Eric Tytell is an associate professor and interdisciplinary researcher with 13 years of academic experience exploring the physics and neural control of animal movement, particularly at the interface of fluid dynamics and neurophysiology. Based at Tufts University, he designs and carries out sophisticated experiments in fluid mechanics applied to organisms and translates biological principles into engineering ideas for robots and medical prosthetics. His background blends a Harvard Ph.D. in biology with training in zoology and physics, enabling rigorous quantitative approaches to animal locomotion. Colleagues rely on his strengths in data analysis and programming to push from detailed mechanistic studies toward general principles that can inspire real-world designs. Notably, his career spans both academic and applied roles—from directing fluid dynamics at a research firm to science communication—reflecting a practical orientation toward impact beyond the lab.
13 years of coding experience
15 years of employment as a software developer
BA, Biology, General, BA, Biology, General at North Carolina School of Science and Math
M.Phil., Zoology, M.Phil., Zoology at University of Cambridge
Ph.D., Biology, Ph.D., Biology at Harvard University
B.A., Biology, Physics, B.A., Biology, Physics at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Contributions:233 commits, 33 pushes in 4 years 10 months
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