Research
Crocker is known for his early work on
particle tracking in two- and three-dimensions, and the measurement of small forces between
colloidal micro particles using
optical tweezers. His other significant work includes the development of
two-point microrheology and its application to cell mechanics and force spectrum microscopy measurements, as well as the use of DNA hybridization to direct the formation of novel
colloidal crystals. His later work involves the use of energy landscape methods to understanding soft glassy materials, such as foams and the actomyosin cytoskeleton. ==Awards and honors==
Selected articles
• Crocker JC, Grier DG, Methods of digital video microscopy for colloidal studies, J Colloid Interface Sci, 179 298–310, 1996. • Weeks ER, Crocker JC, Levitt AC, Schofield A, Weitz DA, Three-dimensional direct imaging of structural relaxation near the colloidal glass transition, Science, 287 627–631, 2000. • Crocker JC, Grier DG, Microscopic Measurement of the Pair Interaction Potential of Charge-Stabilized Colloid, Phys Rev Lett, 73 352–355, 1994. • Crocker JC, Valentine MT, Weeks ER, Gisler T, Kaplan PD, Yodh AG, Weitz DA, Two-point microrheology of inhomogeneous soft materials, Phys Rev Lett, 85 888–891, 2000. • Lau AWC, Hoffman BD, Davies A, Crocker JC, Lubensky TC, Microrheology, stress fluctuations, and active behavior of living cells, Phys Rev Lett, 91, 198101-(1-4), 2003. ==References==