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Lynette Jones

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lynette Anne Jones is a New Zealand mechanical engineer whose research concerns haptic technology,[1] haptic perception, thermal output devices, microsurgery, and the function and mechanics of the human hand and skin. She is a senior research scientist in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and editor-in-chief of the journal IEEE Transactions on Haptics.[2]

Education and career

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Jones earned bachelors and masters degrees at the University of Auckland in 1976 and 1978. She completed a PhD at McGill University in Canada in 1983.[2]

After postdoctoral research at McGill's Montreal Neurological Institute, she continued at McGill as a researcher and, in 1991, became a tenured associate professor there. She moved to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as a principal research scientist in 1994, and was named a senior research scientist in 2010.[2]

She has been editor-in-chief of IEEE Transactions on Haptics since 2014.[2]

Books

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Jones is the author of the book Haptics (MIT Press, Essential Knowledge Series, 2018). With Susan Lederman, Jones is coauthor of the book Human Hand Function (Oxford University Press, 2006).[3]

Recognition

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Jones was named an IEEE Fellow in 2018, "for contributions to tactile and thermal displays".[4]

References

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  1. ^ VanHemert, Kyle (16 July 2013), "MIT Whiz Wants to Turn Your Skin Into a Computer Interface: Lynette Jones is trying to create interfaces that pump spatial information directly onto our hides", Wired
  2. ^ a b c d Curriculum vitae (PDF), 2020, retrieved 2022-06-26
  3. ^ Reviews of Human Hand Function:
  4. ^ RAS Fellow listing (PDF), IEEE Robotics & Automation Society, 2022, retrieved 2022-06-26
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