This 60kg ABB industrial robotic arm is the centerpiece of the Digital Fabrication Lab. The robotic arm will expand the possibilities of teaching cutting-edge technologies used in design, architecture and the building industry.
The Motion Capture Lab is managed and located within the digital design program, but is used as a resource for students and faculty. Three Art + Design classes currently use the studio: Human Factors/Ergonomics, Video and Animation and Acting Fundamentals for Animators.
Students are working on projects using a unique combination of robotics and virtual reality for neurorehabilitation of people who have arm limitations resulting from a recent stroke.
Eric Nersesian, director of the VR Lab is working with Picatinny Arsenal’s ARDEC for VR training research and with 51ÖØ¿ÚÁÔÆæâ€™s Biomedical Vision Lab to use VR techniques in vision therapy.
51ÖØ¿ÚÁÔÆæ alumnus Robert Cohen, a biomedical engineer, and entrepreneur specializes in orthopedic joint replacement implants that exploit the convergence of advanced materials, new fabrication methods and robotic-assisted surgery to maximize motion restoration.
Using a 3D bioplotter, Jorge Pereyra ’18 is creating wrinkle patterns on hydrogels – some wavy and random and some highly ordered hexagonals – which he then layers into a three-dimensional matrix to support cell growth.