Heike Vallery
Heike Vallery is a German mechanical engineer whose research involves the development of robot legs and exoskeletons to assist in human walking, including applications in prosthetics and medical rehabilitation.[1] She is a professor of biomechanical engineering at Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands, and Alexander von Humboldt Professor at RWTH Aachen University.
Education and career
[edit]Vallery was a student of mechanical engineering at RWTH Aachen University, earning a diploma there in 2004,[2] after which she earned a doctorate (Dr. Ing.) from Technical University of Munich in 2009.[2]
She was a postdoctoral researcher at ETH Zürich and an assistant professor at Khalifa University before becoming a faculty member at Delft University of Technology in 2012.[2]
She added an affiliation as honorary professor at Erasmus MC, a medical research center in Rotterdam, in 2019.[2] She was named as an Alexander von Humboldt Professor at RWTH Aachen University, with a joint affiliation between Delft and Aachen, in 2022.[3] She is currently Head of the Institute of Automatic Control at RWTH Aachen University, successing Dirk Abel.[4]
References
[edit]- ^ Heike Vallery: Alexander von Humboldt Professorship for Artificial Intelligence 2023, Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, retrieved 2023-05-28
- ^ a b c d Prof. Dr. Ing. H. (Heike) Vallery, TU Delft, retrieved 2023-05-28
- ^ Heike Vallery has been awarded the Alexander von Humboldt Award, TU Delft, 16 June 2022, retrieved 2023-05-28
- ^ "Institute of Automatic Control - RWTH Aachen University". Retrieved 2023-09-28.
External links
[edit]- Heike Vallery publications indexed by Google Scholar
- Living people
- German mechanical engineers
- German women engineers
- RWTH Aachen University alumni
- Technical University of Munich alumni
- Academic staff of the Delft University of Technology
- Academic staff of RWTH Aachen University
- Academic staff of Khalifa University
- 20th-century German women engineers
- 21st-century German women engineers
- 20th-century German engineers
- 21st-century German engineers