Welcome to this edition of Perspectives, the e-newsletter of the
Stanford course, Perspectives in Assistive
Technology.
What
is the course? - Perspectives in Assistive Technology is a
Winter Quarter course at Stanford that explores issues surrounding the design,
development, and use of assistive technology benefitting people with
disabilities and seniors. More information can be found on the course
website.
Invitation to attend - You are invited to attend
all class lectures. They will be held in the
Thornton Center - Classroom 110 on Tuesday
and Thursday afternoons at 4:15 to 5:30pm and are free and open to the
public.
Next class session - Tuesday, February 19th at
4:15pm:
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Rehabilitation and Assistive
Robotics Allison M. Okamura, PhD & David
L. Jaffe, MS Stanford University -
Mechanical Engineering Department - Design Group |
Abstract: Dave will
provide a history of assistive rehabilitation robots and in particular describe
the prior robotics-related work at the VA Palo Alto Rehabilitation R&D
Center. Allison will discuss therapy robots and the use of robots to perform
brain science. She will describe the evolution of therapy robotics for stroke
rehabilitation, as well as her recent work (in collaboration with former
students and Neuroscientist Amy Bastian at Johns Hopkins University and the
Kennedy Krieger Institute) on using robots to analyze and affect the movements
of patients with damage to the cerebellum. These presentations include material
provided by Machiel Van der Loos at the University of British
Columbia.
Biosketches:
Allison M. Okamura received her BS degree from the University of
California at Berkeley in 1994, and her MS and PhD degrees from Stanford
University in 1996 and 2000, respectively, all in mechanical engineering. She
is currently Associate Professor in the mechanical engineering department at
Stanford University. She was previously Professor and Vice Chair of mechanical
engineering at Johns Hopkins University. She has been an associate editor of
the IEEE Transactions on Haptics, an editor of the IEEE International
Conference on Robotics and Automation Conference Editorial Board, and co-chair
of the IEEE Haptics Symposium. Her awards include the 2009 IEEE Technical
Committee on Haptics Early Career Award, the 2005 IEEE Robotics and Automation
Society Early Academic Career Award, and the 2004 NSF CAREER Award. She is an
IEEE Fellow. Her interests include haptics, teleoperation, virtual environments
and simulators, medical robotics, neuromechanics and rehabilitation,
prosthetics, and engineering education.
David L. Jaffe holds a
BS degree in Electrical Engineering from the University of Michigan and a MS
degree in Biomedical Engineering from Northwestern University.
Prior to coming to Stanford,
he was a Research Biomedical Engineer at the VA Palo Alto Health Care System's
Rehabilitation Research and Development Center. At the VA his interests were
designing, developing, testing, and bringing to market microcomputer-based
devices for veterans with disabilities including communication, mobility, and
information systems. He has worked on several VA assistive technology research
projects including an innovative wheelchair interface for individuals with
quadriplegia, an electro-mechanical fingerspelling hand that serves as a
communication device for people who are deaf/blind, a system that explores
virtual reality techniques to train individuals with gait deficits to improve
their walking, and a project that employs a computer-based simulation to assess
and improve the driving ability of individuals after brain injury.
In addition to organizing
this course, ENGR110/210 Perspectives in Assistive Technology, he currently
contributes to the definition of quarterly course projects in ME218 Smart
Product Design, is a project coach in ME113 Mechanical Engineering Design, and
mentors students working on assistive technology projects.
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