Metadata
Title
Unfolding the Next Generation of Robots: GRASP Researchers Win Award for Kinegami
Category
undergraduate
UUID
839788203b4e45bab65ce046729b8e94
Source URL
https://www.seas.upenn.edu/stories/unfolding-the-next-generation-of-robots-grasp...
Parent URL
https://clarkscholars.seas.upenn.edu/
Crawl Time
2026-03-23T06:11:40+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Unfolding the Next Generation of Robots: GRASP Researchers Win Award for Kinegami

Source: https://www.seas.upenn.edu/stories/unfolding-the-next-generation-of-robots-grasp-researchers-win-award-for-kinegami/ Parent: https://clarkscholars.seas.upenn.edu/

Honors + Awards, Research + Innovation / July 29, 2024

Share:

Author:

Ian Scheffler

Researchers in the General Robotics, Automation, Sensing and Perception (GRASP) Laboratory at the University of Pennsylvania are developing an algorithm for designing functioning robots through folding.

The paper that details the design and code behind the project, Kinegami: Algorithmic Design of Compliant Kinematic Chains From Tubular Origami, was awarded an honorable mention for the 2023 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) Transactions on Robotics King-Sun Fu Memorial Best Paper Award.

The project is a collaborative effort between two GRASP subgroups — the Sung Robotics Lab, which focuses on computational design for soft and origami robots, and Kod*lab, which focuses on modeling and control of bio-inspired robots — aiming to make robot design more accessible to the general public.

Before collaborating on the Kinegami project, Daniel Feshbach’s main project in the Sung Lab was a centimeter-scale origami quadruped called CurveQuad. (Credit: Justin Nachea)

To learn more about Kinegami, read the full story on the GRASP Lab website.

Read More

Going for Gold: Matt Fallon to Compete for Team USA

Pushing the Limits of Scientific Discovery with Machine Learning