peoplepill id: benjamin-tee
Singaporean scientist and an innovator of electronic skin (e-skin) technology
Benjamin Tee
The basics
Quick Facts
The details (from wikipedia)
Biography
Tee Chee Keong Benjamin is a Singaporean scientist. He helped to co-develop the electronic skin technology when he was a PhD student in Stanford University. In 2015, he was chosen as one of TR35 list (MIT Technology Review's global 35 Innovators Under 35) for his work on e-skin. The only Singaporean on the 2015 TR35 list, e-skins could potentially make prosthetic limbs as sensitive as human ones.
Career
Tee is currently a scientist at the Agency for Science, Technology and Research's Institute of Materials Research and Engineering (A*STAR's IMRE) and an adjunct assistant professor at the National University of Singapore's Department of Material Science and Engineering.
Education
- BS (Summa cum laude) Electrical Engineering, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, 2006
- MS Electrical Engineering, Stanford University, 2007
- PhD Electrical Engineering, Stanford University, 2014
Awards
- 2014 Singapore-Stanford Biodesign Global Innovation Fellow
- 2015 One of 10 finalists TR35 APAC list
- 2015 One of 35 Innovators Under 35 TR35 list by MIT Technology Review
- 2016 Singapore Young Scientist Award
Selected publications
- A Skin-Inspired Organic Digital Mechanoreceptor, B. C-K. Tee*, A. Chortos*, A. Berndt*, et al., Science, 350, 313–316 (2015). Featured on Science Magazine
- Continuous Wireless Pressure Monitoring and Mapping with Ultra-Small Passive Sensors for Health Monitoring and Critical Care, L. Chen*, B. C-K. Tee*, et al., Nature Communications, 5, 5028, (2014)
- An electrically and mechanically self-healing composite with pressure- and flexion-sensitive properties for electronic skin applications, B. C-K. Tee*, C. Wang*, R. Allen, Z. Bao, Nature Nanotechnology, 7, 825–832 (2012) | Featured on Science Magazine, BBC, ABC, National Geography
- Tunable Flexible Pressure Sensors using Microstructured Elastomer Geometries for Intuitive Electronics, B. C-K. Tee et al., Advanced Functional Materials 24, 5427–5434, (2014)
- Highly sensitive flexible pressure sensors with micro-structured rubber dielectric layers, SCB Mannsfeld, B. C-K Tee, et al., Nature Materials 9, 859–864, (2010). Featured on Nature News and Views
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article.
The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Lists
Benjamin Tee is in following lists
comments so far.
Comments
Benjamin Tee