About

Conor J. Walsh is a pioneering biomedical engineer and roboticist whose work sits at the intersection of soft robotics, wearable technology, and human rehabilitation. Based at Harvard University, Walsh has fundamentally advanced the field of soft robotics by developing compliant, body-conforming devices that work in harmony with human physiology rather than constraining it. His research spans soft actuator design, exosuits, and assistive medical devices, with particular focus on restoring mobility and function to individuals with neurological and cardiac conditions. Walsh's most celebrated contributions include the development of soft robotic gloves for hand rehabilitation (1,580 citations), rapidly actuating pneumatic network systems (1,557 citations), and fiber-reinforced soft actuators (883 citations) that have become foundational references in the field. His soft robotic exosuit for stroke rehabilitation (663 citations) and human-in-the-loop optimization of hip assistance (615 citations) demonstrate a sophisticated translation of laboratory innovation into clinical impact. Perhaps most remarkably, his team developed a soft robotic sleeve capable of supporting cardiac function, showcasing the extraordinary breadth of his vision. With multiple papers surpassing 400 citations and a total impact exceeding 7,400 citations across just ten works, Walsh's research has reshaped how engineers and clinicians think about assistive and rehabilitative technology.

Research Focus

Key Achievements

58
H-Index
148
Papers
15,889
Total Citations
107
Avg Citations/Paper
🏆 Most Cited Paper
Soft robotic glove for combined assistance and at-home rehabilitation
1,580 citations · 2014
📈 Most Prolific Year: 2017 (23 Papers)
🤝 Key Collaborators: 398
🏛 Institutions: Harvard University, Harvard University Press, St. John's College of Nursing, Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering, Los Angeles Pierce College, Inspire Institute

Top Papers

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Key Collaborators

Contact & Links

Available for collaboration
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