
Assistant Professor of the Department of Computer Science
Pedro Lopes is an Assistant Professor at the University of Chicago, where he leads the Human Computer Integration lab, which focuses on the the research question: what if interfaces would share part of our body?
Pedro’s team materializes these ideas by creating interactive systems that intentionally borrow parts of the user’s body for input and output; allowing computers to be more directly interwoven in our bodily senses and actuators.
One specific flavor of such devices that Pedro has extensively explored is devices that borrow the user’s muscles by means of electrical muscle stimulation. These devices use part of the wearer’s body for output, i.e., the computer can output by actuating the user’s muscles with electrical impulses, causing it to move involuntarily. The wearer can sense the computer’s activity on their own body by means of their sense of proprioception. Pedro’s wearable systems have shown to (1) increase realism in VR, (2) provide a novel way to access information through proprioception, and (3) serve as a platform to experience and question the boundaries of our sense of agency.
Pedro’s work is published at top-tier conferences (ACM CHI & UIST) and demonstrated at venues such as SIGGRAPH and IEEE Haptics. Pedro has received the CHI Best Paper award for his work on Affordance++, Best Talk Awards and a Best Paper nomination. As part of his research, Pedro has exhibited at Ars Electronica 2017, Science Gallery Dublin and World Economic Forum in San Francisco. His work also captured the interest of media, such as MIT Technology Review, NBC, Discovery Channel, NewScientist or Wired.
Previously, Pedro was a PhD student with Prof. Patrick Baudisch at the Hasso Plattner Institute, Germany.
Selected YouTube videos: VR Walls, Impacto, Muscle Plotter, Affordance++
CV (up to date)