In the News
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New Approach Advances Wireless Power Transfer for VehiclesNovember 14, 2013 NC State researchers moving closer to their goal of creating highway ‘stations’ that can recharge electric vehicles wirelessly as the vehicles drive by. Srdjan Lukic, Kibok Lee and Zeljko Pantic, electrical engineering, featured. |
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New Technology Advances Wireless Power Transfer For VehiclesNovember 14, 2013 NC State researchers moving closer to their goal of creating highway ‘stations’ that can recharge electric vehicles wirelessly as the vehicles drive by. Srdjan Lukic, Kibok Lee and Zeljko Pantic, electrical engineering, featured. |
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What’s Creepy, Crawly And A Champion Of Neuroscience?October 23, 2013 NC State professor is in the simulation phase of using swarms of up to 1,000 cockroaches to assist in search-and-rescue operations. Edgar Lobaton, electrical and computer engineering, featured. |
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What’s Creepy, Crawly And A Champion Of Neuroscience?October 22, 2013 NC State professor is in the simulation phase of using swarms of up to 1,000 cockroaches to assist in search-and-rescue operations. Edgar Lobaton, electrical and computer engineering, featured. |
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What’s Creepy, Crawly And A Champion Of Neuroscience?October 22, 2013 NC State professor is in the simulation phase of using swarms of up to 1,000 cockroaches to assist in search-and-rescue operations. Edgar Lobaton, electrical and computer engineering, featured. |
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What’s Creepy, Crawly And A Champion Of Neuroscience?October 22, 2013 NC State professor is in the simulation phase of using swarms of up to 1,000 cockroaches to assist in search-and-rescue operations. Edgar Lobaton, electrical and computer engineering, featured. |
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What’s Creepy, Crawly And A Champion Of Neuroscience?October 22, 2013 NC State professor is in the simulation phase of using swarms of up to 1,000 cockroaches to assist in search-and-rescue operations. Edgar Lobaton, electrical and computer engineering, featured. |
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What’s Creepy, Crawly And A Champion Of Neuroscience?October 22, 2013 NC State professor is in the simulation phase of using swarms of up to 1,000 cockroaches to assist in search-and-rescue operations. Edgar Lobaton, electrical and computer engineering, featured. |
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Send In the Cockroach SquadOctober 21, 2013 Researchers have been working with tiny robots based on cockroaches as well as with actual roaches–controlled by an embedded chip–as a possible means of exploring collapsed buildings. Edgar Lobaton, electrical and computer engineering, featured. |
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Robotic ‘Roaches’ to the RescueOctober 21, 2013 NC State researchers bringing insects into the emergency response role. Edgar Lobaton, electrical and computer engineering, featured. |
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Swarms of cyborg roaches might be terrific for disaster relief effortsOctober 21, 2013 Cyborg insects are being considered as a way to help emergency responders survey damaged structures after a disaster. Edgar Lobatan, electrical and computer engineering, featured. |
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Mapping Out The Unknown With Cyborg Bug SwarmsOctober 21, 2013 The cyborg bugs could give responders ‘a quick picture of the environment,’ under conditions that may be dangerous or inaccessible to human rescuers. Edgar Lobaton, electrical engineering, featured. |
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Insect Cyborgs Map Unknown EnvironmentsOctober 21, 2013 NC State researchers have developed software that allows them to map unknown environments — such as collapsed buildings. Edgar Lobaton, Alper Bozkurt and Alireza Dirafzoon, electrical and computer engineering, featured. |
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Software uses cyborg swarm to map unknown environsOctober 21, 2013 The cyborg bugs could give responders ‘a quick picture of the environment,’ under conditions that may be dangerous or inaccessible to human rescuers. Edgar Lobaton, electrical engineering, featured. |
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Cyborg Swarms to Make MapsOctober 21, 2013 NC State researchers have developed software that allows them to map unknown environments based on the movement of a swarm of insect cyborgs. Edgar Lobaton, Alper Bozkurt and Alireza Dirafzoon, electrical and computer engineering, featured. |