[Seminar] "Origami-inspired Computational Fabrication" by Dr. Koya Narumi
Description
Speaker: Koya Narumi
Project Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering and Information Systems, Graduate School of Engineering, The University of Tokyo
Title: Origami-inspired Computational Fabrication
Abstract:
Since the 2010s, computational fabrication has been a growing topic in HCI, CG, architecture, and so on, with the rise of the Computational Fabrication Seminar and ACM Conference on Computational Fabrication (SCF). In this talk, I will introduce our research results focusing on origami. The talk includes (1) Pop-up Print (ACM UIST2020), a 3D printing method of folded objects for smaller printing time, material consumption, and storage; (2) Crane (ACM TOCHI 2023), an integrated origami design platform that was also applied to the fashion design of A-POC ABLE ISSEY MIYAKE; and (2) Inkjet 4D Print (ACM TOG 2023), a 4D printing and self-folding method of complex freeform origami with more than thousands of facets.
Speaker Biography:
Koya Narumi is a project assistant professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Information Systems, Graduate School of Engineering, The University of Tokyo. He received his Ph.D. degree in Information Science and Technology from The University of Tokyo in 2020. His research interests lie in human-computer interaction and computational fabrication leveraging the properties of novel materials and structures such as phase-changing soft actuators, self-healing interface devices, and inflatable mobility devices. He works as a program committee and an organizing committee of HCI conferences such as CHI and UIST.
Hosted by Cybernetic Humanity Studio (OIST - Sony CSL collaboration)
https://oist.zoom.us/j/91061757795?pwd=bUdabmRFRGVQdXFmYXczMnRjYnMwQT09&from=addon
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