University of Pittsburgh
August 2, 2012

Pitt Assistive Technology Expert Rory Cooper Featured in NBC Videos on the Science of the Olympics, Paralympics

Videos highlight athletes Oscar Pistorius, double-amputee sprinter known as “the Blade Runner,” and Jenny Simpson, a steeplechaser turned 1,500-meter runner
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PITTSBURGH—Rory Cooper, a University of Pittsburgh expert on assistive technology and wheelchairs, is featured in three online NBC videos as part of the network’s coverage of the 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games. The five-minute educational videos, part of NBC’s “Science of the Olympics” series, highlight athletes including Oscar Pistorius, double-amputee sprinter, and Jenny Simpson, a steeplechaser turned 1,500-meter runner. 

Cooper—Pitt FISA and Paralyzed Veterans of America Chair and Distinguished Professor in the Department of Rehabilitation Science and Technology, director of the University’s Human Engineering Research Laboratories (HERL), and professor of bioengineering, mechanical engineering, physical medicine and rehabilitation, and orthopaedic medicine at Pitt—was interviewed by NBC regarding biomedical science and biomechanical engineering and technology surrounding athletes in the Games.

“I hope that when people see these programs,” Cooper said, “it will encourage more people from underrepresented minorities, especially people with disabilities, to pursue careers in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics.”

Cooper is a renowned authority on paralyzed veterans, wounded warriors, and on many other military matters who is invited to advise presidential cabinet members and has been honored at a U.S. Marines parade. In addition to being an engineer, a scientist, a researcher, and a professor, he is a veteran and a medal-winning international athlete whom General Mills honored with a photo and writeup on a Cheerios cereal box. 

Cooper and Pitt doctoral student and HERL physical therapist Justin Laferrier are featured in the following three NBC videos [Web links are given for each]:

•  The story behind and the engineering/athleticism surrounding Oscar Pistorius, the double-amputee sprinter known as “the Blade Runner” and scheduled to compete in Olympic track relays for his native South Africa. [“Science of the Summer Olympics: The Strength and Flexibility of Oscar Pistorius”  <http://science360.gov/obj/video/d2783a15-2880-4c1d-b6b4-d795c129aae2/science-summer-olympics-strength-flexibility-oscar-pistorius];

• Jenny Simpson, a steeplechaser turned 1,500-meter runner, who has used technology and biomechanical engineering to train for the 2012 London Summer Games running on a treadmill in an air bubble—to relieve the pounding of a healing stress fracture. 

[“Science of the Summer Olympics: The Impact of Jenny Simpson”  <http://science360.gov/obj/video/f2a96021-7c9a-410a-b6ee-8b26f3b925a1/science-summer-olympics-impact-jenny-simpson]; and

• The engineering of mobility devices for such Paralympics events as wheelchair basketball. [“Science of the Summer Olympics: Engineering for Mobility”  <http://science360.gov/obj/video/d6ed8536-61aa-43d9-9822-f2ca072ca718/science-summer-olympics-engineering-mobility>].

“I am really pleased to see the Paralympics get this level of attention,” said Cooper, a former bronze medalist at the 1988 Seoul Paralympics and recently a five-time gold medalist at the National Veterans Wheelchair Games. “The athletes are truly Olympians and have achieved amazing heights of athleticism.”

Cooper is the codirector of the National Science Foundation (NSF) Engineering Research Center. Moreover, he currently serves as the principal investigator of an NSF Innovative Graduate Education and Research Training (IGERT) grant, an NSF Research Experience for Undergraduates grant, and an NSF Experiential Learning for Veterans in Assistive Technology and Engineering grant. He also served as the principal investigator on one of the first NSF-funded Minority Engineering Program grants addressing the needs of people with disabilities.

Cooper attended California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, where he earned both his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in electrical engineering. He earned his PhD in electrical and computer engineering from the University of California, Santa Barbara. He did his postgraduate fellowship at the VA Rehabilitation Research and Development Center in the Edward Hines Jr. Veterans Affairs Hospital in Hines, Ill. He came to Pitt in 1994 and helped establish HERL.

The idea for the video series was proposed early this year at a national meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, where Cooper—there to receive one of two Mentor Award honors—saw a similarly produced educational video on the science behind hockey. Cooper, with ties to the NSF for roughly 20 years, heard at that meeting about the NSF and NBC partnering on a mirror project involving the Olympics, He suggested the idea of a Paralympics video, and his idea became reality: By spring 2012, he was being interviewed on camera here at Pitt.

To see Rory Cooper on a 2009 Cheerios cereal box, go to http://www.chronicle.pitt.edu/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/rory-cooper-pho...

For information on Rory Cooper as recipient of an American Association for the Advancement of Science 2011 Mentor Award, go to http://www.aaas.org/aboutaaas/awards/mentor/index.shtml.

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