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Adapted from Sammy Kattahttps://sammykatta.com/diversity

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Some resources for furthering one's education on systemic racism in the US: link

The Bioinspiration Lab

Welcome! We are a lab interested in all things biomechanics from The College of New Jersey (TCNJ), led by Nick Battista, an associate professor in the Mathematics and Statistics Department.

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Our central research focus is unraveling the swimming performance of a variety of marine invertebrates using a blend of math modeling, computational fluid dynamics, and machine learning. We also investigate many other interesting phenomena in biomechanics, math physiology, and fluid-structure interactions. 

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Nick is the creator and main contributor of a various numerical tools for research, teaching, and recreational purposes, which are available on his GitHub site. We regularly use his software package, IB2d, for studying fluid-structure interaction systems.

RESEARCH AREAS

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A recent focus of our lab is studying the limitations and performance tradeoffs in different swimming strategies using a blend of computational fluid dynamics, machine learning, and organismal experiments. We are fortunate that TCNJ has its own HPC (ELSA) in which we use to perform our widespread locomotion studies.

In tandem, part of our research effort is developing (open-source) computational tools that decrease the learning curve for students and scientists to perform fluid-structure interaction models and other CFD simulations at an accelerated rate.

BIOINSPIRATION LAB NEWS!

  • Congratulations to Anna Dorval, Lauren Terr, and Eileen Yizzi on excellent poster presentations at this year's TCNJ COSA!

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  • Our collaborative manuscript on Multiscale Flow Between the Branches and Polyps of Gorgonians was accepted into the Journal of Experimental Biology! Thanks for letting us be apart of this workCheck it out here!

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  • Welcome to the lab Lauren Terr! Lauren is exploring swimming performance for pelagic polychaetes like Tomopteris! 

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  • Congratulations to Eileen Yizzi who received an honorable mention in her NSF Graduate Research Student Fellowship Proposal! 

  • Welcome to the lab Anna Dorval! Anna is creating a polynomial chaos expansion toolkit for doing swimming performance predictions during the TCNJ MUSE program.  

  • Our manuscript on Planktos, an agent-based modeling framework that integrates fluid dynamics, was accepted in Bulletin of Mathematical Biology! Thanks for letting us be apart of this work, Christopher Strickland (UTK). Check it out here!

  • Congrats to all recent and former lab members Miruna Baciu, John Phelan, Zain Moin,  Lilly Hoffman, Rose Pereira, Spencer Haber, Stephanie Shen, and Natalia Sokolnicki on graduating from TCNJ! 

  • Our collaborative manuscript on how the presence of a substrate can strengthen the upward jet by upside down jellyfish been accepted for publication, in Frontiers in Marine Science! Check it out here!

  • Our collaborative manuscript on implementing concentration dynamics into the IB2d library has been accepted for publication, in Bioinspiration & Biomimetics! Check it out here!

  • Congratulations to Jason Miles whose first-author manuscript, Exploring the sensitivity in jellyfish locomotion under variations in scale, frequency, and duty cycle, was just accepted into the Journal of Mathematical Biology! Check it out here!

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  • Congratulations to Tierney Baldwin whose first-author manuscript, Hopscotching Jellyfish: combining different duty cycle kinematics can lead to enhanced performance, was just accepted into the journal Bioinspiration & Biomimetics! Check-it-out-here! 

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  • Welcome to the lab Eileen Yizzi and Lilly Hoffman!
    They will creating a kinematic mathematical model of a lionsmane jellyfish that will be integrated into the IB2d library!

  • Lana's research featured on TCNJ website: Check-it-out-here!
     

  • September 14, 2021: Come check out some members of the lab present at the MUSE Poster Sessions! We will be showcasing 2 on-going projects!

                  Lana Abdelmohsen: How much can neural networks learn about jellyfish?

                  Kendra Ebke: When it is good to be out of sync: copepod and marine snow interactions

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