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The stakes for Harvard will be in focus on July 21. Read more at straitstimes.com. Read more at straitstimes.com.
As a soldier, Kit Parker saw horrific injuries. As a scientist, he led an effort to create high-tech dressings that speed healing and reduce scarring.
Where science meets war: Kit Parker's lab 05:34. This week on 60 Minutes, Lesley Stahl and producer Andrew Metz reported on how the U.S. military's counterinsurgency tactics are being adapted by ...
The last time we checked in with engineering professor Kit Parker, his students had finished building a brisket-smoking robot. It's easy to see why they did that: Brisket is tasty, brisket is hard ...
Kit Parker is the Tarr Family Professor of Bioengineering and Applied Physics, head of the Disease Biophysics Group, and a member of the Wyss Institute for Biologically-Inspired Engineering at Harvard ...
Michael Rosnach, Keel Yong Lee, Sung-Jin Park, Kevin Kit Parker Scientists have built a school of robotic fish powered by human heart cells. The fish, which swim on their ...
There’s more to this project than just creating a life-like fish. Parker’s primary interest is in understanding the heart and how various parts of the anatomy can help with blood flow.
Parker's robotic stingray is tiny—a bit more than half an inch long—and weighs only 10 grams. But it glides through liquid with the very same undulating motion used by fish like real stingrays ...
The stakes for Harvard will be in focus on Monday, when a federal judge in Boston will hear arguments on whether the Trump ...
Kit Parker is used to being an anomaly on Harvard University’s campus. The physicist — an Army Reserve colonel who served in Afghanistan — is a long-time critic of the school’s hiring practices and ...
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