search

UMD     This Site





Clark School Associate Professor Sarah Bergbreiter (ME/ISR) recently gave a TED Talk on her microrobotics research at TEDYouth 2014: Worlds Imagined. The event for middle- and high-school students was held at the Brooklyn Museum in New York on Nov. 15, 2014.

Bergbreiter is a member of the Maryland Robotics Center. Her research interests are in microrobotics, micro-electro-mechanical systems, microactuators, soft robotics, robot locomotion, networked centimeter-scale robots and millimeter-scale power systems. She came to the University of Maryland in 2008 and earned tenure in 2014. Bergbreiter is the recipient of a Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE) in 2013; an NSF CAREER Award for "Microrobot Legs for Fast Locomotion over Rough Terrain,? in 2011; and a DARPA Young Faculty Award in 2008. She also has been the principal investigator for an NSF Research Experiences for Undergraduates in microrobotics. NSF?s Science Nation online magazine featured Bergbreiter?s work in the video, ?As fast as their tiny ?bot? legs will carry them!?.

TEDYouth is a day-long event with live speakers, hands-on activities and great conversations. Scientists, designers, technologists, explorers, artists and performers share short talks on what they do best, serving both as a source of knowledge and inspiration for youth around the globe.

| View Sarah Bergbreiter?s talk on the TED website |



Related Articles:
Students present final projects for 2014 NSF Microrobotics REU
Sarah Bergbreiter wins PECASE Award
IEEE Spectrum website features quadruped microrobot
Miniature Robotics REU students give final presentations
ISR welcomes 10 REU microbotics students for the summer
Alum Nitin Sanket wins Larry S. Davis Doctoral Dissertation Award
Elizabeth Childs Lands Knight-Hennessy Scholarship
Microrobots soon could be seeing better, say UMD faculty in Science Robotics
These are tiny robots. And they are awesome.
Best paper award for Bergbreiter, St. Pierre, Gosrich at Hilton Head workshop

January 22, 2015


«Previous Story  

 

 

Current Headlines

Ingestible Capsule Advances May Lead to Earlier Detection of Diseases

University of Maryland Moves Ahead in Its Leadership of the United States' Semiconductor Industry

Srivastava Named Inaugural Director of Semiconductor Initiatives and Innovation

State-of-the-Art 3D Nanoprinter Now at UMD

UMD, Partners Receive $31M for Semiconductor Research

Two NSF Awards for ECE Alum Michael Zuzak (Ph.D. ’22)

Applications Open for Professor and Chair of UMD's Department of Materials Science and Engineering

Ghodssi Honored With Gaede-Langmuir Award

Milchberg and Wu named Distinguished University Professors

New features on ingestible capsule will deliver targeted drugs to better treat IBD, Crohn’s disease

 
 
Back to top  
Home Clark School Home UMD Home