Robotics and Intelligent Machines Center

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http://rim.gatech.edu/

Ashok Goel

Professor

Biography

Dr. Ashok K. Goel is a Professor in the School of Interactive Computing at Georgia Institute of Technology. He is Director of the School's Design & Intelligence Laboratory and a Co-Director of Georgia Tech's Center for Biologically Inspired Design. He is also Co-Coordinator of the Georgia Tech interdisciplinary group on Creativity, Cognition & Computation.

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Ronald Arkin

Associate Dean for Research and Space Planning; Regents' Professor

Biography

Ronald C. Arkin received the B.S. Degree from the University of Michigan, the M.S. Degree from Stevens Institute of Technology, and a Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst in 1987.

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Alex Goldstein

Executive Director, Center for Robotics and Intelligent Machines (RIM)

Biography

Mr. Goldstein has been with the Georgia Institute of
Technology since 1994. He is responsible
for strategic planning, development of outreach and research initiatives, and
day-to-day operations of RIM. Prior to
his current appointment he has served as Director of Operations of the Center
for Board Assembly Research at the Manufacturing Research Center (MARC).

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Nina White

Administrative Professional Sr.

Biography

Nina began her career at Georgia Tech in 2008. She is responsible for the administrative management functions within the Robotics & Intelligent Machines Center . Prior to her current appointment, she worked in the Office of Development-Stewardship.

Nina received her BA in Sociology from the University of Georgia.

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Frank Dellaert

Associate Professor

Biography

Dr. Dellaert does research in the areas of robotics and computer vision, which present some of the most exciting challenges to anyone interested in artificial intelligence. He is especially keen on Bayesian inference approaches to the difficult inverse problems that keep popping up in these areas. In many cases, exact solutions to these problems are intractable, and as such he is interested in examining whether Monte Carlo (sampling-based) approximations are applicable in those cases.

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Charles Isbell, Jr.

Associate Dean for Academic Affairs; Professor

Biography

Dr. Isbell's research passion is artificial intelligence. In particular, he focuses on applying statistical machine learning to building autonomous agents that must live and interact with large numbers of other intelligent agents, some of whom may be human.

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James Rehg

Professor

Biography

Dr. Rehg's research interests include computer vision, computer graphics, machine learning, robotics, and distributed computing. He co-directs the Computational Perception Laboratory (CPL) and is affiliated with the GVU Center, Aware Home
Research Institute, and the Center for Experimental Research in Computer Science. In past years he has taught "Computer Vision" (CS 4495/7495) and "Introduction to Probabilistic Graphical Models" (CS 8803). He is currently teaching "Pattern Recognition" (CS 4803) and "Computer Graphics" (CS 4451).

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Kathy Cheek

Administrative Coordinator

Office:
CCB Office 217
Email:
kathyc [at] cc [dot] gatech [dot] edu (Send Email)

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Joi Adams

Accountant III

Office:
CCB Office 220
Email:
joi [at] cc [dot] gatech [dot] edu (Send Email)

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Beki Grinter

Professor

Biography

Dr. Grinter research focuses on the relationship between human action, and interaction, and computing. She uses empirical methods to explore how we can support people interactions with systems and each other through systems. Her research has influenced the design of better processes and products with the purpose of improving the collaboration. This research lies at the intersection of several different research communities including computer supported cooperative work, human computer interaction, sociology, software engineering and ubiquitous computing.

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