TCU has launched the Roach Institute of Athlete Engineering, an interdisciplinary research hub, with a $10 million gift from The Roach Foundation of Fort Worth. The institute will study how people perform, move, recover, and stay safe under pressure, including traditional athletes, tactical athletes like military forces and firefighters, and industrial athletes in fields like manufacturing and construction.
Research Focus
The institute, led by director James Weinstein, will focus on areas like heat, biomechanics, and data analysis to help coaches, commanders, and supervisors make sense of data from sensors and technology. Researchers will also study how the body handles heat, what sweat can reveal, and how sleep and hydration affect performance.
The institute will operate in and around TCU’s athletics complex and has already invested heavily in athletics and research facilities, including a recently opened $50 million human performance center. The gift fits into TCU’s larger push to grow its research profile and supports collaboration among students and faculty in fields like engineering, data science, and applied technology.
Original reporting: Fort Worth Report — read the source article.