Publications / Articles

+ Programmable Mechanical Metamaterials
Bastiaan Florijn, Corentin Coulais and Martin van Hecke
Huygens-Kamerling Onnes Lab, Universiteit Leiden
(Received 15 July 2014; published 24 October 2014)

+ Soft material for soft actuators
Aslan Miriyev, Kenneth Stack and Hod Lipson
Department of Mechanical Engineering,
Columbia University in the City of New York,
500W 120th St., Mudd 220, New York, NY 10027, USA.

+ PneUI: Pneumatically Actuated Soft Composite Materials
for Shape Changing Interfaces
Lining Yao, Ryuma Niiyama, Jifei Ou, Sean Follmer, Clark Della Silva, Hiroshi Ishii
MIT Media Lab and MIT EECS
Cambridge, MA 02139 USA

+ Metamaterial Mechanisms
Alexandra Ion, Johannes Frohnhofen, Ludwig Wall, Robert Kovacs, Mirela Alistar,
Jack Lindsay, Pedro Lopes, Hsiang-Ting Chen, and Patrick Baudisch
Hasso Plattner Institute, Potsdam, Germany

+ Sequential self-folding of polymer sheets
Ying Liu, Brandi Shaw, Michael D. Dickey, Jan Genzer
North Carolina State University

+ Fluid-driven origami-inspired artificial muscles
Shuguang Lia, Daniel M. Vogta, Daniela Rusc and Robert J. Wooda
John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge
The Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering, Harvard University, Cambridge
Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge

Untethered soft robotics
Steven I. Rich, Robert J. Wood and Carmel Majidi
Article published in nature electronic

+ Sticky Actuator: Free-Form Planar Actuators for Animated Objects
Ryuma Niiyama, Xu Sun, Lining Yao, Hiroshi Ishii, Daniela Rus, Sangbae Kim
University of Tokyo, Japan / MIT Mechanical Engineering, MIT Media Lab, MIT CSAIL Cambridge, MA, USA

Data-Driven Material Modeling with Functional Advection for 3D Printing of Materially Heterogeneous Objects
Christoph Bader, Dominik Kolb, James C. Weaver and Neri Oxman
Mediated Matter Group, Media Lab, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts and Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts.