insight that enabled a less-than-eight-hour turnaround and affirms why the project earned the publication’s top annual honor.