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Robert Howe named IEEE Fellow
10 January 2012 - HARVARD

SEAS faculty member Robert Howe is among the 329 new IEEE Fellows for 2012.
Robert D. Howe, Abbott and James Lawrence Professor of Engineering at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), has been named a 2012 Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. (IEEE).
The IEEE Board of Directors cited Howe’s "contributions to haptic interfaces and robotic manipulation."
The IEEE Fellowship is one of the most prestigious honors within the IEEE; it is bestowed upon a very limited number of Senior Members who have made outstanding contributions to the electrical and information technologies and sciences for the benefit of humanity and the profession.
The number of IEEE Fellows elevated in a year is no more than one-tenth of one percent of the total IEEE voting membership. This year, 329 new Fellows were elevated.
Howe’s research focuses on the role of sensing and mechanical design in motor control, in both robots and humans. His work draws upon diverse disciplines, including biomechanics, systems analysis, and neurophysiology.
The main approach of his Biorobotics Lab is experimental, although analysis and simulation play important parts. In conjunction with industrial partners, he is developing applications of this research in biomedical instrumentation, teleoperated robots, and intelligent sensors.
Howe earned a bachelor’s degree in physics from Reed College, then worked as a design engineer in the electronics industry in Silicon Valley. He received a doctoral degree in mechanical engineering from Stanford University in 1990 and then joined the faculty at Harvard.
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